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A25478 A supplement to The Morning-exercise at Cripple-Gate, or, Several more cases of conscience practically resolved by sundry ministers; Morning-exercise at Cripplegate. Supplement. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1676 (1676) Wing A3240; ESTC R13100 974,140 814

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particular instances wherein we shew love to our selves It shall suffice therefore that we speak of such things as are inducive of many more We shall reduce them to these Four heads 1. Our thoughts of and the judgment we pass upon our selves 2. Our speeches concerning our selves 3. Our desires after that which is good for our selves 4. Our Actual endeavours that it may be well with us 1. Let us consider what thoughts we have of and what judgments we pass upon our selves We do not ordinarily nor ought we at any time to censure our selves with too much rigour and severity We are indeed required 1 Cor. 11.31 again and again to judge our selves and it is our duty to do it strictly and severely yet we ought not without cause Luk. 6.41 42. to judge or condemn our Selves for any thing nor are we very forward so to do Our love to our neighbour should be exercised in this matter if he doth or speaketh any thing that is (n) De sactis mediis quae possunt bono vel malo animo fieri temerati●m est judica●e maximè ut condem●emus August 1 Cor. 13.5 Heb. 4.13 1 Cor. 2.11 capable of a double sence and interpretation let us take it as done or spoken in the best sense it is capable of unless the contrary doth manifestly appear by some very convincing circumstances for it is the property of Charity to think no evil We may be much more bold to judge our selves than others we are privy to our own principles from whence our words and actions flow and to our own intentions in all we speak or do But the case is otherwise when we take upon us to judge others their principles and intentions are known only to themselves until they some way or other declare them the heart being the hidden Man is known only to God before whom all things are naked and open and to a mans self What man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him Moreover inordinate self-love hath often too great an influence on the judgment we pass upon our selves and the corruption of our wills and affections on the judgment we pass upon other men that we seldom judge aright As he that hath the jaundise be the object never so white judgeth it yellow his eye being ill disposed so the eye of the mind being affected with the corruption of the heart puts another colour upon that which is most candidly spoken or done Were our hearts principled with true love to others we should be as cautious about the judgment which we pass on them as about that we pass upon our selves and there is great reason we should be more from the 〈◊〉 mentioned considerations 2. We shew our love to our selves in and by our speeches concerning our selves and it is our duty so to do As we ought not to pass too severe a judgment on our selves in our own minds so we may not speak that which is false of our selves and it is seldom known that any mans tongue falls foul upon himself Yea our love to our selves is and ought to be such as not to suffer our tongue to blab and send abroad all the evil we certainly know by our selves It is our duty then in the same matter to shew our love to others Our tongue which is apt to speak the best of our selves should not frame it self to speak the worst we can of our Brethren The Apostle chargeth Titus Titus 3.2 to put Christians in mind of this among other duties to speak evil of no man There are several ways and degrees of evil speaking 1. The first and most notorious is when men are spoken against as evil doers for doing that which is their duty to do When they are condemned for that for which they ought to be commended Thus was Jeremiah dealt with in his time when he faithfully declared the mind of God to the people Jer. 18.18 Come say they and let us smite him with the tongue The same lot had John from Diotrephes who prated against him with Malicious words because he had wrote to have the brethren received a work of Christian love and Charity which he had no heart unto To speak evil of others for that which is their duty is a common thing among men and too ordinary among some professors If they be told of a truth or exhorted to a duty that doth not agree with their private opinion and Comport with their carnal interest how do their hearts rise and their mouths begin to open against such as declare it to them We may well conceive that the Apostle Paul observed some such thing in his days when we find him beseeching Christians to suffer the word of exhortation Heb. 13.22 1 Pet. 2.1 and the Apostle Peter also by his charging them in hearing to lay aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies and envies and evil-speakings 2. A second way of evil speaking and a great sin against love and Charity is when men raise up false reports of others or set them forward when others have maliciously raised them To offend in this kind is a great breach of a Christians good behaviour as the Apostle intimates Titus 2.3 when he saith That they be in behaviour as becometh Holiness (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not false accusers It doth not at all become the profession of a Christian whose master is the God of truth to speak that which is false of any man whatsoever And therefore these false accusers are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a name which is usually given to the father of lies Joh. 8.44 3. There may be evil speaking in speaking of such evils as others are really guilty of as 1. First when a man doth industriously (p) Facilius est unicuique nostrum aliena curiose inquirere quam propria nostra inspicere search out such things as are evil in others for this very purpose that he may have something to say against them Of this David complains Psal 64. ver 6. They search out iniquities they accomplish a diligent search It is a sign that Malice boils up to a great height in mens hearts when they are so active to find matter against their neighbours Love would rather (q) Qui bene vult vitam peragere neque videre multa neque audire studear Just Martyr De vita Christ ad Zenam Ep. Luke 11.53 not seen or hear of others failings or if it doth and must busieth it self in healing and reforming them to it's power 2. They also are Guilty and more guilty of evil speaking than the former who endeavour to bring others into sin rather than they will want matter against them Thus the malicious Pharisees did their utmost to cause Christ himself had it been possible to offend urging him vehemently and provoking him to speak of many things seeking to catch something out of his mouth that they
of the Church done they have been to them the very joy and life of their souls Psal 122.1 I was glad when they said unto me let us go into the house of the Lord our feet shall stand within thy gates O Jerusalem I never was ●●re affected with joy and gladness in all my life then when I was wont to hear the people encouraging one another to assemble themselves to the publique worship of God in the house of God on Gods day O it did my heart good to hear with what alacrity and rejoycing they did provoke one another come let us go to the house of the Lord notably prophesied of in words at length Isa 2.2 3. verses many people shall go and say Come ye and let us go up to the Mountain of the Lord to the house of the God of Jacob and he will teach us of his ways and we will walk in his paths for out of Zion shall go forth the Law and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem In the loss of Ordinances and Sabbaths they have been dead in the nest like Rachel weeping for her children and would not be comforted because they were not And in the recovery and enjoyment of them they have rejoyced as men rejoyce that divide the spoil see Psal 3. Psal 42. 43. 84. per totum Christians we must write after this copy and count the Sabbath not our Duty only but our Delight and priviledge 2. Affirmative duty The Holy of the Lord. We must call it i. e. ut sup count it keep it as Lichdosh Jehovah sanctum Domini One of the titles of Jesus Christ The Holy one of God we must observe the Sabbath as Holy time Holy yet not by constitution not essentially holy as Christ is holy nor inherently as the Saints are holy but holy by institution by sanction relatively holy the Lord blessed the Sabbath-day and hallowed it i. e. he set it apart for holy uses Deut. 5.12 keep the Sabbath-day to sanctifie it Nothing but holy things must be done in this holy time praying reading hearing singing of Psalms c. as Psal 92. which is both a precept and plat-form for Sabbath-sanctification meditation rejoycing in God and Thanksgiving as you may read at large Thirdly We must call it i. e. count it honourable or the glorious day of God Glorious upon several accounts 1. For Gods glorious resting upon that day Gods rest that is a glorious rest rest of God As things of God in scripture are great and glorious things 2. Glorious or Honourable by a glorious sanction Coyn with the Kings stamp upon it is counted Royal not for the mettal so much though it be of Silver or Gold but for the Image superscription and impression it beareth Every day in the week is Honourable because it is Gods Creation but the Sabbath is glorious for the inscription Jehovah hath set his Image upon it He did sanctifie it It hath Gods sanction upon it and that is glorious 3. It is Honourable for those glorious ends for which it was set apart and they are three 1. That God might sanctifie his people Ezekiel 20.12 moreover I gave them my Sabbaths for a sign between me and them not a ceremonial sign as some would dwindle it that have no more Religion in them than an old rotten Ceremony cometh to but a moral sign i. e. a Testimony Pledge or Covenant whereby it might appear that they were Gods people sanctified to his service and honour So it follows that they might know that I am the Lord that sanctifieth them The Sabbath is Gods Medium to raise up to himself an holy people 2. That Gods people might sanctifie him so ver 41. I will be sanctified in you so Levit. 10.3 I will be sanctified in them that draw nigh me God sanctifieth us when he makes us holy we sanctifie God when we acknowledge him to be holy God sanctifieth us when he makes us what we are not we sanctifie him when we acknowledge him to be what he is These be glorious ends but 3. Another glorious end for which God made the Sabbath was that the Sabbath on Earth might be a type and figure of the Sabbath in Heaven That in this initial and imperfect Sabbath on earth we might see though in a glass darkly what the Saints and Angels are doing in Heaven without ceasing that we might peep into Heaven before we come thither and long and wait for that eternal Sabbath A day wherein God bows the Heaven and comes down and offers himself in ways of sweet and friendly Communion with his people Exod. 20. v. 23. Fourth Duty is As we must call and count it glorious so we must actually honour it or him it may be rendred both and indeed when we honour this day we glorifie God and we glorifie God when we make him our end in honouring his day Without both these we do take Gods Name in vain and do but mock God rather in pretending to keep a Sabbath than glorifie him We must set up God in his own day and in his own Institution And thus I have done with the opening of this blessed Model in the Duties of it I should come now to the Priviledges annexed but sufficient to the day is the travel thereof For the Improvement of this doctrinal Exposition I shall do these two Things 1. I shall endeavour the stating of some Cases of Conscience concerning the Sabbath 2. I shall raise some observations instead of more distinct Uses and application Case 1 If it be inquired what Sabbath it is that is here spoken of we shall not need to stick long upon the solution Some indeed of the Antisabbatical Doctors who love neither the Name nor Thing will needs expound it of the yearly Sabbath the day of the strictest rest among the Jews in their solemn convention for Humiliation and Atonement of which we read Levit. 16.31 and 23.27.31 But surely it is an unreasonable straitning of the text to confine it to this especially since the Prophet had sufficiently insisted upon that subject both by way of reproof and Exhortation in the former part of the chapter Here therefore I conceive we are to understand the Weekly Sabbath not only the seventh day Sabbath which was yet in being but the First day Sabbath also which was to succeed the Prophet being an Evangelical Prophet as one calls him the Evangelist Isaiah speaks of the Evangelical Sabbath which was to continue to the end of the world Rules drawn from the Negative part of this model Rules 1. Note in the first place that from the Creation of the world to this day God never suffer'd his Church to be without a Sabbath As soon as ever there was a Church though it was but in its infancy and confin'd within the narrow limits of a single-family and few souls therein God did immediately institute a Sabbath for it Gen. 2.3 And on the seventh day God ended all his works which
promising to hear attentively saith incipe suspensis auribus ista bibam now this attentive hearing is a diligent heeding of the things that are spoken by the Ministers of Christ so as not to let any thing pass without notice and observation this was the attention of the Samaritans to Philips preaching Acts 8.6 (h) And the people with one acc●rd gave heed unto those things which Philip spake and the attention of Lydia to Pauls preaching Acts 16.14 (i) Whose heart the Lord opened that the attended to the things spoken of Paul that were spoken by Paul that is to all of them what saith Cornelius Act. 10.33 (k) Now therefore are we all here present before God c. so that our attention must be catholique and universal we must listen to all that is spoken to us in the name of Christ the Lord but yet in preaching some things are more especially to be attended to 1. If any Scripture be clearly open'd attend to that 2. If any doubt of Conscience be fully resolv'd attend to that 3. If any sin of yours be particularly discovered attend to that Lastly if any thing be spoken by the Minister with a more than ordinary warmth and servency attend to that there is some divine signature with it and it calls for our special observation that 's the first we are to hear the word attentively I 'le only mention two hindrances of attention and proceed 1. Wandring thoughts thoughts that are forreign and Heterogeneous to the duty in hand these thoughts imploy the mind and hinder the hearing of the word Now these thoughts are various according to the imployments inclinations and circumstances of men wanton people have filthy thoughts finical people are thinking of their attires and ornaments worldly people of their Trades and Callings 2. Drowsiness and sleepiness when the head nods and the eyes begin to swim the Sermon is like to be heard well but yet this is too common a practice and that amongst Professors whereby they vilisie the ordinance of Preaching they give an ill example to others and render their uprightness and integrity suspected by sober Christians and I wish that those Professors who use it customarily and indulge themselves in it would put off their livery and tell us plainly they are none of the Lords family 2. Direction Hear and receive the word with meekness this is the direction of the text wherefore lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness and receive with meekness the ingrafted word c. we must not be angry at the word if so it will do us no good people are very apt to be angry at the word see Luke 4.28 (l) And all they in the Synagogue when they heard these things were filled with wrath Matth. 15.12 (m) Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended when they heard this saying Acts 5.33 (n) When they heard that they were cut to the heart and took counsel to slay them Jerem. 26.8 9. (o) Now it came to pass when Jeremiah had made an end of speaking all that the Lord had commanded him he sp●ke unto all the people that the Priests and the Prophets and all the people took him saying thou shalt surely dye 2 Chron. 25.15 16. (p) Wherefore the anger of the Lord was kindled against Azariah and he sent unto him a Prophet which said unto him why hast thou sought after the Gods of the people which could not deliver their own people out of thine hand And the King said unto him art thou made of the Kings Council forbear why shouldest thou be smitten 2 Chron. 16.8 9 10. (q) Then Asa was wroth with the Seer and put him in a prison house for he was in a rage with him because of this thing this is a notable instance 1. Because this anger is great a rage and such a rage as put the Prophet in prison 2. It is expresly said that this rage was against the word ver 10.3 This rage was found in a good and holy man whose heart was perfect with the Lord his God now from this instance we may learn what part of the word it is that men are most angry at 1. The word which discovers their sins and charges them home upon their Consciences as the Seer charged Asa home thou hast relied on the King of Syria and not on the Lord thy God and this vexed him 2. That word that reproaches them for their sins ver 9. herein thou hast done foolishly Men cannot endure to have their actions charged with folly 3. That word that threatens them for their sins ver 9. henceforth thou shalt have wars people cannot bear it to be threatned this was the great quarrel that the Jews had with Jeremiah he came so often with a burden of the Lord and threatned them see Jer. 26.9 (r) Why hast thou prohesied in the name of the Lord saying this house shall be like Shiloh and this City shall be desolate without an inhabitant when Christ threatned the Scribes and Pharisees they could bear no longer Math. 12.12 (s) And they sought to lay hold on him for they knew that he had spoken that parable against them Thus you see people are apt to be angry at the hearing of the Word but vvhat kind of people are most apt to be angry First They that are great in the vvorld Luke 19.47 (t) And he taught daily in the Temple but the chief of the people sought to destroy him It vvas Jeh●jakim the King that cut Jeremiahs roul in pieces and it was Herod that thrust John into prison for reproving him Secondly proud men Jerem. 43.12 (u) When Jeremi●h had made an end of speaking c. Then spake all the proud men saying unto Jeremiah th●u spe●kest falsely proud men cannot endure a check either by the publique ministery or by a private admonition Thirdly Guilty persons why was Cain so touchy when God askt him about Abel because he was guilty of his blood Guilty persons are like gall'd horses they kick if you touch their sores nothing hinders us from receiving the word with meekness like the Conscience of sin wherefore when the Apostle bids us receive the word with meekness he bids us lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness if the heart be surfeited with sin it will rise and boak against the Word when Christ preacht against Covetousness the Pharisees that vvere Covetous vvere vext at him and exprest their vexation by sneering at him Luke 16.13 14. (w) And the Pharisees which were covetous heard all these things and they derided him 3. Direct Hear the Word with a good and honest heart Luke 8.15 (x) But that on the good ground are they which in an honest and good heart having heard the word keep it this is a comprehensive head and takes in all particulars that concern the right manner of hearing but I shall contract it and reduce it 1. to an understanding
of Popery returning and truly not without ground for when I consider how slight we make of this Ordinance rescued from the Papists with the expence of so much blood methinks it is but a righteous thing with God to bring us under their iron yoke again and if it once comes to that then you would be glad of this Ordinance if you could get it then you will be brought into this strait either you must take it in the Popish way and be damned for your Idolatry or in the Gospel way and be burnt at a stake for opposing Antichrist Oh repent in time renew your first love strengthen your zeal that is ready to dye Come to the Lord's Table as you are invited take it in his way that is with Knowledg Faith Love Thankfulness lest you provoke the Lord by your neglect to take it quite away from you as he is like to do if he suffer Popery to return 8. Consider again how scandalous you are in this neglect There are not a few about this Kingdom that are Antient Christians that have a long time had the reputation of wisdom sobriety and godliness in their lives that yet are notoriously guilty in this matter I beseech such to consider their scandal herein What is it my brethren to scandalize weak brethren but to lay stumbling-blocks in the way of such over which they may fall and if not ruine themselves yet they may at least wound their peace When weak Christians see such as you live in the neglect of this Ordinance what do they but by your Example take encouragement to neglect it also for thus it is likely they reason if there were any necessity of partaking of that Supper why do not such and such do it they are godly wise men sure if they thought it a sin they would not persevere in this neglect and so are the weak imboldned to sin also though against their light for it is scarce possible that they should read or hear of so plain a command as this This do in remembrance of me and not be in some measure awakened to the sense of their duty which light yet they stifle because of your example I beseech you therefore by the mercies of God and love of the Lord Jesus and the bowels you ought to have to your weak brethren that you would not give such a manifest occasion of their falls their soul-wounds if not their destruction 9. Once again let me intreat you to lay to heart how unworthily hereby you cast contempt upon the practice of the Churches of Christ in all Ages past Tell me if you can what Church of Christians for 1600 years but have made conscience of this duty In Justin Martyr's time by what we can gather from his writings it seems the Church alwaies closed their solemn publick meetings with this supper And Austin tells us there were Christians in his days that were for taking it every day of the week and though he himself thought such daily participation thereof was not needful yet he perswaded to partake thereof every Lord's day Quotidie inquit Eucharistiae communionem percipere nec laudo nec vitupero omnibus tamen Dominicis diebus communicandum suadeo Now though Christ hath not expresly tied us to such a frequency yet he hath intimated to us he would have himself remembred herein very often when he saith so often as you eat this bread But for you to live in a perpetual neglect is very far from taking it often It was a saying of Asaph Psal 73.15 If I speak thus I should offend against the generation of thy children Oh that you would consider that so long as you continue this neglect you offend against the children of God in many generations even from the time of the institution 10. Lastly do but think how unmerciful you are to your own souls in denying them this Ordinance What do you but with-hold their proper and necessary food from them you call upon them to exercise their graces and you find them faint and languid you then complain of them Oh what a dead and listless heart have I to God and duty Alas man it is thy own fault thou like an Aegyptian taskmaster callest for the tale of brick and deniest straw thou callest to thy soul to do her work and wilt not give her the bread to refresh her which her Saviour hath allowed Bring thy soul to this Supper feed her satisfie her with a crucified Jesus that is there presented and then tell me whether her Faith will not strengthen her love increase her joys and consolations multiply Ask your brethren what tasts and relishes what sweet refreshments they have received from the Lord in this Ordinance they will cry unto you Oh come tast and see how gracious God is to us at this Feast It was a saying of Bernard Cum defecerit virtus mea non conturbor non diffido Scio quid faciam Calicem salutarem accipiam that is when my strength faileth me I am not troubled I do not despond I know a remedy I will go to the Table of the Lord there I will drink and recover my decayed strength and I dare say that good man experienced no more but what ten thousands of the Lord's people do frequently experience Where would you have Christ give you his loves but in his garden of spices in his wine cellar where his banner over you is love Here it is he broaches his side and le ts out his heart blood to you which is more sweet to a believing sinner than the most delicious banquet to the most hungry appetite and if it proves not so to all that come it is because of their own indispositions and not because of any deficiency in the Ordinance it self And now I had done were it not that I understand there are some Objections to be removed which I shall propose and answer and then leave you to the blessing of the Lord for to give you a full satisfaction in the whole matter Object 1. But some may say All that you have been hitherto pleading for is but a Ceremony and sure God will not be so much concerned with a failure in so small a punctilio as a Ceremony Answ True it is a Ceremony but it is such an one that beareth the stamp of the Authority of the Lord Jesus if he appoints it will you slight it and say it is but a Ceremony But again if it be a Ceremony it is the most glorious one that ever was appointed in as much as it is designed to set forth the Redemption of the world as it was compleated and perfected by the death of Jesus Christ Yet again it is but a Ceremony but you are greatly mistaken if you think that therefore there is no danger to neglect it what was the tree of knowledg of good and evil but a Ceremony yet for disobedience in eating thereof do you not know and feel what wrath it hath brought on
night and then with her spirit seeks him early Desires blown by meditation are the sparks that set prayer in a light flame The work of preparation may be cast under five heads when we apply to solemn and set prayer 1. The consideration of some attributes in God that are proper to the intended petitions 2. A digestion of some peculiar and special promises that concern the affair 3. Meditation on suitable arguments 4. Ejaculations for assistance 5. An engagement of the heart to a holy frame of reverence and keeping to the point in hand Cypr. de Orat. p. 106. 6. edit Nec quicquam tunc animus quam solum cogitet quod precatur was serious advice from Cyprian let the soul think upon nothing but what it is to pray for and adds that therefore the ministers of old prepared the minds of the people with sursum corda let your hearts be above For how can we expect to be heard of God when we do not hear our selves when the heart does not watch while the tongue utters The tongue must be like the pen of a ready writer Psal 45.1 to set down the good matter which the heart indites take heed of ramblings to preach or tell pious stories while praying to the great and holy God is a branch of irreverence and a careless frame of spirit Heb. 12.28 2. Humble confession of such sins as concern and refer principally to the work in hand Our filthy garments must be taken away when we appear before the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem Look upon my afflictions Zech. 3.4 Psal 25.18 Psal 39.8.12 Psal 103.3 cries David and forgive all my sins There are certain sins that often relate to afflictions First deliver me from my transgressions then hear my prayer O Lord for this is the heavenly method he first forgiveth all our iniquities and then healeth all our diseases A forgiven soul is a healed soul while a man is sick at heart with the qualms of sin unpardoned it keeps the soul under deliquiums and swooning fits that it cannot cry strongly unto God and therefore in holy groans must discharge himself of particular sins and pour out his soul before God Thus did David in that great penitential Psalm Psal 51.4 Isa 59.2 Ezra 9.6 For sin like a thick cloud hides the face of God that our prayers cannot enter We must blush with Ezra and our faces look red with the flushings of conscience if we expect any smiles of mercy Our crimson sins must dye our confessions and the blood of our sacrifices must sprinkle the horns of the golden altar before we receive an answer of peace from the golden mercy seat When our persons are pardoned our suits are accepted and our petitions crowned with the Olive-branch of peace 3. An arguing and pleading Spirit in prayer This is properly wrestling with God humble yet earnest expostulations about his mind towards us Psal 74.1 Isa 64.9 Why hast thou cast us off for ever why doth thine anger smoke Be not wroth very sore O Lord remember not iniquity for ever see we beseech thee we are thy people If so why is it thus as frighted Rebekah flies out into prayer An arguing frame in prayer cures and appease● (f) Psal 34.4 Gen. 25.22 Psal 27.4 Psal 22.1 21. Psal 80 4. Jer. 14 8 9. the frights of spirit and then inquires of God The Temple of prayer is call'd the souls inquiring place Why is God so far from the voice of my roaring Thou hast heard me from the horns of the Vnicorns Art thou angry with the prayers of thy people and how long turn us again and cause thy face to shine upon us O hope of Israel why like a wayfaring man like a man astonied O Lord thou art in the midst of us and we are called by thy name leave us not I must refer to Abraham Jacob and Moses Joshuah David and Daniel how they urged arguments with God Sometimes from (a) Ps 5 7. 6 4 31 16. the multitudes of God's mercies from (b) Psal 4.1 6.9 22.4 21. 31. 2 3 7. 140.7 the experience of former answers from the Name of God from (c) Psal 9.10 16.1 their trust and reliance upon him (d) Psal 17.1 from the equity of God (e) Psal 31.17 34.1 from the shame and confusion of face that God will put his people to if not answered and that others will be driven away from God and lastly from (f) Psal 20.5 35 18. the promise of peace These and many like pleadings we find in Scripture for patterns in prayer which being suggested by the spirit kindled from the altar and perfumed with Christ's incense rise up like memorial pillars before the oracle Let 's observe one or two particular prayers what instant arguments holy men have used and pressed in their perplexities 2 Chron. 20.10 c. Jehoshaphat what a working prayer did he make taking pleas from God's Covenant dominion and powerful strength from his gift of the Land of Canaan and driving out the old inhabitants ancient mercies from his Sanctuary and his promise to Solomon from the ingratitude and ill requital of the enemies with an appeal to God's equity in the case and a humble confession of their own impotency and yet that in their anxiety their eyes are sixt upon God You know how gloriously it prevailed when he had set ambushments round about the Court of Heaven v. 8. and the Lord turn'd his arguments into ambushments against the children of Edom c. Yea this is set as an instance (g) Joel 3.2 how God will deal against the Enemies of his Church in the latter days Another is that admirable prayer of the Angel of the Covenant to God for the restauration of Jerusalem Zech. 1.12 wherein he pleads from the length of time and the duration of his indignation for threescore and ten years from promised mercies and the expiration of Prophesies and behold an answer of good and comfortable words from the Lord and pray observe that when arguments in prayer are very cogent upon a sanctified heart such being drawn from the divine attributes from precious promises and sweet experiments of God's former love it 's a rare sign of a prevailing prayer 'T was an ingenious passage of Chrysostom concerning the woman of Canaan Chrys in Mat. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the poor distressed creature was turned an acute Philosopher with Christ and disputed the mercy from him O 't is a blessed thing to attain to this heavenly Philosophy of prayer to argue blessings out of the hand of God Here 's a spacious field I have given but a small prospect where the soul like Jacob does in arenam descendere enter the lists with omnipotency and by holy force obtain the blessing 4. Ardent affections in prayer betokening a heart deeply sensible are greatly prevalent Exod. 14 15. A crying prayer pierces the
fear Death and 31. Grace thus in Exercise Sermon 31 is but one degree from Glory Now Christians though there are many particular Cases wherein you 'l need Direction yet let me close with this Request Try your utmost what the practical Transcript of these Directions into your Hearts and Lives will produce ere you complain for more That these may be useful to you whoever else censures them as useless shall be the hearty Prayer of June 19. 1674. Your worthless Servant Samuel Annesley The CONTENTS Dr. Annesley Serm. 1 HOw may we attain to love God with all our hearts souls and minds Mat. 22.37 38. Mr. Milward Serm. 2 How ought we to love our Neighbour as our selves Mat. 22.39 Mr. Gale Serm. 3 Wherein the love of the world is inconsistent with the love of God 1 Joh. 2.15 Mr. Jenkyn Serm. 4 How may we improve the present season of grace 2 Cor. 6.1 2. Mr. Veal Serm. 5 What spiritual knowledg they ought to seek for that desire to be saved c. Isa 27.11 Mr. Case Serm. 6 How ought the Sabbath to be sanctified Isa 58.13 14. Mr. Senior Serm. 7 How may we hear the Word with profit James 1.21 Mr. Watson Serm. 8 How may we read the Scriptures with most spiritual profit Deut. 17.19 Mr. Wells Serm. 9 How may we make melody in our hearts with singing of Psalms Eph. 5.19 Dr. Manton Serm. 10 How ought we to improve our Baptism Acts 2.38 Mr. Lye Serm. 11 By what spiritual rules may catechising be best manag'd Prov. 22.6 Mr. Wadsworth Serm. 12 How may it appear to be every Christian 's indispensable duty to partake of the Lord's Supper 1 Cor. 11.24 Mr. Barker Serm. 13 A Religious fast Mark 2.20 Mr. Lee Serm. 14 How to manage secret Prayer that it may be prevalent with God to the comfort and satisfaction of our Souls Mat. 6.6 Mr. Doolitle Serm. 15 How may the Duty of Family-prayer be best manag'd Josh 24.15 Mr. Steele Serm. 16 What are the Duties of Husbands and Wives towards each other Eph. 5.33 Mr. Adams Serm. 17 What are the Duties of Parents and Children Coloss 3.20 21. Mr. Janeway Serm. 18 What are the Duties of Masters and Servants Eph. 6.5 6 7 8 9. Mr. S. C. Serm. 19 The sinfulness and cure of thoughts Gen. 6.5 Mr. West Serm. 20 How must we govern our tongues Eph. 4.29 Mr. Poole Serm. 21 How may detraction be best prevented or cur'd Psal 15.3 Mr. Baxter Serm. 22 What is that light which must shine before men in the works of Christ's Disciples Matth. 5.16 Dr. Wilkinson Serm. 23 How must we do all in the Name of Christ Col. 3.17 Mr. Cole Serm. 24 How may we steer an even course between Presumption and Despair Luke 3.5 6. Mr. Fowler Serm. 25 How Christians may get such a faith as may not only be saving at last but comfortable and joyful at the present 2 Pet. 1.8 Dr. Jacomb Serm. 26 How Christians may learn in every state to be content Phil. 4.11 Dr. G. Serm. 27 How we may so bear afflictions as neither to despise them nor faint under them Heb. 12.5 Dr. Owen Serm. 28 How may we bring our Hearts to receive Reproofs Psal 141.5 Mr. T. Vincent Serm. 29 Wherein doth appear the blessedness of forgiveness and how it may be attained Psal 32.1 Mr. Silvester Serm. 30 How may we overcome the inordinate love of Life and fear of Death Acts 20.24 Mr. Hook Serm. 31 What gifts of Grace are chiefly to be exercis'd in order to an actual preparation for the coming of Christ by Death and Judgment Mat. 25.10 Quest How may we attain to love God with all our Hearts Souls and Minds Serm. I. Matth. 22.37 38. Jesus said unto him Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy mind This is the first and great Commandment IT is fit this Exercise should begin with a general Introduction that may indifferently serve every Sermon that shall be Preach'd I should be much mistaken and so would you too should we think this Text unsuitable let 's therefore not only in the fear but also in the love of God address our selves to the management of it This Command you have in Deut. 6.5 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and with all thy soul and with all thy might This Command is not found in Exodus nor in Leviticus but only in Deuteronomy i. e. the second Law of Moses which as some express it bore a Type of the second Law viz. the Evangelical to which this Command is proper for the Old Law was a Law of fear tending to bondage and therefore Moses mentions the incussion of terror in the giving of it which when he hath dispatch'd he begins the following Chapter with Love noting that the Holy Ghost will cause the Law of Love to succeed the Law of Fear And 't is observable that the Jews read this place with the highest observation and their Scribes write the first and last words of the Preface to it with greater Letters than ordinary to amplifie the sense and to note that this is the beginning and the end of the Divine Law and they read this Scripture morning and evening with great * Jansen Harmon The Occasion Religion The occasion of Christ's pressing this command upon them at this time was this when the Pharisees heard how he had baffled the Sadduces and stopped their mouths with so proper and fit an answer that they had no more to say they consult how they may shew their acumen and sharpness of wit to diminish Christ's credit concerning his Doctrine and Skill in Scripture and therefore they chuse out one of their most accomplish'd Interpreters of the Law captiously to propose an excellent question They call him Master whose Disciples they will not be they enquire after the Great Commandment who will not duely observe the least they thought Christ could not return such an answer but that they might very plausibly except against it * Cartw. Harm Auth. imperfect op If Christ should have named any one command to be the greatest their exception was ready why not another as great as that but Christ's wisdom shames their subtilty Christ doth not call any command Great with the lessening of the rest but he repeats the summe of the whole Law and distinguisheth it into two Great Commands according to the subordination of their Objects Thou shalt love c. Though the excellency of the subject calls for the enlargement of your hearts yet the copiousness of it requires the contracting of my discourse To save time therefore let me open my Text and Case both together The Case is this The Case What is it to love God with all the heart
imperfect state have some warping on their parts and some withdrawing on God's yet their love to God in the lowest ebbe tremblingly hankers after him the soul cannot forget its alone resting-place l Psal 116.7 2. Our Love to God is like the love of the Flower of the Sun to the Sun It springs of a very little seed it is not only our Faith but our Love that is at first like a grain of mustard-seed it growes the fastest of any Flower whatsoever It is not only Faith but Love that grows exceedingly m 2 Thes 1.3 It alwayes turns and bows it self towards the Sun our Love to God is alwayes bowing and admiring alwayes turning to and following after God It opens and shuts with the Suns rising and setting our Love when it is what it should be opens it self to God and closes it self against all other Objects It brings forth seed enough for abundance of other Flowers love to God is the most fruitful Grace that when it blossoms and buds it fills the face of the World with fruit n Isa 27.6 3. Our Love to God is like the love of the Turtle to her Mate God's People are his Turtle o Psal 74.19 I grant they most properly resemble Brotherly Love but why not our Love to God they never associate with other Birds the loving soul keeps fellowship with God and out of choice with him only and those that bear his Image The Turtle never sings and flyes abroad for recreation as other birds but they have a peculiar note for each other the soul that loves God flutters not about for worldly vanities no recreation so sweet as Communion with God the Soul's converse with God is peculiar When one dies the other droops till it dies so that they do as it were live and dye in the Embraces of each other so the soul that loves God his loving kindness is better than life p Psal 63.3 and there 's nothing makes a Saint more impatient of living than that he cannot while he lives have a full Enjoyment of God 4. Our Love to God should be like though exceed Jacobs love to Benjamin q Gen. 42.38 He 'l starve rather than part with Benjamin and when hunger forc'd him from him and he was like to be by a wile kept from him Judah offers to purchase his liberty with his own because his Fathers life was bound up in the Lads life r Gen. 44.30 so the Soul that loves God is not able to bear the thoughts of parting with him his life is bound up in enjoying the presence of God I have been too long but oh that I could affect your Hearts as well as inform your Judgments What it is to love God with the heart what it is to love God Now then let 's reassume the Enquiry what it is to love the Lord our God with all our Heart some referr this to the thoughts s A●g some to the vegetative Soul t Creg Nys some to the Understanding that it may be free from errour u Anselm others q.d. Lay up all these things in your hearts w Origen but the other words will take in most of these and therefore according to Scripture we must understand the Will and Affections and so the word is taken Josh 22.5 Moses the servant of the Lord charged you to love the Lord your God with all your heart As out of the heart proceeds life so from the Will proceeds all Operations the Will ought to be carryed towards God with it's whole force all the Affections of a pure and holy heart are directed to the onely Love of God x Gerhard Harm c. 156. Love riseth from the Will now there 's a two-fold Act of the y Elici us in peratus Will that which is immediately drawn forth of the Will it self the Will own Act and such an Act the Will exerts in loving God and then there is the commanded Act of the Will which is the Act of some other power moved to that Act by the Will where the will is filled with the love of God it moves the understanding to meditate of God whom we love and to enquire after the excellency of the Object loved We must not love God onely with the heart but with the whole heart What it is to love God with the whole heart pray mark this perfect Hatred and perfect Love knows no such thing as the world calls z Judicium rerum non c●gnoscit Aut. imper operis Prudence if you perfectly hate any one all things about him displease you whatever he says or does though it be never so good it seems to you to be evil so if you perfectly love any one all things about him please you Some expound this totality by this distinction we are to love God with the whole heart Positively and Negatively Positively where all Powers of the will are set to love God and this we cannot perfectly doe while we are travellers till we come to our heavenly Country but Negatively thou shalt so love God that nothing contrary to the love of God shall be entertained in thy heart and this we may attain to a pretty tolerable perfection of in this life a Cajetan The whole heart is opposed either to a divided and dispers'd heart or to a remiss and a sluggish heart God doth as much abominate a partnership in our love as a husband or wife abhor any such thing in their Conjugal Relation we must love nothing but God or that which may please God He that loves God with his heart and not with his whole heart loves something else and not God As the whole heart is opposed to a remiss and sluggish heart the meaning is this the care of our heart should be set upon nothing so much as upon the loving and pleasing of God we must preferr God alone before all other Objects of our love and there must be an ardency of affection whatever we doe it must be for his sake and according to his will b Chemnit Harm c. 105. c. 2. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Soul I forbear to mention the different conjectures of those that try the acuteness of their parts to produce some peculiar Interpretation which others have not By comparing Scripture with Scripture the sensitive life or the sensitive Appetite is here meant Thus c Gen. 34.3 Deut. 12.20 his soul clave unto Dinah and he loved the Damsell again thy d thy sensual a fections soul longeth to eat flesh And because the Soul is in many places taken for Life as Exod. 4.19 all the men are dead that sought thy life Heb. thy soul so Exod. 21.23 Thou shalt give life for life Heb. soul for soul and so we may take it here intensively for the sensitive Appetite and extensively for the Life The soul is here taken for the Animal life which
Whatever you say of God you may put an onely to it God so loves every gracious Soul as if he had no other Person to bestow his Love upon therefore thou must so love God as if there were nothing else in the world to bestow thy love upon Alas what 's thine to day as to outward things may be none of thine to morrow thou canst not say so of God God once thine and for ever thine But perhaps you will say Were God mine you should need to say no more to inflame my heart to love him Propriety in God! could I attain this I had enough This is it I wait for I pray for I think nothing too much for it I onely fear I shall never attain it the very comforts of my Life are imbitter'd for want of it To this I answer we cannot shake off God's Soverainty over us nor Propriety in us this you will grant God is and will be Thy God Thy Lord thy Sovereign Thy Commander let thy carriage be what it will the vilest wretches in the World cannot sin themselves from under God's dominion But there 's no comfort in this Well then I will therefore add thou that mournest after propriety in God God is thy God thy gracious God and Father thy God in Covenant thy God in mercy and loving kindness Do'st thou unfeignedly desire to love God then thou may'st be sure God loves thee for God loves first u 1 Joh. 4.19 Do'st thou not out of choice prefer the Service of God before all other Service then you shall abide in the love of God w Joh. 15.10 Brethren Love God as if he were peculiarly yours and you 'l thereby have an evidence that he is peculiarly yours It is reported of one that continued a whole night in Prayer and said nothing but this x Deus meus omnia mea Avend p. 382. My God and my All or God is Mine and all is Mine repeating this a thousand times over Let this be the constant breathing of thy Soul to God My God my All. 2 Ratione ordinis dignitatis 2. This is the first and great command in respect of order and dignity This is the great command because we must place this before all others in the very y In intimo cordis Anselm yelk of the heart as the only foundation of piety whatsoever is taught in the Law and in the Prophets flows from this as from a fountain grows upon this as upon a root z ● use If I forget not this is somewhere Augustin's Metaphor this is to the other commands as the needle to the thred it draws all after it 3 Ratione debiti 3. This is the first and great command in respect of obligation To love God is so indispensable that let me with Reverence say God cannot dispence with it As God first bestows his love upon us before any other gift and then whatever he gives afterwards he gives it in love So God requires that we first give him our hearts our love and then do all we do out of love to God Sometimes God will have mercy and not sacrifice divine duties shall give place to humane nay sometimes duties to God must give way to duties to a beast a Luk. 14.5 but however duties to God and Men may be justled to and fro yet there is not any duty can warrant the intermitting of any love to God so much as one moment 4 Ratione materiae 4. This is the first and great command in respect of the matter of it Love to God is the most excellent of all graces b 1 Cor 13.13 love among the graces is like the Sun among the Stars which not only inlightens the lower world but communicates light to all the Stars in the Firmament So love to God does not only its own office but the offices of all other Graces The Apostle names four graces that are necessary to government which love doth all their offices e. g. beareth all c 1 Cor. 13.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cand●r lenitas patientia Melanc in loc things i. e. love parteth with something of its right beareth the weaknesses of friends to preserve concord believeth all things i. e. candidly makes the best interpretation of all things is not distrustful or suspicious upon light and frivolous occasions hopeth all things that is gently waits for the amendment of that which is faulty endureth all things that is patiently bears injuries c. If you except this is spoken of love to men I readily answer that surely love to God for whose Image in men and command concerning men we love them will do greater things 5 Ratione amplitudinis 5. This is the first and great command in respect of the largeness of it This requires the whole man the whole heart the whole soul the whole mind the whole strength whatever else we entertain some other room may be good enough for it let the heart be kept for Gods peculiar presence Chamber God requires the whole Soul all the inferior powers of the Soul our whole life must be spent in the love of God This command reaches the whole mind God expects that we should in Judgment reason down every thing into contempt that should pretend a loveliness to justle out God 6. This is the first and great command in respect of its capacity 6 Ratione capacita●● because it contains all commands no man can love his Neighbour unless he love God and no man can love God but he must observe all his Commandments Origen makes enquiry how the Commands about legal purification may be reduced to the love of God every command of God hath its peculiar obligation but this Law of love hath a super-ingagement over them all e. g. Men may accept and commend several duties to them that have not one drop of love in them e. g. If I give bread to one that is ready to famish or Physick to one that is dangerously sick these things do good according to their own Natures and not according to the good will of the giver Alas Man needs relief and catcheth at it and never examines the heart or and whence it comes but now God is infinitely above needing any thing from us it is his gracious condescention to receive any thing from us and therefore God never accepts of any thing we do but what is done out of love to him 7. This is the first and great command in respect of the difficulties of it 7 Ratione difficultatis because through our infirmities not to mention worse we cannot presently love God the prime difficulty is the spirituality of it This wisdom (d) Prov. 24.7 is too high for foolish Sinners Though it is most rational yet it is the most spiritual and consequently the most difficult part of Religion Some commands may be observed without special grace as all the outside of Religion Yea
carelessness without an Epithete bare sloath without any thing to aggravate it ordinarily doth the Soul more hurt than all the Devils in hell yea than all its other sins Shake off this and then you will be more than Conquerors over all other difficulties shake off this and there is but one sin that I can think of at present that you 'l be in danger of and that 's spiritual pride You 'l thrive so fast in all grace you 'l grow up into so much communion with God that unless God sometimes withdraw to keep you humble you will have a very Heaven upon Earth Imped 4. The love of any sin whatsoever the love of God and the love of any Sin can no more mix together than Iron and Clay every Sin strikes at the being of God (i) Deicidium The very best of Saints may possibly fall into the very worst of pardonable Sins but the least of Saints get above the love of the least of Sins we are ready to question Gods love unto us as Dalilah did Sampson's love to her if he do not gratifie us in all we have a mind to but how could Dalilah pretend love to Sampson while she comply'd with his mortal enemy against him how can you pretend to love God while you hide Sin his enemy in your hearts as it was with the grand-child of Athaliah (k) 2 King 11.1 2 c. stoln from among those that were slain and hidden though unable at present to disturb her e're long procures her ruine so any Sin as it were stoln from the other Sins to be preserv'd from Mortification will certainly procure the ruine of that Soul that hides it can you hide your Sin from the search of the Word and forbear your Sin while under the smart of affliction and seem to fall out with Sin when under gripes of Conscience and return to Sin as soon as the storm is over never pretend to love God God sees through your pretences and abhors your hypocrisie (l) Job 34.21 22. His eyes are upon the ways of man and he seeth all his goings there 's no darkness nor shadow of death where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves Come Sirs let me deal plainly with you you are shameful strangers to your own heart if you do not know which is your darling Sin or Sins and you are Traytors to your own Souls if you do not endeavour a through Mortification and you are wilful Rebels against God if you do in the least indulge it never boggle at the Psalmist's counsel (m) Psal 97.10 ye that love the Lord hate evil Imped 5. Inordinate love of things lawful and in some respect here 's our greatest danger here persons have Scripture to plead for their love to several persons and things that it is a duty to bestow some love upon them and the meer stones are not so plainly set as easily to discern the utmost bounds of what is lawful and the first step into what is sinful and here having some plausible pretences for the parcelling out of their love they plead not guilty though they love not God with all their hearts souls and minds whereas they should consider that the best of the world is not for enjoyment but use not our end but means conducing to our chief end Here 's our sin and our misery our foolish transplacing of end and means Men make it their end to eat and drink and get estates and injoy their delights and what respect they have to God I know not whether to call love or Service they shew it but as means to flatter God to gratifie them in their pitiful ends Having warned you of some of the chief Impediments I shall propose some means to engage your hearts in love to God which you may confidently expect to be effectual through the operation of the Holy Ghost and you may likewise expect the operation of the Spirit in the use of such means The means are either Directing Promoting or Conserving Means to attain love to God 1. Directing and that is Spiritual Knowledge this is beyond what can be spoken in its commendation A clear and distinct knowledge of the love and loveliness of God in the amazing yet ravishing methods of its manifestations and the clear understanding of the heavenly priviledge of having our hearts inflam'd with love to God this will do I would fain perswade you to try I am not able to say how much to direct you in this case plainly get and exercise this twofold knowledge 1. The knowledge of Spiritual things did we but perfectly know the Nature of the most contemptible insect nay did we but know the Nature of Atoms this would lead us to admire and love God but then to know those things that no graceless person in the world cares for the knowledge of e. g. the inward workings of Original Sin and how to undermine it the powerful workings of the Spirit of grace and how to improve it what are the joys of the Holy Ghost and how to obtain them would not such things insinuate the love of God into you add then 2. The knowledge of ordinary things in a Spiritual manner so as to make the knowledge of Natural things serve Heavenly designs Thus Christ in all the Metaphors in all the Parables he used To value no knowledge any further than it is reducible to such an use this would lead us into the loving of God Thus I name but one directing means promoting means are various not but that Spiritual knowledge doth singularly promote the love of God but it 's proper work lyes in directing The several things I shall name for inward means your way of managing must make them so 1. Self-denyal this is so necessary that no other grace can supply the want of it It is among the graces of the Soul as among the members of the Body one member may supply the want of another the defect of the Lungs may be supplied by other parts The want of prudence may be supplied with Gospel-simplicity which looks like quite another thing but nothing can supply our want of love to God nor can any thing supply our want of Self-denyal in order to our loving of God We can never have n Fo● fotidissimus suo 〈◊〉 horribilissimum stercus vermis nequis simus Bonavent stimul Amor. p 153. too low thoughts of ourselves provided we do not neglect our duty and let go our hold of Christ Those very things that not only we may love but we must love 't is our duty to love them and our sin not to love them yet all these must be denyed when they dare to stand in competition with our love to God o Luk. 14.26 If any man come to me and hate not his Father and Mother and Wife and Brethren and Sisters yea and his own life also he cannot be my Disciple Christ would have us count what Religion will cost us
upon experience you find to be fittest for such a work solemnly place your selves in Gods presence beg of him the fixing and the flowing of your thoughts that your thoughts might be graciously fix'd yet as graciously enlarg'd let the subject matter of them be something Spiritual endeavour to fill your heads and affect your hearts with holy musings till you come to some resolution which resolution close with Prayer and follow with endeavours O how would this even e're you are aware engage your Souls to love God though you cannot methodize your Meditations to your mind yet inure your selves to an holy thoughtfulness about things above Endeavour as you are able to tye your thoughts together and so fasten them that they may not be lost that your musing time may not be reckon'd among your lost time I distinguish between Meditation and Study Study is for knowledge Meditation is for Grace Study leaves every thing as we find it Meditation leaves a Spiritual impress upon every thing it meddles with Though I will not assert I may enquire whether Meditation be not one of those duties of which the very constant performance speaks the Soul to be gracious i. e. though I dare not say they are not gracious that do not every day solemnly meditate yet whether may I not say they are gracious that do Try therefore whether you may not say with the Psalmist (t) Psal 39.3 whilst I was musing the fire burned whether while you are musing your heart may not be inflamed with love to God 7. Choice of friends I dare appeal to all experienc'd Christians whether ever they met with lively Christians that carried it like Christians without some warming of their hearts with love to God and Godliness the truth is Christian-conference hath the most speedy and effectual efficacy of any Ordinance of God whatsoever Do therefore in Religion as you do in other things e.g. If you meet with a Physician all your discourse shall be something about your health If you meet with a Traveller you are presently inquisitive about the places he hath seen Why should not Christians when they meet converse like Christians and presently fall into a Heavenly Dialogue Christians this you know there must be a forsaking of all wicked company e're you can pretend the least love to Christ mistake me not I do not mean that the bonds of Family-relations must presently be broken that Husbands and Wives Parents and Children Masters and Covenant-servants must presently separate if one of them be ungodly No where the relation is such as cannot be dissolved without sin then those that are Godly must converse with the ungodly as Physicians with their sick patients But this is it I say you must not willingly and out of choice make Gods Enemies your familiar Friends Those that are alwayes speaking well of God insensibly draw out their hearts in love to him When Christ's Spouse (u) Cant 5.9 c 6.1 had told the Daughters of Jerusalem what Christ was more than others they presently offer themselves to seek him with her as evil communication (w) 1 Cor. 15.33 corrupts good manners so good communication corrects evil manners In short you cannot but observe that none is able to hear any one spoken against whom they love and that every one delights to speak and hear of whom they love so that here you have a means to enflame an imploy to exercise and a touchstone to try your love to God 8. Thanksgiving That person that makes conscience of thanksgiving will thereby grow in love to God that person that takes every thing kindly and thankfully from God cannot but love him and Christians if we be not basely wanting to our selves we may by thankfulness make every thing a help to promote divine love e.g. I hear a man swear and curse and blaspheme God O what cause have I to love God that he hath not left me to do so I am under the rebukes of God I feel his anger in such a providence O what cause have I to love God that he will take any pains with me and give me medicinal correction not giving me up to my own hearts lusts till I perish Alas I am not so spiritual as to make such Inferences yet blessed be God I really value it as a priviledge to be able to put a good interpretation on all Gods dealings O that I could love God for the very means and helps and incouragements to love him I shall name no more though I might many promoting means But 3. Sustaining and Conserving Means Here several Graces are singularly useful I shall name only three 1. Faith whereby we are perswaded that what God hath spoken is true and good (x) Mark 9.23 If thou canst believe all things are possible to him that believeth Now then take some Particular Promise Why not that which hath already affected thy heart you can't press a Promise as you squeeze an Orange to extract all that is in it no 't is called drawing water (y) Isa 12.3 out of a Fountain though you draw out never so much there 's no less behind Well then take that promise (z) Prov. 8.17 I love them that love me and those that seek me early shall find me I may here by my love to God make out Gods love to me and so by these claspings of love have my love inflam'd and preserv'd But Christians be sure to remember this whenever you lay one hand on a Promise lay the other on Christ you will thereby get your Objections answered and your Fears removed e. g. I am unworthy of Divine Love but so is not Christ I know not how to come to God our access is by Christ Though I come I know not how to believe Joh. 6.37 thy coming is believing Oh for more acquaintance with the Life of Faith it is mostly with us in spirituals according to our Faith 2. Hope whereby we expect a future good Hope is the daughter of Faith Many a time the weak Mother leans upon the Daughter Hope at least to our apprehensions hath not so many Obstructions and hinderances as Faith I dare say I hope what I dare not say I believe Though I must tell you That which the over-modest Christian calls a weak Hope God often calls a strong Faith Remember (a) Psal 119.49 the word unto thy servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope There 's a prayer of Hope and here 's a Promise-answer to Faith Thou (b) Isa 26.3 wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusteth in thee c. So that in a word as to the present Case though I yet cannot love God as I would I hope God will help me that my Love shall be alwayes growing 3. Patience (c) Jam. 1.4 Let patience have her perfect work that you may be perfect and intire wanting nothing And do but with Patience go on with your work
from us but seeing he is so earnest with thee for thy love Beg it of him for him God is more willing to give every grace than thou canst be to receive it Acquaint (w) Job 22.21 26. thy self therefore with God and thou shalt have thy delight in the Almighty and shalt lift up thy face unto God Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him and he shall hear thee What though thou beginnest at the lowest step of Divine love thou mayst through grace mount up to the highest pinnacle I willingly wave so much as mentioning the several methods proposed and shall from a modern Author commend to you these five steps or degrees of love to God Degrees of love to God Psal 31.23 1. Degree is to love God for those good things which we do or hope to receive from him to love God as our Benefactour O love the Lord all ye his saints for the Lord preserveth the faithful Though I name this as the lowest degree of our loving of God yet the highest degree of our loving God is never separated from the loving of God as our benefactour It is mention'd in Moses's (a) Heb. 11.26 commendation of that he esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt for he had respect unto the recompence of reward To love God for hopes of heaven is not a mercenary kind of love it is not only lawful that we may but it is our duty that we must love God for the glory that is laid up for us Where is the man that will own the name of Christian who dare charge Christ with any defect of love to God while the Scripture saith expresly (b) Heb. 12.2 that for the joy set before him he endured the cross despising the shame and is set down on the right hand of the throne of God Is it not no question but it is an infinite kindness of God to make promises and is it not grosly absurd to say it is a sin to believe them when our love shall be perfected in heaven shall we then love God and shall not we then love God as well for our perfect freedom from sin for our perfection of grace for the society of Saints and Angels as for himself If you question this surely you will startle more at what I shall farther assert viz. To love God for temporal benefits does infallibly evidence us eminently spiritual nay further yet I shall commend to the consideration of the most considerate Christian Whether our loving of God for the good things of this life doth not evidence a greater measure of love to God than to love God onely for the gracious communication of himself unto the soul I speak of truely loving God not of bare saying you love him now I evidence it thus God's gracious communications of himself naturally tend to the engaging of the soul to love him but the things of the world do not so God's gracious communications of himself speak special love on God's part and that draws out love again but alas common mercies speak no such thing Now then that soul that is so graciously ingenuous as to love God for those lower kinds of mercies that do not of themselves speak any love from God to us that love of God looks something like though it is infinitely short of it for it is impossible to prevent God in his loving of us but it looks somewhat like our being before-hand with God in the way of Special love To love God spiritually for temporal mercies how excellent is this love though to love a Benefactor may be but the love of a brute yet to love God Thus as our Benefactor cannot but be the love of a Saint you see therefore that though you begin your love to God at below what is rational it may insensibly grow up to what is little less than Angelical 2. The second step of our love to God is to love God for himself because he is the most excellent good you may abstract the consideration of his beneficence to us from his excellency in himself and then when the Soul can rise thus Lord though I should never have a smile from thee while I live and should be cast off by thee when I dye yet I love thee Alas why is this named as the second step surely there are but few can rise so high Pray Christians mind this There 's many a gracious Soul loves God for himself who dare scarce own it that he loves God at all e. g. when the Soul is in perplexing darkness and cannot discern any Covenant-interest in God but as the Church bemoans her self God hath (c) Lam. 3.8.15 18 c. filled me with bitterness he hath made me drunken with wormwood My strength and my hope is perished from the Lord when I cry and shout he shutteth out my prayers c. In short 't is the case every Soul that is under sore temptations or long desertions yet mark you while they thus walk in darkness and see no light yet then a discerning Christian may see his love to God like Moses's face shine to others observation though not their own as may be particularly thus evidenced when God smites them they love him for they are still searching what sin it is that he contends for that they may get rid of it not hide it nor excuse it when they fear God will damn them then they love him for they then keep in the way of holiness which is the way of Salvation yea they will not be drawn out of it though carnal Friends like Job's Wife bid them curse God and dye though Satan tell them they strive in vain though their discouragements are multiplyed and their diligence is disappointed yet they are resolved like Job who said (d) Job 27.2 5 6 10. Though God hath taken away my judgment and the Almighty hath vexed my soul I will not remove my integrity from me my righteousness I hold fast and will not let it go my heart shall not reproach me so long as I live q. d. I will delight in the Almighty or nothing I will alwayes call upon God though he should never regard me Or though the Soul under trouble will not own so much goodness in it self as to say thus yet the conversation of such Christians speaks it plainly and can such a frame proceed from any thing but love to God doth not grace work in the Soul like Physick in the Body the Mother gives her Child Physick the Physick in its working makes the Child Sick the Child when sick instead of being angry with the Mother for the Physick makes all its moan to the Mother hangs about her layes its head in her bosome Is not this love to the Mother though she gave this Sick-physick So my Brethren God deals with his Children what though some of his dealings makes them heart-sick yet they cling to him fearing nothing but Sin and can bear any
children or lands for my sake and the Gospel but that he shall receive an hundred fold Now in this time an hundred fold more comfort in parting with all for Christ than he could have had in keeping all and denying of him But why should I name particulars there 's enough in one Scripture whence to form many incentives to love God (y) Rom. 8.28 We know that all things work together for good to them that love God to them that are called according to his purpose Pray mark this place We 'T is not only the Apostle but all Believers Know 't is not we only Think or Hope but we Know that all things all those afflicting providences which are most grievous to be born all those dark providences which we know not what to make of work together though we cannot presently anatomize every particular providence yet in their contexture we can't but say they are gracious and for good for the spiritual and eternal good of all them that love God O but here I stick I cannot say I love God Read on the next clause is the best Interpreter of this To them that are the called according to his purpose that is plainly to those that obey Christ's call in his Word to all that are converted to all that are willing to be taught and rul'd by Jesus Christ And though thou darest not own thy conversion yet thou darest not deny this evidence of it viz. That thou wouldst fain comply with Christ in every thing 2. Love to God enobles all other graces I will not meddle with the controversie about faith's being informed by love or love being as it were the Soul of faith The Scripture tells that faith works by love (z) Gal 5.6 and 't is by loving nothing so much as God Love is the most ingenuous grace the most heavenly grace the most God-like grace all other graces are more or less excellent as they are enlivened with love to God Sales (a) Sales of the love of God p 670 c. Spa●sim illustrates it thus The General of an Army having gain'd some renowned victory will have all the glory of it for he ordered the Battel and led them on we name the Services of the several parts of the Army both the Vanguard the Body the Wings the Rear So here some Christians are singular for Faith others for Alms deeds some for Prayer others for Humility but Love to God commands all these Love commands Patience to bear and Hope to wait and Faith to believe Elsewhere he compares love to Scarlet which is a Royal cloath not for the wool but for the dye so a Soul as it were double dip'd in love to God is the most excellent Christian 3. Love to God rectifieth all other loves and keeps them in due bounds The same Author hath this other illustration viz. I may love my servant but if I doe not love my child better than I love my Servant I am defective in my love Well then I must love my child but if I do not love my wife better than I love my child I am defective in my love Well then I must love my wife but if I do not love God infinitely more than I love my wife I am defective in my love You shall see saith he a Mother so busie about her child as if she had no love for any one else as if her Eyes were for nothing else but to look upon it and her Mouth for nothing else but to kiss it But now if she must lose her child or her husband her love to her Husband is so great as if she had no love for her child at all So when God and those we most dearly love stand in competition you may soon see the subordination of our love Though let me add this for your encouragement God never calls for the hating of other things for love to himself but he doth most singularly make up in himself whatever any one parts with for him when God requires the banishment of other Objects it is to communicate himself more fully more clearly more sweetly Look over what Martyrology you please I think you will scarce find so much as One dying for Christ any other way than Triumphing whereas many of as eminent Graces as they dye in their Beds little less than despairing What encouragement may this be for the worst of times 4. Our love to God doth more sensibly quiet our hearts than God's love to us for though God's love to us be infinitely greater than our love to God yet till his love to us have drawn out our love to him we do more abuse his kindness than other persons do whom he doth not so love This is most evident in a person just upon the borders of conversion but yet unconverted God is abundant in his love of Benevolence he is now engag'd upon the making of means effectual for his through-regeneration but now in this work there are several things to be done which though they speak greater love on Gods part than ever he before shewed him yet while God is at work the person quarrels with God more than about any former providences of his Life God to tame him brings him under great Afflictions upon which he either flyes in his face or lies sullen at his feet and thinks he may well do so well but God will not thus leave him God follows him with terrors of Conscience the arrows of God stick fast in him and the poyson thereof drinketh up his spirits but he will not yet yield he holds fast his iniquity which he 's as loth to part with as his life and rather hates than loves God for all this kindness so that till he is brought to love God God's love to him doth no way quiet him by which you may plainly see that let Gods love to us be never so great we misinterpret all till we love God again and then let God do what he will Da mihi Domine Sanctum amorem tuum mitte me si vis in ignem inferni Stell de amore dei p. 314 c. he is quiet let his sufferings be next to Hell torments he 'l not allow one hard thought of God Therefore be perswaded to get encrease and exercise this Love to God with all your hearts souls and minds I have been too long already and therefore will be as brief as may be in answering these two Complaints 1. Complaint All that hath been said makes me fear I have no true love to God at all I cannot say I love God more than the Creature I feel my heart more sensibly warping towards the World in the Service of God than springing towards God in my worldly affairs To this I answer by these Distinctions Distinction 1. We must distinguish between the Estimation of our love and the Commotion of it the Commotion may be greater where the Estimation is less One whose love is fixed upon God though he
shall save a soul from death 2. We should shew our love to the souls of others by seeking and endeavouring the encrease of their Faith Holiness and comfort as we should not be content to go to heaven alone but carry along with us as many as we can so we should not satisfie our selves to see them creep lamely thither but gird up the loins of their minds for them that they may more strenuously and with the more chearfulness and comfort walk thither Thus John endeavoured to bring the Saints to higher degrees of fellowship with God 1 John 1.3 That which we have seen said he and heard declare we unto you that you also may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his son Jesus Christ they had this fellowship before in measure and degree but he would bring them to higher degrees of it as doth appear by what follows These things I write unto you that your joy might be full 3. Our love to our selves goes out freely what we have at hand we are ready to take Eccle. 3.13 Eccl. 5.19 when we stand in need of it The wise man observed it to be a Gift which God ordinarily gives the Children of men to eat and to drink and to enjoy the fruit of all his labour that he taketh under the Sun all the days of his life In the like manner we should go forth to others (c) Quomodo in quotidiana prece unquii diximus dimitte nobis debita nostra sicut nos dimittimus debitoribus nostris animo discrepante cum verbis o●atione dissiden●e cum sactis Hieron ad Castorinam If our Neighbour stands in need of forgiveness we should forgive freely as we expect that God or man should forgive us if he need a gift from us we should give freely and open our hearts readily to supply his wants according to the ability God hath given us as we expect that God or man should give to us if we were in the like necessity The Apostle commends the Macedonians for this that when their brethren stood in need of their Charity to their power yea and beyond their power 2 Cor. 8 3. they were willing of themselves To (d) Multum detrahit beneficio qui nolentem tribuisse se ipsa Cunctatione testatus est ac non tam dedisse quam non retinuiste Sen. de Ben. 1 Tim. 6.18 Psal 5.6 give freely and readily adds much to the goodness of a good work the way to be rich in good works is to be ready to distribute willing to communicate 4. We love our selves unfeignedly no man useth to dissemble with himself or endeavours to feed himself with good words only but is very real and cordial to himself in all things And thus it is required we should be to others God desireth truth in the inward parts he would have us true to him and true to one another 1 John 3.18 My little children let us not love in word neither in tongue but in deed and in truth Rom. 12.9 Let love be without dissimulation Outward and dissembled love is little better than inward and real hatred If blessing be only in the mouth cursing is not like to be far from the heart Psal 2.4 They bless with their mouth but they curse inwardly Such a blessing with the mouth had Christ from the Pharisees in this chapter Master we know thou art true and teachest the way of God in truth ver 16. neither carest thou for any man for thou regardest not the person of men very well said but Jesus perceived their wickedness ver 18. They came with words of love and respect to cover the wickedness of their hearts and wanted that inward affection that Titus is commended for toward the Corinthians 2 Cor. 7.15 5. We do not only love our selves truely and sincerely but with some fervency there is always some heat as well as heart in love to our selves you may observe it ordinarily that when self is concerned in any thing that affection which is moved about it hath some heat in it if it be anger there is heat in anger if it be love there is heat in love Indeed all men are very apt to exceed and go much beyond their bounds when self is concerned as if they were to love themselves with all their hearts with all their soul 1 Sam. 18.1 and with all their mind however it is allowable that a man be warm in love to himself especially to his soul which is the best part of himself Well then our love to others must not be cold when the matter of love is good it is good to be zealously affected in it 2 Cor. 7.7 Gal. 4.18 When Paul understood the fervent mind of the Corinthians towards him as he was a servant of Christ for the good of their souls it did affect him with great joy Let our love to others be first pure and then it is not like to be too fervent 1 Pet. 1.22 Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently 6. We love our selves very tenderly No man ever yet hated his own flesh Eph. 4.29 but nourisheth it and cherisheth it If the body be wounded or pained how tender are we of it the eye will look to it very carefully and it may be weep over it the hand will diligently keep off any thing that might hurt or offend it and is ready to apply any thing to it for the cure of it with the greatest tenderness that may be After the same manner we ought to express our love to others it is required of us that we be kind one to another Eph. 4 32. tender-hearted 1 When others are under sufferings we should be so tender as to have a quick sense of them in our selves Rom. 12.15 Heb. 13.3 Others sufferings should work compassion and cause a fellow-feeling in us so as to make us weep with them that weep and to be bound with them that are in bonds When Nehemiah heard of the affliction of his people though he himself was in a better condition he sate down and wept Neh. 1.4 and mourned certain days We see that Beasts themselves are touched with the sufferings of any of their kind if one of the herd make an outcry or declare his sufferings by his moaning how sensible are the rest of it How do they come about him and shew their readiness to yield him help if it were in their power How much more should humanity cause men to shew what a tender regard they have of the sufferings and afflictions of other men 2 We should be tenderly affected towards others when they are overtaken in a fault and not be too (e) Solemus propriorum clementes esse judices alienorum verò stricti inquisitores Greg. Nezianz Gal. 6.1 rigid and severe in dealing with them and the more tender
the adjective signifies Esau's insatiable and greedy appetite after Jacob's red potage The like also is implied in his omitting the word potage which notes the hast and greediness of his lust increased by the red colour whence he was called Edom. And what was it that Esau's insatiable lust thus longs for that follows v. 34. potage of Lentiles Which were a kind of pulse much like to Vetches or small Pease very course food such as men in their sorrow and mourning were wont to eat O! what a vile profane wretch was Esau to part with his celestial birth-right and dignity for a mess of such course potage well might Moses conclude thus Esau despised his birth-right An insatiable greedy thirst after any inferior good argues a predominant love to the world 3. Prop. To love the World is to have the heart bound up in and made one with the world All love tends to Union and to have the Heart planted in and incorporated with the World argues a predominant love thereto Thus in our text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love not the world i. e. Let not your hearts be implanted glued or nailed to the world let not your thoughts and affections run so deep into the world as to become one with it The more any love the world the more their hearts are united to and incorporated with it The Alligation and adherence of the heart to the Creature is the natural effect of predominant love thereto Love to the world is the nail or glue whereby the heart is fastened to it Thus Hos 4.17 Ephraim is joyned to Idols 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is fastened or glued so as to become one therewith Whereby the prophet teacheth us that Israel's heart was bound fast by indissoluble bonds to his Idols so that it could not be plucked thence 4. Prop. To have the heart under the Dominion of the World argues predominant love thereto Such is the nature of Love that it subjects the Lover to the thing beloved specially if it be loved for it self It s true love to God gives us a Dominion over all things beneath us but love to the world brings the heart into subjection to it O! what an imperious tyrannick Soveraignty has the world over those that love it what slaves are worldlings to the world through love to it whatever the heart inordinately cleaves unto it is under the dominion of so Hos 4.11 whoredom and wine and new wine take away the heart There is a great emphase in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will take away which notes first a contest or conflict and then the conquest which these sensual objects make over the heart that adheres to them 5. Prop. To spend the best of our time thoughts studies care and endeavours for the procuring or conserving worldly goods denotes predominant love to the world This seems to be the case of some carnal Jews after the return from Babylon Hag. 1.4 Is it time for you O ye to dwell in your sieled houses and this house lye wast In your sieled houses or houses curiously wainscotted and adorned not only for use but luxury and pleasure Whence it is aptly rendred by the LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As if he had said is this time a time for you O ye sensualists to spend so much time study care cost and other expences in trimming and adorning your stately houses not only for use but delight and luxury whiles the house of the Lord lies wast this piece of Love to the world our Lord cautions professors of these last days against Luke 21.34 And take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness and cares of this life and so that day come upon you unawares 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to overcharge answers to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to harden as it appears by the LXX on Exod. 8.15.32 which is also rendred by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 10.1 so that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here signifies such an overcharging of the heart with complacential thoughts and amusements about worldly things as takes away all sense of Divine concerns thence it follows with surfeiting and drunkenness These two denote all sensual pleasures Then follows and cares of this life hereby is signified all distracting distrustful anxious cares about provision for this life which are elsewhere stiled the cares of this world as Mat. 13.22 this part of predominant Love to the world is termed Rom. 8.5 minding the things of the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to mind according to Paul's Phrascologie doth not so much regard the simple act of the mind as the complacential thoughts studious contrivements and sollicitous cares of the heart such as naturally follow a carnal constitution or frame of heart and bespeak the man to be under the Dominion of predominant love to the world For when all a mans thoughts inclinations affections studies and cares pay tribute to the flesh what is he but a slave to the flesh thence it follows ver 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the complacential amusement contrivement study and care of the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here is the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 6.5 the figment or contrivement of the heart These carnal world-minders are well described by Paul Phil. 3.19 who mind earthly things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. They amuse themselves in the the complacential thoughts and study of terrene things they have no gust savour or relish but of such they are under the serpent's curse to lick the dust 6. Prop. Another branch of predominant love to the world is to make the Creature the object or matter not only of our use but also of our supreme fruition complacence and satisfaction So much is implied in our text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make not the world the object of your entire contentment acquiescence and sati●faction draw not your choicest comforts and delights from terrene goods There is some kind of contentment and complacence in worldly goods which may consist with the love of God but when the heart makes any worldly good the entire or main object of its fruition and satisfaction this denotes predominant love to the world For Divine Wisdom hath put this Law or Order into things that all Creatures are to be the object of our Vse but God himself the supreme object of our fruition and satisfaction whence to make any Creature the chief matter of our fruition and satisfaction what is it but to violate and pervert the order of the Creation and set up the Creature in the place of the Creator and doth not this bespeak predominant love to the Creatures This our Lord elegantly describes in that parable of the rich glutton Luke 12.15.19 you have the scope of the parable v. 15. beware of Covetousness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here as elsewhere signifies an avaricious greedy humor or desire of having abundance not only for use but to pamper lust The
this world That they would take diligent heed that the world do not insinuate and wind it self into their hearts O! I beseech you keep your hearts far from the walls of this pest-house this love-polluting world keep your love in Heaven while your persons are ingaged in the world Let not your hearts smell of the smoke of this lower house but of Heaven beware that your love do not make its nest in this world but let it take wing and rest no where short of Heaven where its Treasure is Follow not the guises of this soul-polluting world Let this Idol world be nothing to you but God be all in all Take heed that the multiplicity of worldly affairs choak not the sense of God remember your best riches consist in the poverty of your desires Make use of prosperity to prepare you for afflictions know the dearest things must be parted with when God calls for them and therefore keep your hearts loose from them bring your natural desires into a narrow compass but let your hearts be enlarged towards God amuse not your hearts as children at the glistering outside of things but fear a snare in every comfort feed much on Spiritual delights and that will kill carnal pleasures Let your hearts be as the Mother-pearl which they say receives no water but what comes from Heaven let your hearts be open towards Heaven but shut against the world let not this great Idol enter into God's Temple 4 Lastly let us all be exhorted to be in nothing more curious than about the right placing of our Love that it be fixed on its right Object and in a right Manner Let us get a stamp of Grace on all our love and then it will become Divine Let us love nothing greatly but what we shall love for ever It was the saying of a serious Jansenist I would never begin to love that which one day I must cease to love Let us labour after the highest strain of love to God which is to love God for himself and to love our selves in God Our best Being lies in God and therefore our best love is to love our selves in God As one extreme heat burns out another so let our love to God burn out our love to the World Now is the time OR Instructions for the present improving the season of Grace Serm. IV. 2 Cor. 6.1 2. We then as workers together with him beseech you also that you receive not the Grace of God in vain for he saith I have heard thee in a time accepted and in the day of Salvation have I succoured thee behold now is the accepted time behold now is the day of Salvation Sect. 1 PAul's Epistles excell both in matter and in method Their matter is principally reconciliation through Christ What subject so sweet so profitable Their method is by way of Doctrine and use a method which if it be despised Paul's writings cannot be duly valued In the fore-going verse the last words of it he positively asserted the great doctrine of Reconciliation through Christ and doctrinally propounded it in these words He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him This was his Doctrine In these two verses immediately following he applieth the doctrine We then as workers together with him beseech you that ye receive not the grace of God in vain for he saith I have heard thee in a time accepted c. In which two verses there are contained these three parts 1. The first is an exhortation that they would not receive the Grace of God in vain or a caution against their receiving it in vain 2. Secondly the reasons that the Apostle produceth to back the exhortation Those reasons are two The first is the reason of his propounding this exhortation that is because he was a worker together with God The second is the reason of their imbracing this exhortation and that is in the 2 verse For he saith I have heard thee in a time accepted and in the day of Salvation have I succoured thee as it is in Isa 49.8 3. Thirdly you have here the accommodation or the application of this second reason unto the present state of the Corinthians behold now saith the Apostle is the accepted time now is the day of Salvation that God of old promised unto Christ Ye enjoy it ye live under it and therefore you must now improve it to the best advantage of your souls Now we shall go over these three parts in the way of explication that so we may the more profitably handle that part which I principally design to insist upon 1. We shall explain the exhortation or the caution that he layeth down which is Not to receive the Grace of God in vain Here we shall explain two hings 1. We shall shew you what is meant by the grace of God 2. What is meant by receiving or not receiving the grace of God in vain First what is meant by the Grace of God You are here to understand by grace the Doctrine of the Gospel frequently Sect. 2 and fitly in the Scripture called grace as in Eph. 3.2 Col. 1.6 Act. 20.32 Tit. 2.11 and in sundry other Scriptures the doctrine of the Gospel is called grace And it is called by that name for these three reasons 1. Because it is graciously and out of the free favour of God bestowed Why it is bestowed at all 't is from grace why it is bestowed upon one age or place rather than other 't is only from God's free grace and favour Rom. 16.25 26. It is there said to be a mystery kept secret since the world began but now made manifest And that in Isa 65.1 I said Behold me to a nation that was not called by my name To these God was pleased by the gospel to say Behold me He was found of those that sought him not God 's argument to bestow the gospel of life upon a person or a family or a place is merely from his own free good will 2. The gospel is called grace because the subject matter of the gospel is grace Whatever it is the gospel promiseth whatever priviledge or saving benefit is contained in the gospel is all from grace we are justified freely by his grace Rom. 3.24 Forgiveness of sin it is said to be from his rich grace Eph. 1.7 Eternal life it is the free gift of God Effectual vocation saving conversion is meerly from grace We are called according to his purpose and grace not according to our works 2 Tim. 1.9 To you it is given to believe Phil. 1.29 God giveth repentance 2 Tim. 2.25 he called me by his grace Gal. 3.15 1 Pet. 3.7 the Saints are heirs of grace Christ himself that obtained all the priviledges of the gospel for us was sent as a token of free grace free favour through the tender mercy of God Luk 1.7.8 Joh 3.16 whereby the day-spring from on high hath
Minister could not get into thy Soul Death never cometh without a warrant yet it often comes without a warning We do not live by patent but we live at pleasure How knowest thou that the candle of the Ministry shall shine one Sabbath longer The message shall alwaies live but the messenger is alwaies dying The clods of the Earth may soon stop that mouth that so frequently and unfruitfully hath given thee the word of life He the light now of his place and of his people may be blown out by violence as well as burnt out by death Thou canst not say but God may soon make that ear of thine deaf that now thou stoppest God may soon blind those eyes which now thou shuttest It is a peradventure whether God will ever give repentance or no. God hath made many promises to repentance but he hath made none of repentance If to day thou saist thou wilt not to morrow thou maist say thou canst not pray It is just with God that he who while he liveth forgets God when he dies should forget himself I have heard of a profane miscreant that being put upon speedy repentance and turning to God scoffingly answered if I do but say three words when I come to dye Miserere mei Domine Lord have mercy upon me I am sure to be happy This miserable wretch shortly after falling from his horse and receiving thereby a deadly wound had indeed time to speak three words as the relation informed me but those three words were these Diabolus capiat omnia Let the Devil take all Thou dost not know what thy last words shall be the very motions of thy tongue and of thy heart are all in the hands of that God whose grace thou hast despised 7. It is a day That requireth present improvement because it is followed with a night a night that is dark as pitch The night cometh wherein no man can work So saith our Lord Joh. 9.4 There is neither work nor invention in the grave In the dark thou mayest see to bewail thy not working in the light but in the dark there is no working Sorrow then will not help thee couldst thou make hell to swim with thy tears Thy tears are only of worth in time Put not off your working till the time wherein you must leave work It is perfect madness not to think of beginning to work till the time of working is at an end Nemo finitis nundin●s exercet mercaturam What man after the fair will go then to buy and sell There is no negotiation but in the time of the fair the season of grace The spiritual manna of grace is only to be gathered in the six days of thy life The time after this is a time of rest wherein there is no more work to be done to procure Salvation If this be the day of thy death tomorrow cannot be the day of thy repentance It is miserable to have that to do for lack of time which is to do for loss of time Thus I have shewn you how we are put upon present improving the season of Grace As 't is here termed a day or in respect of the nature of the Season Sect. 13 2. Secondly In regard of the workers in this day we are urged from hence to a present improving of the season of grace 1. How little have we wrought in this day of grace What a pitiful account and yet an account must be given of this Day can we give unto God of thousands of Sabbaths and repetitions of ordinances and opportunities of life that we have enjoyed You have been perhaps long in the world and under the means of grace but can you say you have lived long 'T is one thing for passengers in a ship to be a great while tost in the Sea and another thing for them to sail a great way You have been long in the world tossed up and down with many temptations and impetuous corruptions and violent affections but which of you have sailed much or gone forward in your course to Heaven with any considerable progress Little is to be seen in the copies of your lives besides blots and empty spaces Much paper hath been spent with wide lines Had you not need now towards the end of the side to write the closer to redeem the time as the Apostle expresseth it Eph. 5.16 We should redeem our time out of the hands of those that have taken it captive out of the clutches of those vain employments that have so often taken it captive Now in all redemptions there is the laying down a price for the party that is redeemed But what is that price you are to lay down for your time when it is to be redeemed I will tell you Id quod perdis pretium est saith Augustin That which you lose in your worldly employments in your idle recreations in your vain visits in your exorbitant eatings and drinkings that time that you take from these to give to God and your Souls that is the price that you lay down for the redeeming of seasons for your Souls It is miserable for our work to be undone for want of time when we are dying when it is undone for the loss of time while we are living 2. How great is the wo of those whose Day is done and yet their work is not done but still to do You have seen their end upon Earth but you have not heard their cries and their self-bewailings in hell How many have been cut off before your eyes who ceased to be before they began to live Improve examples lest you become examples Your Schooling is cheap when it is at the cost of another Let the lashes of Divine severity that have fallen upon others quicken thee in thy Spiritual pace and travelling towards Heaven Why should God stay for you rather than for them Thou canst not mispend thy time at so cheap a rate as they did by whom God hath warned thee Hell is not so full of Souls as it is of delayed purposes What would not lost Souls give for a crum of that time of which now in this world they make Orts If the foresight of their tears for neglecting the Day of grace fetched tears from Christ Luk. 19.41.42 How great shall the feeling be of the Eternal effects of their inexcusable folly How Exuberant but unfruitful shall be the flood of their own tears for their former slothfulness never enough to be bewailed because never at all to be repaired Surely a small loss could not draw tears from so great a Person as the Son of God 3. Many by beginning betimes in the morning of their day have done more work than thou a delayer canst now accomplish They should provoke thee to a holy jealousie They setting forth for Heaven in the morning have travelled further in that morning than thou hast done in that long Summer's day wherein thou hast been slothful What a shame is it that some should be
mens speech all the day no jest so idle no story so common and fruitless but will pass at our tables and in our private conference Many spend the best of their time no better than the Idolatrous Athenians did their worst in nothing else but either telling or hearing some new thing What news is the most innocent question wherewith I would I could not say most men fill up the vacancies of a Sabbath And is that sinful will you say was it not in Nehemiah's question Nehem. 1.2 Hanani one of my brethren came he and certain men of Judah and I asked them concerning the Jews that had escaped which were of the Captivity and concerning Jerusalem c. presently what news And why may not Christians ask the same question yes they may when they ask it with Nehemiah's spirit to Nehemiah's end sc that we may get our hearts sutably affected with the miseries or prosperity of the Church of God abroad or at home see what a gracious use he makes of his news in that and in the following chapter at your leisure go ye and do likewise and it shall be your honour But to tell news and to inquire after news meerly for novelty sake and to fill up time for want of better discourse is a miserable idling out of precious time which might be spent to mutual edification whereas by ordinary and unsavoury discourses which are usually heard amongst us people do edifie one another indeed but it is Ad Gehennam they edifie one another to hell You that pretend to be the Lords people be more jealous for the Lords day and honour The Lord takes pleasure in his people Oh let the Saints be joyful in glory Psal 149.4 5. Let your speech be always seasoned with salt especially on Gods day that you may season your children and servants which otherwise will be corrupted by such rotten communication O let your prayer be all times but especially on the Sabbath day that o holy David set a watch O Lord before my mouth and keep the door of my lips the sabbath is Gods glory let your tongues be so too The like caution we ought to use about our thoughts by the rule of proportion they being the language of our hearts 8th Rule and as audible in the ears of God as our words are to mens yea whereas men understand our hearts by our words God understand our words by our hearts Moses did set bounds about the mount that neither man nor beast might break in whatsoever touch't the mountain must dye Exod. 19 12. 19. so must we set bounds about our heart that neither humane nor brutish distractions may break in There is death or life in it and therefore of all keepings keep thy heart Prov. 4 23. for out of it are the issues of life The heart indeed is not so fenceable as the mountain but the more open it lieth the stronger-guard had we need to set upon it and to pray for a guard from heaven as David Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart Psal 19 ult be acceptable in thy sight O Lord my strength and my redeemer If vain or vile thoughts break in upon thee do as the ravished virgin was to do in the Law cry out to God and thou shalt not be held guilty Deut. 22.27 Christians this caution is of a special concern to you O Jerusalem wash thine heart from wickedness that thou mayst be saved Jerem. 4.14 how long shall vain thoughts lodge within thee Resolve the Text into its integrals and it will afford you some such observables 1. Thoughts will defile the heart as well as deeds Wash thy heart 2. This defilement will damn the soul wash that thou mayst be saved 3. The reason is implied they are wickedness wash thine heart from wickedness 4. All this evil is even in vain thoughts as well as in vile thoughts how long shall thy vain thoughts c. 5. Therefore we must wash our hearts from vain thoughts as well as from wicked and blasphemous thoughts Hence I infer 6. If this should be the work of a Christian every day how much more on Gods day the purer the paper the fouler the stain and blot Christians look to your hearts Further take notice of the appropriation Thy own ways Thy own pleasure● thy own words Object And are not holy ways and holy pleasures and holy words our own as well as such as are carnal and sensual yes they are but God speaks here according to our sense and apprehension from whence Note how brutish and sensual laps't man is in his notions and apprehensions of things that he can call nothing his own but what relateth to the flesh H●se● 8.13 I have written to him saith God the great things of my law but they were accounted a strange thing Alienum forreign and of no concernment to himself at all And let this also serve for a tenth rule In our sanctifying of the Sabbath we must be specially careful to distinguish what is Gods and what is our own Indeed we must distinguish between what is Satans Our own and Gods There be sinful wicked pleasures ways words thoughts I say wicked and sinful in themselves and these are properly the Devils pleasures the Devils ways the Devils words and thoughts and these are lawful at no time much less on Gods time Gods day and the Devils imployment do not well agree And there are our own pleasures ways words and thoughts such as concern the present life relating to the body and outward man These may be lawful on our days six days shalt thou labour and do all thy work but are not lawful on the Sabbath day In it thou shalt do no manner of work c. save what is of necessity or Charity And then there are Gods pleasures ways words and thoughts i. e. of Gods command and such as lye in a direct tendency to the worship and service of God in publique private or secret and these only we may and must do and mind upon the Sabbath if we mix any of the Devils or our own pleasures and profits with Gods we pollute the holy things of God and profane his Sabbath This is the sum of what time will give me leave to say upon the Negative part of this Model only before I dismiss it let me add this short note of observation that if what hath been spoken even on this negative part be the mind and will of God concerning the sanctifying of the Sabbath then may the generality of Christians lye down in the dust and smiting upon their thigh with brinish tears upon their cheeks confess with a Pious Honourable Lady upon her dying Bed O I never kept a Sabbath in all my life The Lord teach us so to lay this sin to heart that God may never lay it to our charge Having thus briefly dispatcht the Negative part of Sabbath-Sanctification contained in this model I
The Word of the Lord is tried he is a buckler to all that trust in him John 3.15 That whosoever believeth in him should not perish Unbelief is a God-affronting Sin 1 John 5.10 He that believeth not God hath made him a lyer it is a Soul murdering Sin John 3.36 He that believeth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Thus in reading observe those Scriptures which do rem acu tangere touch upon your particular case Although all the Bible must be Read yet those Texts which point most directly to your condition be sure to put a special Star upon Take special notice of the examples in Scripture (o) Praecepta docent exempla movent make the examples of others living Sermons to you 1. Observe the examples of God's Judgments upon Sinners They have been hanged up in Chains in terrorem How severely hath God punished proud men Direct 19 Nebuchadnezzar was turned to grass Herod eat up with Vermin How hath God plagued Idolaters Numb 25.3 4 9. 1 Kings 14.9 10. What a swift witness hath he been against lyers Act. 5.5 10. These examples are set up as Sea-marks to avoid 1 Cor. 10.11 Jude ver 7. 2. Observe the examples of God's mercy to Saints Jeremy was preserved in the Dungeon the three Children in the Furnace Daniel in the Lyons den These examples are props to Faith spurs to Holiness Direct 20 Leave not off reading in the Bible till you find your hearts warmed Psal 119.93 I will never forget thy precepts for with them thou hast quickned me Read the Word not only as an History but labour to be affected with it Let it not only inform you but inflame you Jer. 23.29 Is not my Word like as a fire saith the Lord Go not from the Word till you can say as those Disciples Luk. 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us Set upon the practice of what you read (p) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Psal 119.66 I have done thy Direct 21 Commandments A student in Physick doth not satisfie himself to read over a systeme or body of Physick but he falls upon practising Physick the life-blood of Religion lies in the practick part So in the Text He shall read in the Book of the Law all the days of his life that he may learn to keep all the Words of this Law and these Statutes to do (q) Tantum scimus quantum operamu● them Christians should be walking Bibles Zenophon said many read Lycurgus his Laws but few observed them The Word written is not only a rule of knowledge but a rule of obedience * Bis memin ● legis qui memor est ●peris Bill Autholog it is not only to mend our sight but to mend our pace David calls God's Word a lamp to his feet Psal 119.105 It was not only a light to his eyes to see by but to his feet to walk by by practice we trade the talent of knowledge and turn it to profit This is a blessed reading of Scripture when we fly from the Sins which the Word forbids and espouse the duties which the Word commands reading without practice will be but a torch to light men to Hell Make use of Christ's Prophetical Office He is the Lyon of the tribe of Judah Direct 22 to whom it is given to open the Book of God and loose the seals (r) A canorum Dei revelator Pa●eus thereof Rev. 5.5 Christ doth so teach as he doth quicken John 8.12 I am the light of the world he that followeth me shall have lumen vitae the light of life The Philosopher saith light and heat increase together (s) Calor lux concr●scunt 't is true here where Christ comes into the Soul with his light there is the heat of Spiritual life going along with it Christ gives us Spiritualem gustum a taste of the Word Psal 119.102 103. Thou hast taught me how sweet are thy words to my tast it is one thing to read a promise another thing to tast it Such as would be Scripture-Proficients let them get Christ to be their Teacher Luke 24.45 Then opened he their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures Christ did not only open the Scriptures but opened their understanding (t) Cathedram habet in caelo qui corda docet in ter●d Aug. Tread often upon the threshold of the Sanctuary Wait diligently on a rightly constituted Ministry Prov. 8.34 Blessed is the man that heareth me waiting diligently at my Gates Ministers are God's Interpreters it is their work to expound and open dark places of Scripture We read of Pitchers and Direct 23 Lamps within the Pitchers Judg. 7.16 Ministers are earthen Pitchers 2 Cor. 4.7 But these Pitchers have Lamps within them to light Souls in the dark Pray that God will make you profit Isa 47.18 I am the Lord thy God Direct 24 which teacheth thee to profit make David's prayer Psal 119.18 Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law Pray to God to take off the vail on the Scripture that you may understand it and the vail on your heart that you may believe it Pray that God will not only give you his Word as a rule of Holiness but his Grace as a principle of Holiness Implore the guidance of God's Spirit Nehem. 9.10 Thou gavest them thy Good spirit to instruct (u) Christu● sedens ad d xtram Dei misit Vicariam Vim spiritus sancti Tertul. them Though the Ship hath a Compass to Sail by and store of Tackling yet without a gale of wind it cannot sail though we have the Word written as our Compass to sail by and make use of our endeavours as the tackling yet unless the Spirit of God blow upon us we cannot sail with profit When the Almighty is as dew unto us then we grow as the Lilly and our beauty is as the Olive-tree Hos 45.6 Beg the anointing of the Holy (x) 1 John 2.20 Ghost One may see the figures on a Dial but he cannot tell how the day goes unless the Sun shine we may read many Truths in the Bible but we cannot know them savingly till God's Spirit shine in our Souls 2 Cor. 4.6 The Spirit is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation Ephes 1.17 When Philip joined himself to the Eunuch's Chariot then he understood Scripture Acts 8.35 When God's Spirit joins himself to the Word then it will be effectual to Salvation These rules observed the Word written would through God's blessing be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an ingraffed Word Jam. 1.22 A good Cyens grafted into a bad stock changeth the nature of it and makes it bear sweet and generous fruit So when the Word is graffed savingly into mens hearts it doth sanctifie them and make them bring forth the sweet fruits of Righteousness Phil. 1.11 Thus I have answered this question how we may read the Scriptures
God 3. Odes or spiritual Songs may belong to natural things what we ought to debate discuss viz. The Race Order Harmony and Continuance of the World and God's infinite Wisdom manifested in it 2. Some distinguish these according to the Authors of them 1. Psalms they are the Composures of holy David 2. Hymns they are the Songs of some other excellent men recorded in Scripture as Moses Heman Asaph c. 3. Spiritual Songs they are Odes of some other holy and good men not mentioned in Scripture as the Song of Ambrose Nepos and others 3. Some aver that these several speeches mentioned in the Text answer the Hebrew distinction of Psalms Among them there were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mizmorim which treated of various and different Subjects 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which only mentioned the Praises of the most High 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which were Songs more artificially and musically composed and some Divines observe were sung with the help of a musical Instrument But I may add Are not all these several species mentioned to prefigure the Plenty and the Joy which is reserved for the Saints within the Vail when they shall join in consort with the glorious Angels in singing their perpetual Hallelujahs to their glorious Creator 3 The manner of Singing Our Text saith with Melody with inward joy and tripudlation of Soul If the Tongue make the Pause the Heart must make the Elevation The Apostle saith to the Colossians Colos 3.16 We must sing with grace which is as some expound it 1. Cum gratiarum actione with giving of thanks And indeed thankfulness is the very Selah of this duty that which puts an accent upon the Musick and sweetness of the Voice and then we sing melodiously when we warble out the Praises of the Lord. 2. With gracefulness with a becoming and graceful dexterity And this brings both profit and pleasure to the Hearers as Davenant observes Psalms are not the Comedies of Venus or the jocular Celebrations of a wanton Adonis but they are the Spiritual ebullitions of a composed Soul to the incomprehensible Jehovah with real grace God's Spirit must breathe in this service Et prodess● veliat d●lect●re Dav. Cantemus cum gratia à Spiri●u S●ncto donata Chrysost Hoc quod praecinitur sine gratià D●i impleri non potest Oec●m Sine corde nulla est modalatio Bod. here we must act our joy our confidence our delight Singing is the triumph of a gracious Soul the Child joying in the praises of his Father In singing of Psalms the gracious heart takes wings and mounts up to God to joyn with the Celestial Quire It is grace which sits the heart for and sweetens the heart in this duty And where this qualification is wanting this service is rather an hurry than a duty it is rather a disturbance than any obedience 4. The Master of the Chore the Preceptor that is the Heart We must look to the Heart in singing that it be purged by the Spirit and that it be replete with spiritual Affection He plays the Hypocrite who brings not the heart to this Duty One observes There is no Tune without the Heart Singing takes its proper rise from the Heart the Voice is only the further progress And indeed God is the Creator of the whole man and therefore he will be praised not only with our Tongues but with our Hearts The Apostle tells us He will sing with the spirit 1 Cor. 14.15 And David informs us his heart was ready to sing and give praise N●n vox sed votum non musica cerdula sed cor Aug. De modo benè vivendi Bern. Psal 57.7 8. 108.1 Augustine admonisheth us It is not a Musical-string but a Working-heart is harmonious The Virgin Mary sings her Magnificat with her heart Luke 14.47 And Bernard tells us in a Tract of his That when we sing Psalms let us take heed that we have the same thing in our Mind that we warble forth in our Tongue and that our Song and our Heart do not run several ways If we in singing only offer the Calves of our Lips it will too much resemble a Carnal and a Jewish service 5. The End of the Duty To the Lord. So saith the Text viz. To Jesus Christ who is here principally meant Our singing must not serve our Gain or our Luxury or our Fancy but our Christ our Lord and dear Redeemer In this Duty it is his Praises we must mainly and chiefly celebrate And most deservedly we magnifie the true God by Psalms and Singing when the Heathens celebrate their false and dung-hill-Gods Jupiter Neptune and Apollo with Songs and Hymns One well observes Singing of Psalms is part of Divine Worship Deus est canendi Vnicus Scopus Bod. and of our Homage and Service due to the great Jehovah Bodius takes notice that God is the true and only scope of all our singing And truly if the Spirit of God be in us he will be steddily aimed at by us Thus Deborah and Barak sang their Triumphal Song to the Lord Judges 5.3 The several parts of the Text being thus opened they may be set together again in this Divine and Excellent Truth Doct. Non franges vocem sed frange voluntatem non serves tantùm Consonantiam Vocum sed concordium Mo um Bern. Aug. In the Ordinance of Singing we must not make Noise but Musick and the Heart must make Melody to the Lord. So the Text. Augustine complained of some in his time That they minded more the Tune than the Truth more the Manner than the Matter more the Governing of the Voice than the Raisedness of the Mind And this was a great offence to him Singing of Psalms must only be the joyous breathing of a raised Soul and here the cleanness of the Heart is more considerable than the clearness of the Voice In this Service we must study more to act the Christian than the Musitian Many in singing of Psalms are like the Organs whose Pipes are filled only with Wind. The Apostle Col. 3.16 tells us we must sing with our Heart We must sing David's Psalms with David's Spirit One tells us God is a Spirit and he will be worshipped in Spirit even in this duty Now to traverse the Truth 1. We will shew the Divine Authority of this Ordinance 2. We will shew the Sweetness of it 3. The Universal Practice of it 4. We shall shew the Honours God hath put upon this Ordinance 5. And then come to the main Case 6. And make Application For the first We shall shew the Divine Authority of this Ordinance 1. By Scripture-Command 2. By Scripture-Argument 3. By Scripture-Pattern 4. By Scripture-Prophesie 1. From Scripture-Precept And here we have divers commands laid upon us both in the Old and New Testament David who among his honourable Titles obtains this to be called the Sweet Singer of Israel 2 Sam. 23.1 he frequently calls upon himself Psal 7.17 I
wont of the Puritans which were the most pretious Christians to Eccho forth the praises of the great Jehovah in this Duty especially upon the Lord's Day Then was there a holy Quire in their houses their Children were the little birds to sing the praises of the Creator the Servants likewise joining in the harmony to make up a fuller Musick But alas Now the voice of the Bride singing to her Beloved is not heard in the places of our abode there is silence instead of singing and prating instead of praising frivolous discourses instead of joyous praises It might behove us to ponder how much of Heaven do we lose in neglecting this Service In singing Psalms we begin the work of Heaven In Heaven we read of the Song of Moses and of the Lamb Rev. 15.3 And of a new Song Rev. 14.3 And the Angels though they have not Tongues yet they have voices to sing the praises of the Most High and therefore that this Heavenly service is so neglected and unexercised is a lamentation and shall be for a Lamentation Ezek. 19.14 This likewise checks those who formalize in this Duty who Act a Part not a Vse 4 Duty they make a noise and not Musick and more provoke the Eyes than please the Ears of God Hierome pathetically Exclaims against those Formalists We must not saith he Act as Players who stretch their throats to accommodate their Tongues to the matter in hand but we must sing Psalms as Saints praising God not only with our Voice but with our Heart not only with a sweet voice but with a melting heart Bernard makes two conditions of grateful singing 1. We must sing purely minding what we sing nor must we act or think any thing besides there must be no vain or vagrant thoughts no dissonancy between the Mind and the Tongue 2. We must sing strenuously not idly not sleepily or perfunctorily we must sing ex animo most heartily and Energetically Vse 5 Let us get an interest in Christ If we are not in Christ we are certainly out of tune The singing of a sinner is natural like the singing of a Bird. But the singing of a Saint is musical like the singing of a Child Saints in singing perform a grateful duty But sinners offer a vain oblation Isa 1.13 It is Christ must put an acceptation upon this service as well as others Here the Altar must sanctify the gift Christ perfumes the prayers of the Saints Rev. 5.8 And he must articulate the singing of the Saints Indeed he alone can turn our tune into melody and though in our selves we have Esau's garments yet he can give us Iacobs voice We are accepted in Christ in this offer of love Therefore let us get into Christ he can raise our voice in singing to a pleasing Elevation Let us be in him and then our steps shall be metrical our pauses musical and our very Cadencies shall be Seraphical Our singing of Psalms shall be the musick of the Sphears Vse 6 Let us sometimes raise our hearts in holy Contemplation Let us think of the Musick of the Bride-Chamber There shall be no crack't strings displeasing sounds harsh voices nothing to abate or remit our melody there shall be no willows to hang up our harps upon Psal 137.2 In the Bride-Chamber there shall be no sorrow to interfere when we sing the song of the Lamb Rev. 21.3 No grief to jar our harmony These pleasing Meditations should sometimes possess and sweeten our Spirits that while we are walking in the galleries Cant. 7.5 we may be nearer to the Palace of the great King Psal 45.15 How ought We to Improve our Baptism Serm. X. Acts 2.38 Be Baptized every one of you in the Name of Jesus Christ for the Remission of Sins THis Chapter gives us an account of the pouring out of the Spirit according to the promise presently after Christ's Ascension as soon as the Spirit was poured out the Apostles were enabled to speak in various Languages to the astonishment and wonder of the Hearers This was for the Glory of God the Confirmation of the Gospel and to authorize them as Special Messengers sent by Christ At the sight of this Miracle some wonder others mock as if this speaking with divers Tongues had been a confused jabbering that proceeded from the fumes of Wine rather than the gift and operation of the Holy Spirit To satisfie both Peter declares in a Sermon the effect and intent of the Miracle proving Jesus whom they had Crucified to be Lord and Christ When they heard this many of the most obstinate among them were pricked at the heart and relented An happy Sermon it was that Peter preached it brought in thousands of Souls to Christ the first hansel of the power of the Spirit and success of the Gospel 'T is good to observe what course they took for ease and relief after this piercing and brokenness of heart they said to Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren what shall we do This is the usual Question of men under a sound and thorow Conviction To their serious Question Peter makes a seasonable Answer v. 38. 'T is the part of a good Physician not only to discover the Disease but also to prescribe a Remedy especially should spiritual Physicians be tender of broken-hearted Sinners and willing and ready to give them Counsel In Peter's Direction and Counsel to them observe first What he perswades them to do Secondly By what Motive and Argument what they should do and what they should receive In the Advice he perswades them to Repentance and to be Baptized in the Name of Christ The latter we are upon For Explaining it we may enquire First Why is Baptism mentioned rather than Faith and other things more internal and necessary to Salvation I answer Certainly Faith is implied for Mark 16.16 He that Believeth and is Baptized shall be Saved Baptism is an open and real Profession of Christ Crucified So that Be Baptized in the Name of Jesus Christ is as much as Be Baptized Believing on the Name of the Lord Jesus for the Remission of Sins Secondly Baptism is mentioned because it was the visible Rite of receiving Proselytes to Christ Now it imported them who were convinced as Persecutors to turn Professors if they would have ease for their Consciences and therefore not only to Believe with the Heart but to make open Profession of Faith in Christ Rom. 10.10 Quest 2. Why in the Name of Christ only the Father and the Holy Ghost is not mentioned according to the Prescript-form Mat. 28.19 I answer he speaks not of the Form of Baptism but the use and end thereof Now the great use of Baptism is that we may have benefit by the Mystery of Redemption by Christ therefore elsewhere we are said to be Baptized into Jesus Christ Rom. 5.3 And to put on Christ Gal. 3.27 He is the Head of the Church and by Baptism we are planted into his Mystical Body This being
attained so much knowledg in the Principles of the Christian Religion as that the Heathens might be admitted to Baptism and the Christian Children to the Lord's Supper To this custom some of the Learned judge that Peter alludes in 1 Pet. 3.21 not the putting away of the filth of the flesh but the Answer of a good Conscience towards God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 3.15 A●lusio fact● ad mor●m veterem Catechistarum ir●e rogantium Catec●umenos a daltos ante B●ptis●um 〈◊〉 qui ad Christianismum vel gentilitate vocati Credis Credo Abrenuntias Abrenuntio Cujus origo in exemplo Eunuchi Ac. 8.37 Spant dub Evang. Pars 3. p. 97. Trap. in Mat. 13.51 Bowles Pastor Evaag l. 2. c. 5. by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ True the main thing is the Answer of a good Conscience in a man 's own self yet there was a good Answer in his mouth to the Catechist who was to ask them a reason of the hope that was in them 3. The Primitive Fathers that trod on the Heels of the Apostles and were most likely to be best acquainted with the Apostles practice highly esteemed this way of teaching and constantly used it Cyprian saith Optatus used it at Carthage Origen at Alexandria Hence Clemens Alexander his paedagogus Cyril Mystagog Lactantius his Institutions Athanasius his Synopsis Augustine his Enchirid. Liber de Doct. Christianâ de Catechiz rudibus Fulgentius de fide 4. Many of the Antient Councils made Decrees and Canons for Catechising Concil Neocaes Can. 6.7 Concil Tolet. Can. 24. In this consent all the Reformed Churches uno ore Nay which is more the Papists themselves that were assembled in the Council of Trent observing that in the later Spring of the Gospel the use of Catechizing in the Reformed Churches was one of the special means of with-drawing People from the darkness of Popery to the light of the Gospel and of so firmly grounding professors in the true Religion as nothing could with-draw them from the same and so the Hereticks as they were pleased to stile them had got much ground strongly moved the Councel that there might be a Catechism compiled of the Principles of the Romish Religion as that that was most likely to give check to that deluge of Heresie which through the Hereticks Catechising was breaking in upon them 5. This manner of Teaching by way of Catechising viz. By propounding the Question and putting the child to Answer it as the Echo doth the Voice is a most ready way to make any Instruction to take Whence it is that in all Schools of Learning this course is taken viz. The Teacher propounds his Questions and requires Answers from those that are instructed whereas if you speak never so well or so long yea the longer the worse in a set and continued Speech it useth to vanish in the Air without any observable notice or after fruit 2. Superiors in the Family and these are Parents and Family Governors to whom we may adjoin School-masters and Tutors These all are concerned in this great duty of Training up and Catechizing those that are committed to their Charge and Conduct 1. How deeply Parents are obliged to this Duty is written as it were with a Sun-beam in the Scriptures where we find Precepts Presidents Arguments more than many to evince it Ex. 10.2 Ex. 12.24 26 27 with 13.8 14 15. Josh 4.6 7 21 22 24. Deut. 4.9 10. Ainsw in Deut. 6 6 7. 1. Precepts The Israelites are bound to tell in the ears of their sons and of their sons sons what things the Lord had wrought in Egypt that they also might know Jehovah to be the Lord. The Parents are bound to be Expositors of that great Rite of the Paschal Lamb and of the Stones set up in the midst of Jordan bound also to teach their Children the words which they heard from the Lord their God in Horeb even the Ten Commandments How doth this Duty sparkle with a Radiant Lustre in that great Text Deut. 6.6 7 These words which I Command thee this day shall be in thine heart and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy Children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine House and when thou walkest by the way Ainsw in Deut. 6.6 7. and when thou liest down and when thou risest up It is the Eternal God that here gives forth his strict Command to Parents These words all these words Precepts Promises Threatnings shall be in thy heart not in thy head only so as to know but in thy Heart to affect An Heart inflamed with the Love of God and his Truth Joel 1.3 Deut. 11.19 God knew was one of the most effectual means to engage the Tongue to make known his Truth but not only in their Heart but Houses too Thou shalt teach them thy Children nor was this a Ceremonial Precept or a Command given peculiarly to the Jews for their assistance in their Remembrance of the Law of God as their Phylacteries and fringes c. Exod. 13.9 Deut. 6.8 9. but was and is a Moral perpetual standing Precept binding us in Gospel-times as well as them The same things we find in this Text we find also in the New Testament The word of Christ must dwell richly in us all one with this here Let it be in thine heart Col. 3.16 and in our Houses also we must teach and admonish others Eph. 6.4 we are to bring up our Children in the Nurture and Admonition of the Lord. 2. Branches in this Precept 1. Parents warned not to abuse their Authority by provoking their Children In the best of Parents there is not only Natural affection but also Natural corruption by reason whereof if they watch not well they will be very prone not only to be rash but furious with their Children that their Will may be fulfilled Therefore is this bridling Caution needful provoke not 2. Parents are here commanded not to neglect to lay out and improve their Authority in instructing their Children This also is necessary because Parents are too too apt to be fondly indulgent and on that account careless to bring up their Children in such courses as are necessary for knowing and doing the Will of God Both therefore are of special use Do not provoke but instruct Yea in instructing take care that you do not provoke and so instructing you will not at least you shall not have cause to provoke for a well instructed Child is in God's way to be an Obedient Child and very tractable to instructing Parents so that there will be no occasion of provocation from him or being provoked against him Bring them up therefore we must but in what In the Nurture and Admonition of the Lord. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all profitable knowledg Vid Zanch. Musc in Loc. suitable to a Child's Age and State for the composing and framing of him by this his knowledg unto a commendable and vertuous carriage for the
doing of greater good in humane Society for the time to come but more especially in Religious Nurture instruction in Righteousness 2 Tim. 3.16 and as it follows in the admonition of the Lord In the best and highest kind of Nurture that which is drawn and fetcht from the Word of the Lord and so will be most accepted of him and most profitable to Children Not only in Arts and Sciences to make them Worldly wise and Learned nor only in the Mysteries of Trading and Worldly employment to make them Rich nor only in matters of Morality and Civil honesty to make them Sober and vertuous but in the mysteries of true Religion in the nurture and admonition of the Lord 1 Tim. 4.6 in the words of Faith and good Doctrine to make them truly happy 2. Presidents It was the constant practice of the Saints of old carefully to instruct their children in the things of God And that 1. In the Truths and Worship of the true God Thus Divines conclude that Adam instructed his Sons Gen. 4.3 4. Cain and Abel to bring their Offerings to the Lord And from Adam down along to Moses for the space of two thousand years how was the true Religion communicated but by Oral Tradition from Parents to their Children Gen. 18.19 I know Abraham that he will command his Children and his Houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord to do Justice and Judgment that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which he hath spoken of him In this Text we have Abraham's Testimonial subscribed by God himself Wherein God 1. Asserts what Abraham was for the present a man of integrity a man greatly beloved of God I know Abraham I know his judgment I know his heart I am well acquainted with the frame of his spirit the inclination of his Will the bent of his Affections and I know him so well that I cannot but highly approve and dearly love him and will trust him with an Arcanum make him as it were of my Privy Councel in imparting to him my great design concerning wicked Sodom 2. Foretells for the future 1. What Abraham would do for God viz. That he would endeavour to bring all that were under his Command to be at God's Command Abraham will not leave his children and servants to their own Genius counsels lusts ignorance idleness superstition idolatry but command them to keep the way of Jehovah Abraham will endeavour to set up God in his Family to instruct it in that way of Faith Worship and Obedience which God requireth 2. What God will do for Abraham viz. fulfil his Promise keep his Word Holy Job that Non pareil of the World none like him in the Earth Job 1.8 that perfect that upright man Job sends and sanctifies his children i. e. says that late burning and shining Light sent a Message to them to command them to prepare and fit themselves for the holy duty of Sacrificing This preparation to holy Duties is often call'd Sanctifying Exod. 19.20 1 Sam. 6.5 Job 11.55 Job 1.5 Jos●ph Caryl on Job 1.5 Job's main and special care was for the Souls of his children Job's Message to his children was not to ask them how they did after their Feasting whether they had surfeited how the reckoning was inflamed No his eye and heart mostly fixt on this that they might be sanctified His holy Soul struck a perfect light to Paul's desire before Agrippa Acts 26.29 I would to God that not only thou but all that hear me this day were both almost and altogether such as I am And to John's joy John Ep. 3.4 I have no greater joy than to hear that thy children walk in the truth Thus David that man after God's own heart Psal 34.11 Come ye children hearken unto me I will teach you the fear of the Lord. But more especially I would commend to your most accurate view that lovely Prospect presented to us in Prov. 4.3 4. Behold there a great and glorious King descending from his Imperial Throne laying aside his Golden Crown and Royal Scepter and sitting down on a lower seat with a Child a Solomon at his knee So that the King is now humbled into a Tutor the Prince into a Pupil A brief account of the Lecture the Text gives us I was my Father's Son i. e. I was so my Father's Son as that I was also his Jedidiah so beloved as if I had been his only Son He taught me also and said unto me Let thine heart retain my words keep my Commandments and live Thus we have seen the practice of godly Fathers but what have godly Mothers done have they been so cruelly forgetful of their children as not to have compassion on the Sons of their Womb What! worse than Sea-Monsters who draw out their breasts and give suck to their young ones No Lam. 4.3 no those true Daughters of Sarah have been more spiritually kind and benign 1. In the Front of these stands our Mother the Spouse of Christ Can. 8.2 Ass Annot in Cant. 8.2 I would lead thee and bring thee into my Mothers House i. e. into mine own House or Mansion as is usual with us to call our own Houses the Houses of our Fathers The Church in her Universal Latitude is the Mother of all her Members who would or doth instruct me The Church John 6.45 who is the Pillar and ground of truth in this respect that she presenteth and holdeth forth that truth outwardly which only Christ bringeth to the heart and makes effectual 2. Upon her right hand stands David's Royal Consort Queen Bathsheba whom we find laying the Law before King Lemuel i. e. her Son Solomon called Lemuel i. e. of God because God had ordained him to be King over Israel rather than any of his Elder Brethren 1 Kings 2.15 22. The words of King Lemuel the Prophesie Doctrine or Instruction that his Mother taught him 2. What my Son and what the Son of my Womb Prov. 31.1 2. and what the Son of my Vows 3. Upon her left hand let the hoary-headed holy Grand mother Lois and the tender discreet pious Mother Eunice be placed who even from the Dug as it were instructed their hopeful Timothy in the knowledg of the Holy Scriptures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 1.5 3.15 16 11. which were able to make him wise unto Salvation 2. In the ways and works of God's Providence Thus Gideon gives testimony to his Forefathers that they had told their Children of all the Miracles which the Lord had done saying did not the Lord bring us from Egypt Jud. 6.13 Thus the Psalmist Psal 44.1 2. We have heard with our ears O God Psal 44.1 c. our Fathers have told us what work thou didst in their days in the times of old And again Psal 78.3 4 5 6 7. Sayings of old which we have heard and known and our Fathers have told us 4. We will not hide
Counsels go down glibly When persons are fully satisfied that in all our Addresses to them we study only their benefit and profit this opens an effectual door to all the means that we shall use Thus Paul accosts the Romans I long to see you that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift Rom. 1.10 11. Thus he smooths his way to the Philippians Phil. 1.8 God is my Record how greatly I long after you all in the bowels of Jesus Christ Labour then to get their love their good esteem and the work will thrive beyond expectation Love is like the oiling of the Key which makes it to open the lock more easily love greaseth the nail and makes it enter with more facility 2. To holy hearty serious affectionate frequent admonition add an exemplary Conversation Inferiours are apt to be led rather by example than rule and are more prone to imitate Practices than to learn Principles They are more mindful of what we do than of what we say and they will be very prone to suspect that we are not in good earnest when they see that we command them one thing and do another our selves When we teach them well and do amiss our selves we do but pull down with one hand what we build with the other Like a man that at the same time sings a lovely Song and drowns the melody of it by playing an ugly Tune When the Father is immodest the Child that sees it soon grows impudent and therefore the Ancients thought themselves concern'd to be very reserv'd and cautelous before their children Maxima debetur pueris reverentia Psal 101.2 N●l faedum dictu vis●que ea limina ●angat intra quae pura est P●il 1.4 Col. 1 3. Rom. 10.1 Walk as David therefore in thy house with a perfect heart Let thy children and servants behold nothing in thy deportment which if follow'd may prove sinful 3. To an exemplary conversation add faithful fervent humble constant supplication Paul without ceasing makes mention of his heart's desire and his prayer to God for Israel was that they might be saved Ministers like spiritual Priests should not fail to offer their daily Sacrifices for their people confess their iniquities bewail their misery and cry mightily to God for his mercy All our instructions without prayer will do no good Go to God to sanctifie all By prayer carry thy children servants to the blessed Jesus in the Arms of Faith and beseech him to bless them by laying on his hands on them as Isaac did The accustomed Ceremony used in Blessing Beza in Mat. 19. Impositio manuum Symbolum fuit apud Judaeos familiare quoties sol●nnis erat precatio vel benedict● Mat. 15.22 Gen. 27.1 and 48.9 14. with Matth. 19.13 and Mark 10.16 How pathetically did Abraham plead with God for Ishmael Oh that Ishmael might live before thee Gen. 17.18 Bathsheba calls for Solomon the Son of her Vows Prov. 31.2 Austin the Child of Monica's prayers and tears O pray then pray earnestly O that this my Son Daughter Servant might not dye for ever Thou Lord art the Prince and Lord of Life O speak powerfully to their poor Souls that these pieces of my bowels that are now dead in trespasses and sins may hear thy voice and live Cry out to God with that poor man in the Gospel Lord have mercy on my Son Matth. 17.15 If a Mother do as the Woman of Canaan did Have mercy on me O Lord my Daughter is grievously vexed with a Devil If he seem not to hear and to be silent go nearer to him by Faith and cry Lord help me Lord help me If his Answer seem to be a repulse do not thou desist but rather gather Arguments from his denial as she did and conclude that if he once open his mouth he will not shut his hand and if importunity may prevail with an unrighteous man then much more it will obtain with a gracious God Never leave him therefore till by laying hold on his own strength thou hast overcome him At last thou mayst hear that ravishing voice O Woman be it unto thee even as thou wilt and see thy Daughter made whole from that very hour 4. Lastly To fervent supplication add wary inspection Keep a strict hand Dr. Jacomb Dem. D●c 83. and a watchful eye continually over those that are committed to your charge your utmost care and vigilancy in this will be found little enough How soon will those Gardens that now look like a Paradise be overgrown with weeds if the Keepers thereof do not look to them daily How soon is Childhood and Youth tainted with sin if it be not narrowly watcht Be thou diligent therefore to know the state of thy Flock and look well to thy Herds Carefully observe the natural temper of your inferiours you will by this the better know how to apply your selves to them in advice reproof correction Observe the first sprouts and buds of what is either good or evil in them encourage commend reward them in the one curb restrain and prevent the further growth of the other Do they begin to take God's Name in vain Do they nibble at a lye Doth Pride in apparel peep forth Be sure to kill this Serpent in the very egg to crush this Cockatrice in the Shell 2. Thus of Superiours A word to Inferiours and I have done Dear Lambs the Searcher of Hearts knows how greatly I long after you all in the Bowels of Jesus Christ Shall I prevail with you to remember this when I am laid with my Fathers viz. That 't is no less your Duty to make Religion your business in the relation of Children and Servants than 't is ours in the relation of Parents and Masters Oh what a credit what a glory is it to drink in the Dews of Godliness in the morning of your lives What a lovely sight to behold those Trees blossoming with the fruits of the Spirit in the Spring of their Age Better is a poor and a wise Child than an old and a foolish King Eccl. 4.13 What a Garland of Honour doth the Holy Ghost put on the head of an holy Child How profitable is early Piety Some Fruits ripe early in the year are worth treble the price of latter Fruits Godliness at any time brings in much gain but he that comes first to the Market is like to make the best price of his Ware On the other side how dangerous are delays Remember Children late Repentance like untimely fruits seldom comes to any thing Your lives are very uncertain As young as you are you may be old enough for a Grave Oh then seek your God 1 Tim. 6.6 We read of one that truly repented at his last gasp that so none might despair but 't is of but one that none might presume and seek him when and whiles he may be found Isa 55.5 If thou refuse him now he may refuse thee hereafter I have heard of one that deferring Repentance
humiliations more affectionate and evangelical As in that fast I mentioned before Neh. 9. The Levites did stand up among the people and begin the day with blessing God Blessed be thy glorious name which is exalted above all blessing and praise ver 5. and so they proceed to recite a catalogue of God's mercies even from the first call of Abraham to their settlement in the Land of Canaan which reacheth to ver 25. And all this was to bring in the Nevertheless mention'd v. 26. with the greater Emphasis to their humiliation Nevertheless they were disobedient and rebelled against thee and cast thy Law behind their backs and shew thy Prophets c. and the same we may observe in Ezra chap. 9. He takes notice of the reviving God had given them in their bondage and the Nail in his holy place and the Wall in Judah and Jerusalem ver 8 9. the more to aggravate the peoples sin in doing according to the abominations of the Canaanites and mingling themselves with the people of the Land ver 1 2. The goodness of God is said to lead men to Repentance Rom. 2. And therefore mention is to be made of it upon a day when the exercise of Repentance is specially in season Yea Thanksgiving also is requisite as an attendant of supplication for the giving thanks for mercy received is an effectual way to obtain New mercy According to that known saying Efficacissimum genus rogandi est gratias agere Giving thanks for mercy received is the most effectual way to obtain new mercy Thanksgiving carries supplication in the spirit of it And if according to the Apostle Phil. 4. We are in every thing to make known our request with supplication and thanksgiving then when ever we come to God with Supplications we are to couple them with thanksgiving 6. The last duty I mention which is the Appendix to the rest is that of Alms-deeds for when we come to beg mercy from God we should not forget to shew it to men And he that stops his ear to the cry of the poor Prov. 21.13 he may cry but shall not be heard yea his prayers are so far from coming up as incense before God that they are an abomination Cornelius that was a man much in prayer and fasting also as is noted of him Act. 10.30 was full also of Alms-deeds Act. 10.31 and both together came up as a memorial before God Alms-deeds as they are not to be confined to a fast day so surely are not to be excluded He that vvill on such a day shut up his purse let him take heed least God shut up against him his ear his heart and his hand The People complain Isa 53.8 Wherefore have we fasted and thou seest not God tells them they fasted but shewed not mercy and therefore fasted not aright and then tells them what was the fast that he had chosen ver 7. Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry and when thou seest the naked that thou cover them c. Certainly those duties that ought to follow our fasting or else it avails nothing with God ought not to be shut out of the duties of such a day if there be call and opportunity thereunto Thus I have shewn the duties of a fast day which are external with respect to the outward performance And next I shall shew what frame of spirit is requisite to such a day without which all these duties may be externally performed and yet the fast not accepted Rom. 2. ult For as the Apostle saith of Circumcision It is that of the heart and of the spirit so is that fasting that is well pleasing to God There may be confession supplication renewing the Covenant Thanksgiving Alms-deeds and yet if there be wanting a suitable frame of heart all this may be but as a body without the soul or matter without form that may have praise with men but none with God Now this frame of soul consists in 1. Self-debasement 2. Godly sorrow 3. Filial fear 4. Ingenuous shame 5. Inward purity 6. Evangelical faith and hope I shall speak briefly to them all 1. Is self-debasement God complains of the Jews fasting Isa 58.5 they did hang down their heads like a bulrush but their souls did not bow down within them We call a fast day a day of humiliation but we have the name but not the thing if the soul be not humbled What is it for the body to wear sackcloth if Pride cover the heart or to spread ashes under us if the soul lye not down in the dust or to fast from bodily food if the soul be not emptied of self-fulness 2. Godly sorrow A fast day is for afflicting the soul and how is the soul afflicted without true sorrow The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that signifies a fast is derived from a root that signifies to afflict so essential is the afflicting the soul to the day It was a charge against the Jews Isa 58.2 Behold in the day of your fast ye find pleasure What kind of pleasure it was is not there mentioned but it was some sinful pleasure that was not congruous to the day Daniel speaks of his fast ch 10.3 I sat full three weeks mourning As at our funerals many enter the house of mourning and wear black but there is no mourning within nor no garment of heaviness covers their soul So do many enter the day and duty of fasting but no godly sorrow enters with them into it or attends them in it Every thing is beautiful in its season Eccl. 3.11 A fast day wants its beauty if no true sorrow attends it We make confession of sin but if there be no sorrow we feel not what is spoken and what will words of confession avail Ephraim is said to bemoan himself Jer. 31.18 And God is said to hear it and he bemoaned him also But how can we think God's heart should be affected with our confessions when our own are not The Jews upon their solemn days had their solemn sacrifices A fast day is a solemn day and it is not to be without its sacrifices and the great Sacrifice or Sacrifices of the day is a broken and contrite spirit psal 51. 3. Filial fear Natural fear hath sometimes brought a people to the duty and a filial fear is to be exercised in the performance of it as Jehoshaphat feared and then proclaimed a Fast 2 Chron. 20.3 And so did the King of Nineveh Jonah 2. when God's judgments are abroad we ought to fear and this fear should lead us to meet him in the ways of his judgment by prayer and fasting for all our serving God is to be coupled with fear Psal 2.11 our rejoycing is to be with trembling much more our mourning In a fast day we especially deprecate God's wrath and therefore we ought to have such a sense of it as may cause sacred fear There is no affection of the soul but ought to be
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from holes pits caves cut out in rocks shews that it notes secret places for retirements or repositories It 's accordingly rendred by secret chambers Math. 24.26 and by closets Luke 12.3 2. Shut the door or lock it as the word insinuates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from whence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a key is deduced and are both put together as appears by Rev. 3.7 and 20.1 3. implying that we must bar or bolt it 3. Pray to thy Father in secret Father which is pietatis potestatis appellatio as Tertullian notes a name hinting both piety and power to thy Father De Orat. noting both propriety and intimacy 2. A gracious promise which may be branch't into three parts 1. For thy Father sees thee in secret his eye is upon thee with a gracious aspect when thou art withdrawn from all the world 2. He will reward thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 retribuet reponet or as Ambrose reads it redder so the word is sometimes translated by rendring De Cain and Abel Math. 22.21 Rom. 2.6 13.7 by delivering Math. 27.58 Luke 9.42 by yielding or affording Heb. 12.11 Rev. 22.2 All which comes to this he will return thy prayers or thy requests amply and abundantly into thy bosom 3. He will do it openly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perspicuously and manifestly before the world sometimes and most plentifully and exuberantly before men and Angels at the great day secret prayers shall have open and publick answers 3. Here 's a demonstration of sincerity from the right performance of this duty set forth by the Antithesis But thou shalt not be as the hypocrites verse 5. When i. e. as often as thou prayest by thy self enter not thy house only thy hall or thy common chamber but thy closet the most secret and retired privacy Shut the door that others may neither discern thee nor rush in suddenly upon thee He shall reward thee i. e. he shall answer thee and perform thy request as a gracious return to thy secret sincerity God is pleased by promise to make himself a debtor to secret prayer It brings nothing to God but empty hands and naked hearts to shew that reward in Scripture sence does not slow in upon the streams of merit but grace It 's monkish divinity to assert otherwise for what merit strictly taken can there be in prayer the meer asking of mercy cannot merit it at the hands of God who out of our most sincere petitions being at best impregnated with sinful mixtures might take up matter enough to sling as the dung of our sacrifices in our faces Mal. 2.3 We halt like Jacob both in and after our choicest and strongest wrestlings But such is the grace of our heavenly Father who spies that little sincerity of our hearts in secret that he is pleased to accept us in his beloved and to smell a favour of rest in the fragrant perfumes and odours of his intercession Hence though I might draw forth several notes yet shall treat but of one containing the marrow and nerves of the Text. Obs That secret prayer duly managed is the mark of a sincere heart and hath the promise of a gracious return Prayer is the soul's colloquy with God and secret prayer is a conference with God upon admission into the privy chamber of heaven When thou hast shut thine own closet vvhen God and thy soul are alone with this key thou openest the chambers of paradise and enterest the closet of divine love When thou art immured as in a curious Labyrinth from the tumultuous world and entered into that garden of Lebanon in the midst of thy closet thy soul like a spiritual Daedalus takes to it self the wings of faith and prayer and flies into the midst of heaven among the Cherubims I may term secret prayer the invisible flight of the soul into the bosom of God out of this heavenly closet rises Jacobs ladder vvhose rounds are all of light its foot stands upon the basis of the covenant in thy heart its top reaches the throne of grace When thy reins have instructed thee in the night season with holy petitions vvhen thy soul hath desired him in the night then vvith thy spirit vvithin thee wilt thou seek him early Psal 16 7. Isa 26.9 When the door of thy heart is shut and the windows of thine eyes seal'd up from all vain and worldly objects Zach. 3.7 up thou mountest and hast a place given thee to walk among Angels that stand by the throne of God in secret prayer the soul like Moses is in the backside of the desart and talks with the Angel of the Covenant in the fiery bush Exod. 3.1 Gen. 24.63 1 Kings 19.4 v. 12. Here 's Isaac in the field at eventide meditating and praying to the God of his Father Abraham Here 's Elijah under the Juniper-tree at Rithmah in the wilderness and anon in the cave hearkning to the still small voice of God Here 's Christ and the Spouse alone in the wine cellar and the banner of love over her Cant. 2.4 Gers●n Eph. 5.18 John 1.48 where she utters verba dimidiata ubi bibit ebriam Sobrietatem spiritus but half words having drunk of the sober excess of the spirit Here we find Nathaniel under the fig-tree though it may be at secret prayer yet under a beam of the eye of Christ There sits Austin in the garden alone sighing with the Psalmist usque quo Domine Confess 1. l. 8. c 12. how long O Lord and listning to the voice of God tolle lege take up the Bible and read It 's true hypocrites may pray and pray alone and pray long and receive their reward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from such whose observation they desire but take no true delight in secret devotion Mat. 23 14. Chrysost in loc Cant. 2.14 they have no spring of affection to God But O my dove says Christ that art in the clefts of the rock let me hoar thy voice for the melody thereof is sweet A weeping countenance and a wounded spirit are most beautiful prospects to the eye of heaven when a broken heart powrs out repentant tears like streams from the rock smitten by the rod of Moses law in the hand of a Mediator Oh how amiable in the sight of God Psa 130.1 out of the depths have I cried to thee as Chrysostom glosses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 draw sighs from the furrows of thy heart è sulco pectoris Let thy prayer become a hidden mystery of divine secrets like good Hezekiah upon the bed with his face to the wall Isa 38.2 5. that none might observe him or like our blessed Lord that grand example who retired into solitudes and mountains apart and saw by night the Illustrious face of his heavenly Father in prayer the reasons follow 1. Because a sincere heart busies it self about heart-work to mortifie sin to quicken grace to observe and resist
bring us into his pr●s● T●ke heed then of quenching the Spirit of God He that is 〈…〉 knows the sound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 3.8 the voice of the spirit When th● 〈…〉 word or softned by afflictions or feels some holy groans and sighs excited by the spirit that 's a warm time for prayer Rom. 8.27 then we enjoy the sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the intimations of the spirit of God or when prophesies are nigh to expire then there are great workings and searchings of heart in Daniel Zechary Simeon and Anna or when some promise comes with applying power Therefore hath thy Servant found in his heart to pray this prayer unto thee 2 Sam. 7.27 28. Cant. 7.9 for thou hast promised this goodness unto thy Servant When we find promises dropt into the soul like wine it causes the lips of them that were asleep to speak 3. Keep Conscience tender of and clean from secret sins With what face can we go to a friend to whom we have given any secret affronts and will ye be so bold as to come before the God of heaven when he knows ye maintain some secret lust in your heart De Orat. p. 213. Prov. 28.9 Darest thou to bring a Dalilah with thee into this sacred closet True is that of Tertullian Quantum à praeceptis tantum ab auribus Dei longè sumus He that turns his ear from God's precepts must stop his mouth in the dust if God turn his holy ears from his cries When our secret sins are in the light of his countenance we may rather expect to be consumed by his anger and troubled by his wrath Psal 90.7 8. Object But then who may presume and venture into Secret Communion Ans True if God should strictly mark what we do amiss who can stand David was sensible of this objection Psal 130.3 4. but he answers it humbly There is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared If we come with holy purposes to leave all sin he hath promised to pardon abundantly His thoughts and waies are not as ours Isa 55.7 guilt makes us fly his presence but proclamation of pardoning grace to a wounded soul that comes for strength from heaven to subdue its iniquities Mic. 7.19 sweetly draws the soul to lye at his foot for mercy Though we cannot as yet be so free as formerly while under the wounding sense of guilt Psal 51.12 Psal 69.5 yet when he restores to us the joy of his salvation he will again uphold us with his free spirit Yet take heed of Scars upon the soul God knows our foolishness and our guiltinesses are not hid from him yet we come for purging and cleansing mercy A godly man may be under the sense of divine displeasure for some iniquity that himself knoweth as the Lord spake of Eli yet the way to be cured 1 Sam. 3.13 Mark 5.23 is not to run from God but like the distressed woman come fearing and trembling and fall at his feet and tell him all the truth But if prayer have cured thee sin no more lest a worse thing come unto thee For if we regard iniquity in our heart Psal 66.18 the Lord will not hear us but the guilt may stare conscience in the face with great amazement As 't is storied of one that secretly had stoln a sheep it ran before his eyes in prayer that he could have no rest How strangely will memory ring the bell in the ears of conscience If we have any secret sin in deliciis if we look but a squint with desires and secret thoughts after our peace-offerings to meet our beloved lusts again this is dangerous Prov. 7.14 God may justly give up such to cast off that which is good to cleave to their Idols and let them alone Hos 4 17. 6.3 Gerson T. 2. p. 76.6 But if the face of the heart be not knowingly and willingly spotted with any sin or lust bating infirmities which he mourns under then thy countenance through Christ will be comely in the eye of God and thy voice sweet in his ears and as he said Qui benè vivit semper orat a holy life vvill be a vvalking continual prayer his very life is a constant petition before God 4. Own thy personal interest with God and plead it humbly Consider whom thou goest to in secret pray to thy father who seeth in secret Canst thou prove thy self to be in Covenant vvhat thou canst prove thou mayest plead Psal 50.15 16. and have it successfully issued In prayer vve take God's Covenant into our mouths but without a real interest the Lord expostulates with such what have they to do with it God never graciously hears but 't is upon interest This argument Solomon presses in prayer for they be thy people and thine inheritance 1 Kings 8 51. Thus David pleads (a) Ps 140.6 Thou art my God hear the voice of my supplication (b) 119 94. I am thine Lord save me (c) 116.16 Truly I am thy servant I am thy servant Arias turns 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by obsecro quaeso I beseech thee O Lord I am thy servant God will avenge his elect when they cry unto him I was cast upon thee from the womb Luke 18.7 Psal 22.10 thou art my God from my mothers belly Therefore Asa turns the contest heavenward O Lord thou art our God let not mortal man prevail against thee 2 Chron. 14.11 Psal 119.176 Thou takest me for the sheep of thy fold and the servant of thy houshold therefore seek me When Israel shall be refined as silver and tried as gold they shall call on his name and he will hear them I will say it is my people my tried refined golden people and they shall say the Lord is my God Zech. 13.9 When thou canst discern the print of the broad seal of the Covenant upon thy heart and the privy seal of the spirit upon thy prayers and canst look upon the Son of God in a sacerdotal relation to thee thou may'st (a) Heb 5.16 come boldly to the throne of grace in time of need 5. Be very particular in secret prayer both as to sins wants and mercies (b) Psal 32.5.51.9 Hide none of thy transgressions if thou expect a pardon Be not ashamed to open all thy necessities David argues (c) Psal 40.17 70.5.86.1.109.22 because he is poor and needy four several times he presses his wants and exigences before God like an earnest but holy beggar and (d) Psal 142.2 Job 23.4 shewed before him his trouble from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coram presents before him his ragged condition and spreads open his secret wounds as Job said he would order his cause before him from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 disponerem instruerem marshal every case as a battel in rank and file There we may speak out our minds fully and name the persons that
afflict affront and troubles us and wo to them that a child of God upon a mature judgment names in prayer I find not that such a prayer in Scripture return'd empty Jacob in a great strait Deliver me from the hand of my brother Gen. 32.11 from the hand of Esau David in the ascent of Mount Olivet O Lord I pray thee turn the counsel of Ahithophel into foolishness 2 Sam 15.31 2 Chron. 20.10 Prayer twisted the rope for him at Giloh Thus Jehoshaphat in his prayer names Ammon Moab and Edom conspiring against him Thus Hezekiah spreads the railing letter before the Lord Isa 37.14 Psal 83.6 c. Act 4 27. Joseph l. 18. c. 9. Euseb Chron. l. 2. p. 159. Eph. 3.14 Luke 17.5 2 Cor. 12.8 and the Psalmist takes them all in a round Catalogue that consulted against Israel Thus the Church in her prayer names Herod-Antipas and Pontius Pilate whereof the first was sent into perpetual banishment and the latter slew himself It 's of great use in prayer to attend to some special case or single request with arguments and affections suitable For this cause says Paul I bow the knee Suppose a grace deficient in its strength Lord increase our faith or a temptation urgent For this I pray'd to the Lord thrice A great reason why we reap so little benefit by prayer because we rest too much in generals and if we have success 't is but dark that often we cannot tell what to make of the issues of prayer Besides to be particular in our petitions would keep the spirit much from wandring when we are intent upon a weighty case and the progress of the soul in grace would manifest its gradual success in prayer 6. Holy and humble appeals before the Lord in secret when the soul can submissively and thankfully expose it self to divine searching about some measures of holiness and grace wrought in the heart Psal 139.23 Tertal de orat p. 213. The soul cannot bide by the presence of God under flashings of defilement neque agnosci poterit à spiritu sancto spiritus inquinatus neither will the holy spirit own a defiled soul But when a person can humbly modestly and reverently say search me and try my reins and if there be any way of wickedness in me lead me in the everlasting way it vvill be the means of the ebullitions and boilings up of joyful affections and meek confidence at the footstool of grace especially in pleas of deliverance from wicked and proud enemies When David can plead in comparison with and in the case stated between his enemies and himself For I am holy Psal 86.2 14 17. It shews him a token for good or when we plead against the assaults of Satan can we be conscious that we have watcht and prayed against entring into temptation When in the main we can wash our hands in Innocency Psal 26 6. Psal 18.20.7.3 we may then comfortably compass God's altar about In case of opposition and injustice He rewarded me says David in the point of Saul according to my righteousness and the cleanness of my hands before him Or about the truth of the love that is in the heart to God Thou that knowest all things John 21.17 Neh. 14.14 22 Isa 38.3 Isa 26.8 says Peter knowest that I love thee As to zeal for the Worship and Ordinances of God so did Nehemiah As to the integrity of a well-spent life so did Hezekiah or if we cannot rise so high yet as the Church did The desire of our soul is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee Or lastly when we can unfeignedly plead the usefulness of a mercy intreated in order to the divine glory As when a minister or the Church of Christ for him prays for such gifts and graces Eph. 6.19 Col. 4 3. such knowledg and utterance that he may win souls to Christ and can appeal that it is his principal aim this is glorious 7. Pray for the spirit that ye may pray in and by the spirit Awaken the North and the South to blow upon thy garden that the spices thereof may flow forth Cant 4.16 Then thou mayest invite Christ Let my beloved come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruits that the soul may enjoy him and hold sweet communion with him All successful prayer is from the breathing of the spirit of God when he inspires and indites when he directs the heart as to matter and governs the tongue as to utteranee 1 Cor. 2.10 Rom. 8.27 Psal 147.18 Ezek. 47.1 Gerson T. 2. K. K. 4. 49. Zech. 12.10 God graciously hears the sighs of his own Spirit formed in us He sent forth his spirit and the waters flow That I may allude the waters of contrition flow upon the breathing of the spirit and the soul is as it were all afloat before the throne of grace when these living waters issue from under the threshold of the sanctuary Sequitur lachrymosa devotio flante spiritu sancto Devout tears drop down from the spirit's influences Melting supplications follow the infusions of grace by the spirit Then they shall mourn for piercing of Christ says the Prophet and be in bitterness as for a first-born like the mourning at the town of Hadadrimmon where Josiah was slain Then (a) 13.1 2 4 14.8 Isa 66.12 Rich. de S●ult p. 321. in that day what inundations of mercy shall refresh the Church when the Lord will extend her peace like a river and the glory of the Gentiles like a flowing stream great things to the Church and gracious things to the soul Inter orationem suspiria cognoscit holy sighs in prayer give intelligence of great mercies to follow Nay to withstand powerfully all the wiles of Satan one means is Eph. 6.18 to consecrate every part of the spiritual armour by prayer in the Spirit 8. Apply special promises to special cases in prayer For God hath and will magnifie his word of promise above all his name Psal 138.2 John 12.28 when we are under the word of command for a duty we must seek for a word of promise and unite them in prayer When a promise of aid suits to the precept it renders prayer victorious and obedience pleasant when we come with God's own words into his presence when we take his words with us that he would take away all iniquity he 'll receive us graciously Hos 14 2. Gen. 32.9 1 Kings 8.24 Jacob urged that God had bid him return from his Country and kinred Solomon urges the word of promise to David Jehoshaphat urges the a 2 Chron. 20.8 9. word of promise to Solomon Daniel fills his mouth (b) Dan. 9.2 3 with the promise given to Jeremiah he reads and then applies it in prayer First search the Bible and look for a promise and when found open it before the Lord. Paul teaches us to take the (c) Heb. 13.5 6. promise given to
such a prayer as this O that the Lord would lengthen this triumphant day and the (c) Jos 10.12 Lord heard his voice The tribes beyond Jordan in a (d) 2 Chr. 5 23. battel with the Hagarites Jehoshaphat in a sore strait (e) 18.31 at Ramoth Gilead Sampson ready to perish at Lehi (f) Judg. 15.18 16 28. with thirst and when blind exposed to contempt in the Temple of Dagon David near (g) 1 Sam. 30.6 stoning at Ziglag and when flying from Absalom in the ascent of (h) 2 Sam. 15.31 Mount Olivet Elisha at Dothan compast with a Syrian host (i) 2 King 6.17 Lord open the young man's eyes In the midst of lawful and laborious callings Boaz to the reapers (k) Ruth 2.4 the Lord be with you we may pray that our Oxen (l) Psal 129.8 may be strong to labour no breaking in or going out nor no complaining in our streets It sanctifies the plow as Jerom said of the fields of Bethlehem quocunque te verteris Psal 144.14 ad Marcellum p. 129 T. 1. arator stivam teneus Alleluja decantat c. The tillers of the field and the dressers of vineyards sang David's psalms it keeps the shop and inclines the hearts of customers it bars the doors it quenches fire it blesseth thy children (m) Psal 147.13 within thee it preserves thy going out and coming in (n) 128.1 Jacob found it to rest upon his children going a journey (a) Gen. 43.14 to Egypt it closes the eyes with (b) Psal 3.5.4 8. sweet sleep it (c) Job 3● 10 Psal 139.18 given Songs in the night and wakens the soul in the arms of mercy It sits at the helm when a (d) Psal 107.28 Jon. 1.6 storm rises at sea it gives strength to Anchors in roads and prosperous gales to the venturous Merchant When in the palace at dinner Nehemiah presents the cup to his prince he presents also a Michtam a golden (e) Neh 3.4 2 Chro. 34 27 Luke 17.5 Gen. 49.18 2 Chron. 2 4. Act. 7 60. prayer to the King of Heaven at the reading of the law Josiah was heard as to some secret cries to Heaven At a holy conference in a journey the Disciples occasionally pray Lord increase our faith Jacob on his dying pillow predicting future events to his children falls into a holy rapture I have wait ed for thy salvation O Lord. At sacred death in martyrdom Zechariah cries out the Lord look upon it and require it and Stephen under a showr of stones melts in prayers for the stony hearts that slung them Lord lay not this sin unto their chage and our blessed Saviour in his greatest agonies makes a tender hearted prayer Father forgive them they know not what they do Luke 23 34. 1 Sam. 1.17 and lastly in the distresses of others Eli puts a sudden petition for Hannah the God of Israel grant thee thy petition In these and many like cases the holy word stores us with patterns for ejaculation in all extremities which I cannot now digest and improve only in a few words lets take a view of the usefulness of such a sudden flight of the soul to Heaven 1. It helps us to a speedy preparative for all duties Lam. 3 4● with such an ejaculation le ts lift our hearts with our hands to God in the Heavens 2. It is a guard against secret sins in the first risings and the first assaults of temptation 3. It suffers not divine mercies to slip by unobserved in a wakeful Christian and proves a fruitful mother of gratitude and praise 4. It sanctifies all our worldly imployments 1 Tim 4. ● 5. it fastens the stakes in the hedge of divine protection and turns every thing to a blessing 5. It s a Saints buckler against sudden accidents a present antidote against frights and evil tidings It s good at all occasions and consecrates to us not only our meals but every gasp of air c. 6. It s a sweet companion that the severest enemies can't abridge us of Outward ordinances and closet duties they may cut off the little (a) Ezr. 9 8. nail in the holy place they may pluck out But no labyrinth no prison not the worst of company can hinder this coelo restat iter in the very face of adversaries we may lift our souls to God No more of this le ts briefly conclude with some uses Vse Vse Cant. 4 12. To convince such of their dangerous state that neglect sacred duties that have no heart-communion that draw no water out of this sealed fountain But all they do is in publick only it 's a suspicious token of hypocrisie since the kernel and soul of religion lies so much in the heart and closet mark the phrase in the text how it varies thy Father that is in secret be sees in secret God's eye is open upon thee in the closet and if thy eye be open upon his thou mayst see a glorious beauty The excellency of grace lies in making conscience of secret sins and secret duties 2. To examine such as perform secret duty but not from a sincere principle like Amaziah 2 Chron. 25.2 that prays but not with a perfect heart like Ahab they mourn but with Crocodile tears such as do it only because they find precept or example for it and therefore to quiet conscience will into secret but converse only in the shell and trunk of a duty that rest in the naked performance but matter not whether they tast of the sweet streams that flow in from heaven in the golden pipe of an ordinance what account can such render that go into their closets but like Domitian to catch flies only Sueton. in Domit. c. 3. and when the doors are shut to the world their hearts are shut to heaven and communion with God He that sees in secret beholds the evil frame of such a heart and will one day openly punish it 3. To excite and awaken all to this excellent duty and to manage it in an excellent manner Would ye live delightfully would ye translate heaven to earth then keep up communion in secret prayer to know him to discern his face to behold the lustre of his eye that shines in secret Remember the glorious person that meets in your closets all the world yields not such a glittering beauty as a gracious person sees when he is in a happy frame at secret prayer Shut your eyes when ye come out for all other objects are but vile and fordid and not worth the glances of a noble soul O the sweetness the hidden manna that the soul tasts when in lively communion with God! Psal 31.19 Part of that which is laid up for Saints in glory let us a little relish our spirits with it 1. Consider what amorous agonies the soul delights to conflict with in serret fears that raise confidence humility that exalts tremblings that embolden bright clouds
thy trust and requireth thy help to the utmost power for their good assist them herein and see that they do it and use thy gifts and parts and knowledg in praying with them that they also by thy example might be induced to this duty and by hearing thee pray in their company may learn to pray also Light of Nature did dictate to the heathen Mariners Jon. 1. that prayer to God was a means to save them in the storm therefore the Master of the Ship the Head of that Society called Jonah from sleep to Prayers and this they did not only severally but conjunctly v. 14. they cried unto the Lord and said We beseech thee O Lord We beseech thee c. and shall the Heathen Master of the Ship do more in that Society whereof he was chief than a Christian Master of a Family in that Houshold Society whereof he is head Moreover 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lores Penates Dii domestici qui domi coluntur Ego Deos Penates hinc salutatum domum devortar Ter. Phorm Vestae vis ad aras focos pertinet itaque in ea dea quae est rerum Custos intimarum omnis precatio sacrificatio extrema est nec longè absunt ab hac vi d●i penates sive à penu ducto nomine sive ab eo quod penitùs insident Cic. de nat Deor. l. 2. that the Light of Nature doth dictate that there should be conjunct worshipping of God in mens houses the practice of the Heathen makes manifest they had their houshold gods so call'd because they thought they had the rule over them and their Housholds and the keeping and preserving of their Families though indeed they could not defend themselves nor them that did in their houses worship them as Juno in her speech to Aeolus Gens inimica mihi Tyrrhenum navigat aequor Ilium in Italiam portans victósque penates Yet these Gods they served in their houses and sacrificed to them in which Sacrifice their custom * Godw. Rom. Ant. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Videntur fuisse dii penates qui ad tuendam rem domesticam colerentur De Dieu in Gen. 31.19 was to eat up all that was left at the Offering thinking it an hainous matter to send any of that Sacrifice abroad to their friends or to the poor Of this sort were the Teraphim an Idol or Image made for mens private use in their own houses Laban had such houshold Gods Gen. 31.19 30. Why hast thou stollen away my Gods By this you see that the Light of Nature doth dictate houshold worship to be given to God and the Heathens did it to their false Gods And if you called Christians will not in your houses jointly pray unto the true God let the Heathens stand up as witnesses against you However take this Argument containing the sum of the five foregoing Propositions 2. Arg. If all men are bound to take God for their Ruler governing them by a Law writen in their hearts which doth dictate to them that there is a God and jointly to be prayed unto in mens Families then it is their duty so to do The reason of this is because if they be bound to do it and do it not they sin But all men are bound to take God for their Ruler as in the first Proposition is shewn governing them by a Law as in the second written in their hearts as in the third which doth dictate to them that God is as in the fourth and to be jointly prayed to in their Families as in the fifth Therefore it is their duty so to do For the proof of the last part of the minor Proposition viz. That the Light of Nature doth dictate that Men or Masters of Families ought to pray conjunctly with the Members of their Families consider this Seeing Societies as such are totally dependent upon God and mens gifts are communicative and solemnities are operative nature teacheth us that God ought to be solemnly acknowledg'd worship'd and honour'd both in families and in more solemn appointed assemblies Mr. Baxter Reasons of Christ Rel. part 1. p. 74. If the Light or Law of Nature doth dictate that Masters of Families ought to use all means to prevent the damnation of the immortal Souls in that Domestick Society of which they are Heads and Governours and to further their eternal happiness having opportunities so to do then it doth dictate that they ought to pray conjunctly with them The reason of this is because Prayer is a means made together with them which the Light of Nature doth dictate profitable to prevent their misery and further their happiness as in the fourth Position before laid down and they have opportunities for this means But the Light or Law of Nature doth dictate that Masters of Families ought to use all means to prevent the damnation of the immortal Souls in that Domestick Society whereof they are Heads and Governours and to further their eternal happiness having opportunities so to do For if the Light of Nature doth dictate they ought to take care of their bodies that are mortal it doth tell them they are much more to take care of their Souls which are immortal and must for ever live in happiness or misery as in Position first second and third Therefore the Light or Law of Nature doth dictate that it is their duty to pray conjunctly with their Families and if the Law of Nature doth the Lavv of God doth because the Law of Nature is God's Law Argument 3. The third seat or head of Argument shall be taken from what God is to Families as such in these four Propositions God is the founder of all Families as such therefore Families as such should pray unto him 1. Familia est inter plures pirsonas quae sunt sub unius potestate vel naturâ vel jure subjectae vel societas constituta secundùm naturam quotidiani usus gratia Estque conjugalis patria Herilis Liebent Col. Polit The houshold Society usually is of these three Combinations Husband and Wife Parents and Children Masters or Servants though there may be a Family where all these are not yet take it in its latitude and all these Combinations are from God The Institution of Husband and Wife is from God Gen. 2.21 22 23 24. and of Parents and Children and Masters and Servants and the authority of one over the other and the subjection of the one to the other is instituted by God and founded in the Law of Nature which is God's Law The persons singly considered have not their beings only from God but the very being of this Society as such is also from him and as a single person is therefore bound to devote himself to the service of God and pray unto him so an houshold Society is therefore bound jointly as such to do the same because as such a Society it is from God utriusque est par ratio And hath God
〈◊〉 ruler of his own house Kings are Fathers of their own Countries and Fathers are Kings in their own houses in respect of their rule and authority over them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer Odys lib. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Idem Odys 9. Direction II. N c sibi nec aliis utilis Omne animi vitium tanto conspectius in se Crimen habet quanto qui peccat major habetur Juven Sat. 8. 2. That Prayer be managed to the spiritual benefit of the Family the Master thereof should make it his business to be accomplished with gifts and knowledg suitable to the place where God hath set him Ignorance in a Master of a Family renders him uncapable of the discharge of the duties of his place and is worse than in a Child or Servant Such a Family is lik a body that hath a head without eyes It is a shame to see what little knowledg many Governours of Families have in matters of Religion that when they should instruct and catechise their children and servants need to be catechised themselves The Apostle requireth this qualification in Masters of Families that they should be knowing men so some interpret this place 1 Pet. 3.7 as becomes knowing men Naturally men are endued with greater powers to understand than women are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Viri similite● unà versentur ut scientes decet Beza Piscat Quid est stultius quam quia diu non didiceri● non discere Omnis aetatis homines schola admittit Tamdu● d●scendum est quamdiu nescias Sen. Epist 76. and a Master of a Family hath had more time to get knowledg than Children and Servants have and if he hath not attain'd to more it is his shame and reproach and renders him more contemptible in the eyes of those that are subjected to him who have not that reverent awe of him and his authority as they would have if authority were accompanied with knowledg study then you Masters the Scripture more and the grounds of Religion more that you might be able to manage this duty to the greater profit of all in your Families Direction III. 3. It is necessary also to this purpose that the Master of the Family instruct each member of his house in the principles of Religion that they may be able to understand the matter of the Prayers that are put up to God For if the Governour have knowledg how to ask and those that kneel down with him know not the meaning of his words though commonly used and plain to them that have been instructed how shall they concur in such requests or confessions or say Amen to what they do not understand Or what spiritual profit can they get When you lament Original Sin which you and they were guilty of and defiled with if they know not what this means nor how they are corrupted even from their birth how shall they in Prayer be humbled for it If you pray that you may be justified sanctified or have the Image of God engraven on your hearts that you may have Faith in Christ repentance for sin be converted c. how shall they joyn with you if they have no knowledg of these things when they are ignorant what is meant by the Image of God by faith repentance conversion c. and what benefit can they have by such Prayers as to their own concurrence with you to make these things their own desire when yet they are the things you must daily beg of God That Prayer then might be performed to their spiritual edification lay first the foundation be knowing your selves and make them so too and Prayer will be more advantageously done to you and them Nisi priùs in nob●s ejusm●di● affectus exsuscitamus quos altorum animis impressos volumus frustrà erit quicquld conamur Bowl past Evang. Direction IV. 4. That Prayer be managed to the spiritual profit of those in the Family the Master of the Family should get his own heart in good frame and get his own affections warmed in the duty Do you come to Prayer with a lively heart and quickned affections your selves your heat might warm them Quod enim minister Ecclesiae est in templo id pius pater-familias esi indomo ille publico docendi munere fungitur hic privatim suam instituit familiam ad pietatem ac ho●●statem d●mesticos suos format Gerhard lo. com de Conjug and your earnest importunity might stir them up unto the same let them see you are in good earnest by your fervent praying as becomes men that are begging for such things as the life of their souls the pardon of their sin the favour of God deliverance from hell and for everlasting happiness Whereas if you come to the duty with flat dull and cold affections this will make them so too As you find it with your selves when you are under a dull and lukewarm Preacher you have little workings of affections so your Family will find it under your Prayers if they be such for as a Minister should get lively workings in his own breast of those affections which he would raise in the People so should you in Family duties get those workings of love joy and sorrow for sin which you would desire should be in those that joyn with you for what a Minister is in the Church that you are proportionably in your house Direction V. Orationis Lex ut non aliter quàm eos decet qui ad Dei colloquium in grediuntur mente animóque compositi simu● Calv. Inst l. 3. cap. 20. 5. When you are to set actually on the duty prepare your Family by some short advice to carry themselves as becomes those that are going to speak to the great eternal God at least sometimes and the oftner the better Do not rashly rush out of your worldly callings into the presence of the glorious God say to them to this or the like purpose The God we are going to pray unto is a holy just omniscient God that looks into all our hearts that sees and knows the frame of our spirits that will not be mocked and cannot be deceived All we are sinful Creatures that have broke his righteous Laws and thereby have deserved hell and everlasting torments yet this gracious God holds forth his golden Scepter and gives us leave to approach his presence to beg for pardon and for Christ and grace and heaven Our wants are great and many too and yet our mercies are great and many too come then O come let us with a holy fear of God put up our joynt Petitions that God would supply our wants especially of our souls and make joynt confessions of our sins to God with humble broken penitent hearts and joyntly bless him for the mercies we are all partakers of but let us do all as those that would please God while we pray unto him and not by our
carelesness and sloth provoke him while we kneel before him Thus Job prepared his houshold Solennis erat apud Ethnicos mos l●vandi manus ante sacrificandum ●ut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idem ac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apud quosdam significet when he with them did sacrifice to God Job 1.5 Job sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the morning and offered Burnt-offerings according to the number of them all thus did Job continually Could Job sanctifie his Children could Job give them grace Parents might give their Children portions but can they give them holiness too they might put money into their purses but can they put goodness into their hearts yea they may advise and exhort them to get grace but can they work it too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. Iliad l. 6. Is not this bestowed by God the Author of all Grace How then did Job sanctifie his children The meaning is that Job did what he could to prepare and dispose them for the religious duties they were entring upon So the word Sanctifie is often used Exod. 19.22 Let the Priests sanctifie themselves 2 Chron. 30.25 and the Priests and Levites were ashamed and sanctified themselves 17. many that were not sanctified all is explained by Hezekiah's prayer v. 18. The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek the Lord God of his fathers though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the Sanctuary Direction VI. 6. It will be useful to this purpose Cui aliis in precando praecunáum sedulò perquirat quae apud suos obtinent peccata quibus maximè indigent gratiae quibus exercentur tentationes quae illos cujuscu que generis premunt gr●vamina quae illis imminent judicia quae in illos indies confert Deus beneficia hand aliter suis se inter orandum accomodabit qui non haec omnia in numerato habet Bowl past Evan. that the Master of the Family understand the spiritual condition of every one in the Family that he may put up requests suitable to their condition Let him get a particular knowledg of their wants doubts fears temptations afflictions of soul of their sins as far as is convenient and the mercies of God towards them for as it is for the spiritual benefit of a people that their Minister understand the state of his flock that so he might study for them and preach to them pray for them and with them according as their case requires so it will be for the benefit of a Family to have their particular cases spread before the Lord in Prayer Direction VII 7. Keep seasonable hours for Family Prayer and take the fittest time when all might be most free from distraction and disturbance In the morning put it not off too long lest by worldly occasions it be put quite by Be not too late at night when the Family after weariness by their Callings all the day will be more fit to sleep than to pray Late Prayers are too commonly sleepy Prayers one asleep in one place and another in another and it may be the Master of the Family himself prays between sleeping and waking Be not clubbing abroad when you should be praying at home This is in the power of the Governour of the house to remedy the other being to be at the hour appointed by him Direction VIII 8. Spend so much time in Family Prayer that those that joyn might be affected but not so much as to be wearied with the duty Be not too short nor yet too tedious Not too short for the heart is not easily tuned nor the affections warmed nor the mind brought into frame our wants are many and our sins are many and some time must be spent to get the heart sensible of them and of God's mercies to us To rise up from your knees before these can be probably done is to come away no better than you went unto it This overhasty brevity argues but little delight in the duty and sheweth you care not how soon you get out of God's special presence I doubt such as thus slubber over Family Prayer with so much haste * Vt canis è Nilo do it because they may be said to do it to stop the mouths of others and the mouth of their own Conscience with the work done And yet too much prolixity and length of the duty may have its inconveniencies also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pos and make it to some graceless persons in the Family or to others that are good but wearied in their daily Callings before to be burthensome and they more backward to it But the most do not err on this hand therefore to say little here will be enough and leave it to the prudence of the Governour to consider the persons that joyn and other concurring Circumstances and to act accordingly So much for the Directions for the Master of the Family Secondly The Directions for such as are to joyn in Family Prayer for their greater benefit Let them be careful Direction I. 1. Direct That they be all present at the beginning of a duty and continue till it be ended In some Families there is great disorder in this respect Servants either by reason of the backwardness of their hearts for want of love to and delight in Prayer or by not wisely forecasting their business come when the Prayer is half over or else go out before it is ended or if at the beginning and end yet to look after one thing or other make breaches and interruptions in the Prayer by going out and coming in once or twice or more in the Prayer-time which if possible should be carefully avoided for Family Prayer being ordinarily not very long to lose any part of it cannot but be to the detriment and disadvantage of such persons for when their affections begin to be warmed by these interruptions they are cooled and damped again You should be more willing to go to your Prayer than to your meat when hungry by how much your Souls are better than your bodies and serving God better than feeding of the body If business come when we are eating at our Table we commonly let it stay till we have done what business shall wait upon you in that case let it do so also in the other that you might not lose the benefit of the Prayer Numa Pompilius made a Law amongst the Romans that men should not serve the Gods as they passed by or were in haste or did any other business but that they should worship and pray to them when they had time and leasure and all other business set apart Plutarch Direction II. 2. Direct When you are present at Family Prayer give diligent attention and mind what confessions of sins are made what petitions are put up and what praises are returned to God for mercies received The Devil will be striving that you may be absent in Prayer when you are *
shouldest sometime sustain some loss in thy outward estate if it be made up with the favour of God and true peace of Conscience in the way of duty and with the real advantage of thy own Soul and the Souls of all thy Family Canst thou be willing to lose nothing for the gaining of Heaven or hadst thou rather that thou and they should lose God and Christ and Glory and Souls and all Surely when you come to cast up your accounts what you have got and what you have lost your gains will prove your loss 10. If God should bring back some from the Grave and Hell and set them in this world again dost thou think that they would so follow the World and run up and down after money that they would say they could find no time to pray that they might escape that dreadful place of Torment they had been in If some of those that have been in Hell but a Moneth or two were now in thy circumstances dost thou think they would not let their work stand still or rise the sooner and sit up the later or would deny themselves much of their eating time and sleeping time that they might have time to pray Lord let us not go down to Hell again O let us not return to the place which we have found to be so restless and so dreadful And shouldst not thou be as much and often and as earnest with thy Family that neither thou nor any of thine be cast into it I durst not let this pass though I am sensible I have taken up too much room without endeavouring to remove this hindrance that lyes in the way to keep many Families from their knees in Holy Prayer I beg for the Lord's sake and for your Soul's sake that you would watch against it and resolve against it and that your worldly Interest shall no longer keep you from Family Prayer In the close then of all that hath been said Let me in the Name of God exhort you all to the practice of Family Prayer You have heard it proved to be your duty you have been directed how you might manage it for the good of all in your houses you have had motives to press you to the performance of it your pretences and excuses brought against it have been manifested to be frivolous and vain What say you Sirs Will you resolve upon it here in the presence of the Lord or will you still neglect it Shall I lose all my labour or shall it be in vain that I have preached and you have heard this Doctrine I tell you to your faces it shall not be in vain the word of the blessed God shall convince you and reform you or condemn you What come we hither for but faithfully to shew you your duty and earnestly to perswade you to obey Do Ministers study for you when you are sleeping in your beds and declare the mind and will of God in the Congregation and will you cast all our counsel behind your back I hope you will be wiser for your own everlasting happiness Say then Are you convinced in this point that it is your duty If not view over again what hath been said and seriously consider it and let me beg this at your hands that you would think of all Now as you would do if you were with an awakened Conscience upon your dying bed or if you were standing at God's Judgment barr and when this question is put to you whether you ought to pray in your Families Let Conscience say Yes or No according as its verdict and dictate shall be at Death and Judgment and then I am perswaded you will say you are convinced you ought to do it And are you indeed What! and yet go on in the omission of it Will you so sin against your Consciences will you dare so to do You Parents for God's sake consider in what a condition you have brought your Children into the world are they not by nature enemies to God dead in sin children of wrath unfit for Heaven Such Parents are like the Ostrich You negligent Parents read Job 39.13 to 19. and Lam 4.3 Look your faces in that Glass Do you not blush Look that you are so like to such a foolish bird Struthio-camelus der●linquit ova sua in terra crudelis in prolem nihil praestupiditate oblivione crudelitate filiis suis timet Vales. Phil. Sac. Sicut haec avis non curat sua ova ita insipientes non curant instrui liberos in pietate Franzius The Ostrich if it thrust her neck or head into any shrub or bush and get that hidden thinks her self safe and that no man seeth her Plin. Nat. Hist Such fools are these ungodly Parents that if they get their heads under their roofs remember not that God seeth their great neglect there and in danger of damnation and will you not so much as pray daily with them that they may be delivered out of this condition and be saved from damnation is it nothing to you whether your Children are damned or saved is it nothing to you whether they live with the blessed glorious God or with cursed Devils and damned Souls have you no pity nor compassion for them that are flesh of your flesh where are the earnings of your hearts where are the workings of your bowels if their bodies were a dying would you not pray by their bed sides that they may be preserved from ●he grave and will you not that their Souls might be saved from Hel● Dare you not be guilty of the murder of their bodies and dare you of their Souls do not the Laws of men justly hang those that do the one and will not the Laws of God righteously damn them that do the other You Fathers and you Mothers can you look upon your Graceless Christless Children and not pity them and weep over them and call them to you to come and pray with you have you not a word to say to God for them in their hearing will you not call them to this duty and let them be eye-witnesses of the tears that you should shed in lamenting their sinful state and misery thereby and ear-witnesses of the requests you put up to God for their conversion and how might this work upon their hearts if they were But what shall I say to you Fathers and to you Mothers that do neglect your duty which God requireth for the good of your Children the Father doth not pray the Mother doth not perswade him nor intreat him so to do and by the negligence of both the Children are ungodly Are they more wicked or you more cruel They are full of Impiety and you are full of cruelty both Father and Mother because it is so much long of you that they are so bad Crudelis Mater magis an puer Improbus ille Improbus ille puer crudelis tu quoque mater Virg. Eclog. 8. Appendatur hoc Crudelis pater es per te
always sure to find affection and that her aim in shooting her bolt is right though her arm be not always with the strongest 5. The husbands Love is to be shewed in Trusting his wife in Domestick affairs Prov. 31.11 The heart of her husband doth safely trust in her Especially she having as she ought to have a competent judgment to guide them It is below the gravity of an Husband to intermeddle with managing houshold provisions Maid-servants and such like affairs but should leave them to the discretion of his wife unless she at fit times do discreetly choose to advise with him that so if the event should not answer his expectation she may be free from blame But generally he ought to move in his own sphere and incourage her to move in hers He must fetch in honey and she must work it in the hive For seldom doth the Estate prosper where the husband busies himself within doors and the wife without 6. The Effects of an husbands Love to his wife are to be seen in his Behaviour towards her that is in the mild use of his Authority This God hath in his Wisdom invested him withal at his (g) Gen 2.23 Creation and not devested him at his (h) Gen. 3.16 Fall The (i) Esth 1.22 Light of Nature gives it to him and the Gospel hath no where repealed but (k) 1 Cor. 11.3 confirm'd the same And none but proud and ignorant women will ever dispute it But herein lies an Act of the husband's Love 1. wisely to keep 2. mildly to use this Authority 1. He must keep it by a religious grave and manly carriage this will be his chiefest Fort and Buttress to support it It will be hard for her though doubtless her duty to reverence him who himself hath forgotten to reverence his God If his behaviour be light she will be apt to set lightly by him If he be weak and effeminate it loses him But he ought to answer his name to be an Head for judgment and excellency of spirit and to be truly religious This will maintain his Authority But then 2. Herein shines his Love to use the same with all sweetness remembring that though he be Superiour to his Wife yet that their Souls are equal that she is to be treated as his Companion that he is not to rule her as a (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist de cura rei fam l. 1. Imperare maritus mulieri debet non ut Dominus rei quam possidet sed ut animus corpori Lud. Viv. de off mar Non es Dominus sed maritus non ancillam forti●us es sed uxorem Redde studio vicem redde amori gratiam Ambros tom 4. p. 55. King doth his Subjects but as the head doth the body That though she was not taken out of Adams head so neither out of his foot but out of his side near his heart And therefore his Countenance must be friendly his ordinary (m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in Eph s hom 20. language to her mild and sweet his behaviour obliging his commands sparing and respectful and his reproofs gentle He must neither be Abject nor Magisterial If his Rule be too imperious his love is destroyed if his love be not discreetly exprest his Scepter 's lost and then he is disabled from doing God Service or his Family good He should never imagine that a rude insolency or perpetual bitterness is either the way to keep or use his Authority aright Yea the Spirit of God expresly saith Col. 3.19 Husbands love your Wives and be not bitter against them If meekness of Wisdom will not prevail with thy wife thou art undone in this world and she in the world to come And so much for the heads of the husbands Duty to his wife I now proceed to the Third thing namely to declare the Duty of the Wife in this Position The great Duty of every wife is to reverence her own husband She stands obliged to many other Duties as you have heard which lye common between them but she is still signaliz'd by this This is her peculiar qualification as she is a wife Let her have never so much wisdom learning grace yet if she do not reverence her husband she cannot be a good Wife Look to her Creation she was made after Man he has some honour by his seniority 1 Tim. 2.13 For Adam was first formed then Eve She was made out of Man he was the rock whence she was hewen 1 Cor. 11.8 For the man is not of the woman but the woman of the man She was made for man 1 Cor. 11.9 Neither was the man created for the woman but the woman for the man So that it is not Man that hath set this Order but God himself Look again to the Fall and there you hear what God saith Gen. 3.16 Thy des●re shall be to thy husband and he shall rule over thee See in the New Testament lest Christ his being made of a woman should seem to alter this inviolable Law Coloss 3.18 Wives submit your selves to your own husbands as it is fit in the Lord. 1 Pet. 3.1 Likewise ye wives be in subjection to your own Husbands Ver. 2. your chast conversation must be coupled with fear Ver. 5. The holy women of old adorned themselves with this subjection to their own husbands and so in my Text. Let her be never so great never so good and though her husband be never so mean and never so bad yet this is her indispensable Duty to reverence her husband And this Principle must first be fixt in her heart that she is an (n) N●n modo mores majorum institu●a sed leg●s omnes humanae ac divinae ipsa etiam natura clamat mulierem debere esse subditam viro ac es pa ere L. Vives de Chr. foem p. 704. Inferior that her husband is a degree above her that it is neither agreeable to nature or decency to set the head below or no higher than the Rib. And when she is resolv'd in this than will she with much delight and ease go through her Duty A wise God hath ordered it thus and therefore it is best Now I shall open this Duty according to my former Method 1. In its Nature 2. In its Pattern 3. In its Effects 1. For the first The nature of this reverence It is a true cordial and conjugal reverence such as is peculiar to a good woman And I conceive it is made up of 1. Estimation 2. Love and 3. Fear 1. The wife ought to honour and esteem her husband Esth 1.19 Then all the Wives shall give to their husbands honour both to great and small And to this end she ought to contemplate all the excellencies of his Person whether of Body or mind and to set a due (o) Sic Cornelia irata plerísque qui honoris gratia Scipionis cognominahant maluit Cornelia Gracchi nominari
of hating him in his heart (y) Lev. 19.17 then certainly not upon his child whom he is oblig'd not only to admonish verbally but chastise really but first he should do as God did with our first Parents convict him of his nakedness (z) Gen. 3.11 c. i. e. shew him the evil of his lying railing idleness or c. faults he is chargeable with as opposite to the Word of God (a) Prov. 12.22 and prejudicial to his own Soul (b) 8.36 and that he is made to smart for the cure of this evil Which 3. Parents may let their children know they dare not suffer to remain longer uncorrected sith delays may prove dangerous to the Patient if the rod be withheld (c) 23.13 The festering wound may rankle and come to a gangrene if not lanced in due time Parents love is seen in chastening betimes (d) 13.24 both in respect of the age of the child and of its fault If it be not too soon for children to sin it should not be thought too soon for Parents to correct and that seasonably before the sin grow strong get head and sprout forth The child should be taken while there is hope (e) 19.18 The twigg may be bent whiles it is young and the sin mortified if nipt in the bud God we find hath been very severe in remarking the first violations of his Statutes as for gathering sticks on the Sabbath day (f) Numb 15.25 and Aaron's sons offering strange fire (g) Levit. 10.2 so Parents should timely curb the first exorbitances of their children Hence 4. They should let them see they are resolv'd after serious deliberation not to be diverted by the pullings and passions of their unhumbled children from inflicting due punishment fith the Wise man chargeth Let not thy Soul spare for his crying (h) Prov. 19.18 so that they may not remain fearless yet it must then be in compassion that they may conceive as the Father of Heaven is afflicted in the affliction of his (i) Isa 63.9 so are they in the affliction of their children and as the Lord doth it in measure though he will not suffer them to go unpunished (k) Jer. 30.11 so do they My Text bounds the correction that it may not exceed a just proportion to the discouraging of children whose different tempers as well as different faults are to be consider'd so as no more be laid upon them than they are able to bear (l) 1 Cor. 10.13 There should therefore be a special care took that the chastisement be no other than what is meet Physicians endeavour to apportion the Dose they give to the strength of the Patient and the peccant humour they would correct There must be a rational consideration of the age sex and disposition of the child the nature and circumstances of the fault and what sati●faction is offer'd by the delinquent upon ingenuous confession or possibly some interposition of another so that the offended Parent may keep up his authority be victorious in his chastisements and come off with honour and good hopes of the child's amendment For a Parent should be ever ready to forgive and to connive often at smaller failings wherein there is no manifest sin against God in confidence of gaining the child's affections by tenderness and kind forbearance towards the things that are most desirable This pleasing policie is they say much in request at this day in Japan ‖ Varen Descript Regn. Japoriae c. xv where Parents do educate their children with a great deal of softness very rarely punishing them with stripes though they follow their diligent informations with frequent admonttions And they tell us among the Grecians the best means the Mother used if a Boy was stubborn in committing a fault to perswade him to leave it was to shew him her breasts as the most powerful motive she had † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Schol. in Scrip. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the Fathers it seems amongst them were more sharp and therefore Prometheus in Menander is said to be tyed like a Boy to the racks where he prettily pleads his cause as if his punishment had not been proportioned to his fault but he had been too hardly dealt with Be sure our Apostle both in my Text and to the Ephesians is altogether against any discouraging chastisement and requires moderation Thus for nurture the first branch of Education The 2. is in the admonition of the Lord without vvhich the former will not be effectually prosperous This according to the notation of the original word (m) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph 6.4 with 1 Cor. 10.11 Tit. 3.10 is a putting of things into their Childrens minds an informing of the judgment in and pressing upon the will and affections the principles of the Christian institution vvarning them to take heed of deviating from these principles vvhich they are oblig'd to live up to and is the principal thing in the educating of Christian Children So that Parents are mostly concern'd to get the fear of God planted in their Childrens tender souls that they may know and love trust in and obey their Maker Redeemer and Sanctifier and have timely preservatives against the corruptions of an untoward generation Under this we may speak of Parental Instruction and Watchfulness 1. Instruction which is a timely instilling of conscientious principles and seeds of Religon into Children taking them a part and engaging them to receive the most necessary points as it vvere drop by drop here a little and there a little (n) Isa 28.10 according to their narrow capacities in a free and familiar Conference by putting Questions to them and teaching them how to give Answers and by putting them upon asking Questions and returning short and clear Answers thereunto not only concerning the Word but Works of God whose Spirit alone makes all efficacious The Lord hath most strictly enjoyned this by Moses (o) Deut. 4.9 charging Parents to keep their souls diligently and not to let the things God hath done to slip out of their hearts all their days but teach their Sons and their Sons who in after time did thankfully acknowledg the benefit of this instruction (p) Psal 44.1 2. We have heard with our ears O God our Fathers have told us the works that thou didst in their days in the times of old And for the Words and Ordinances of God they are commanded not only to have them in their own hearts (q) Deut. 6.6 7. 11.19 but to teach them diligently unto their children as one who whets and sharpens a thing that is blunt (r) Eccles 10 10. by talking of them when they sit down in their house when they walk by the way when they lye down and when they rise up and elsewhere (s) Psal 78.5 6 7. Prov. 22.6 20 21. nor only so but by Rites (t) Exod. 12.26 13.14 and setting up visible and extraordinary
or froward (w) Luke 2.51 1 Pet. 2 18. in all that is well-pleasing to God whose honour is the end ingenuous Children should aim at by just and honest means in the exercise of their duties keeping themselves from their iniquities (x) 1 Tim 5.22 i. e. those which their own turbulent passions are apt to hurry them into If we did more reverence our selves we should carry better towards our Superiours Pythagoras his advice is very wholsom * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Carmin Let a man be the greatest shame to himself keep his own heart in awe by a secret blush upon his own extravagancies in their first risings and so he will have his Keeper every where with him then as he saith further Let him follow that which is just not only in words but in deeds He that is duly affected with shame of himself will be careful to pay just respects in all due circumstances unto those he is mostly oblig'd to honour 4. Set about all your duties to your Parents willingly and readily not with grudging or disdain but with an holy warmth of heart lifting up your selves to and following hard after whatever God requires (y) Judges 5.39 in all affectionate expressions of a free and chearful spirit sith all is to be in the Lord who loves readiness (z) 2 Cor. 9.7 This manner of performance will be the more easie if Children timely learn the great lesson of self-denial and do really exercise that and love they will then without bogling go through the most unpleasant uneasie and mean imployments they are call'd unto and concern'd to manage for their Parents as Jacob's Sons did for their Father after as well as before their marriage (a) Gen. 30.35 37.13 14. 42.1 2 3. 43.15 47.1 2 3. and in his straits Judah express'd great readiness to comfort his Father (b) 44.33 34 with 30. Ruth as was noted before was very exemplary in this manner of obedience (c) Ruth 1.15 16. but Isaac's readiness was the most singular (d) Gen. 22.9 10. till Christ himself whom he typified came then saith he to his Father (e) Psal 40.8 Ad semper velle non ad semper agere I delight to do thy will O my God thy Law is within my heart Believe it Willingness puts a great acceptableness upon duties Children are bound always to will though not always to act they should readily embrace all opportunities 'T is said Amasiah the Son of Zichri willingly offer'd himself unto the Lord (f) 2 Chron. 17.16 and so should ingenuous Children be ever ready as Paul was in Christ (g) Acts 21.13 for their Parents service Somewhat of this was hinted before and I shall only add what Hierocles saith in this case * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. in Pythag. Carm. p. 54 57 mihi It is fit we should not withdraw our selves from performing with our own hands what our Parents require as occasion serves but by how much the more mean and servile the offices by so much should Children think them the more honest and laudable and not to he avoided because expensive but to be done with a ready and chearful mind for their use and with joy we are put to those pains and expences for their sakes 5. Persevere in all and be constant with diligence unto the end whatever temptations you meet with Let not the instructions you have received according to godliness depart from your heart all the days of your life (h) Deut. 4.9 Be not fickle or inconstant but hold out in all circumstances though your Parents be aged and decay'd (i) Prov. 23.22 Ru h 1.15 16. 4.15 so long as they and you coexist in this world and the Relation remains Be like constant Ruth and holy Joseph when advanc'd he continued his obedience to the very last moment of his dear Father's life and after (k) Gen. 46.29 47.31 48.12 a vertue wherein it seems Samuel's sons were defective (l) 1 Sam 8.5 but Jonadab's were praise-worthy (m) Jer. 35.56 as well as others after their Parents decease when tempted to the contrary yea though it was in a business unpleasing to flesh and blood They did as Physicians prescribe to their Patients receive their Father's documents cum debitâ custodiâ so as not to indulge their appetites in that he forbad them but persevere in observing his injunction This is praise-worthy Nay though our Parents should not submit to the yoke of Christ we should not withdraw our neck from their yoke nor desist from obedience to them so far as it hinders not our obedience to Christ but should hold out that none take our Crown As Antonius said † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lib. 8. Sect. 5. Remember well you ought to be a good man and that which the nature of man requires of you this do constantly So that which the Nature of your Relation calls for do it with all your might and never suffer your self to be diverted or recalled from it Having found the true way of obedience go on in it and be not turned back again remembring vvhat our blessed Lord and Master saith He that shall endure to the end the same shall be saved (n) Mat. 24 13. After these Particulars to Children I must crave leave before I shut up 2. To say somewhat in particular unto Parents to direct and help them likewise to manage their office in an evangelical manner 1. Be sure that you your selves do keep up the life and power of godliness in your own domestick practise that hereby your children may be kept from corruption in a bad air and encourag'd in an holy conversation I have already hinted something of this concerning the exemplariness of Parents and in the premis'd general duty of their good behaviour and therefore shall not need to enlarge much upon it here Only suggest this that you are to walk in your integrity as for your own so for your posteritie's comfort in the family exercise of Religion by behaving your self wisely in an upright way and walking within your house with an upright heart (o) Psal 101 2. 112.2 Prov. 20.7 shewing your selves in all things patterns of good works (p) Tit. 2.7 And putting persons and things into their proper places to prevent confusion which else will arise and much obstruct you in your most important offices This will gain a reputation to your Government and facilitate the management of particular duties When your children see what a gloss you put upon holiness by your sincere chearful and grave Christian deportment they begin to discern the pleasantness of the ways of wisdom the excellency of the life of faith and the odiousness of flesh-pleasing courses and so come to esteem your instructions which are very legible and easie to be understood by such a practical commentary The holy life of John the Baptist had some influence upon Herod's affections for
under your care and are they to be neglected I have been the more large upon this Head because this sin is so common and of such dismal consequence and so little care is taken for the redress of it I come now to lay down the positive duties of Masters and that I shall do with somewhat more brevity 〈◊〉 First Let all Masters endeavour to be God's Servants True Religion and divine Principles in the heart will give a man the best measures of action the grace of God will teach him to deny his pride passion sensuality and worldly lusts and to live holily soberly and righteously in this present world Religion in its power O how lovely doth it make a man with what wisdom and prudence doth such an one act with what sweetness and love and yet with what majesty What a brave Master was Abraham and what made him so but the fear of God Mat. 11 28. this this will make a man merciful patient meek heavenly minded and yet diligent in his place this will make him exemplary and as much as in him lyes to act like God in his place And what injury can such a person do can he be cruel that hath such a Master as Christ can he find in his heart to be unmerciful who hath obtained mercy if a man be very holy himself his example will have a drawing power in it to allure to that which is so good and be a constant check to that which is bad Such a one is under the promise of God's blessing and he will teach him and give him wisdom to discharge the duty of his place He is made partaker of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Epictetus Philem. 2● and so enabled in some measure to act in a conformity to the Divine will It was no small commendation which Paul gave of Philemon when he spake of the Church in his house When our first Parents were in their pure state what homage did all the creatures give them as their visible Lord and had not man by his fall forfeited this prerogative and by denying God's soveraignty lost their own they had no doubt still kept their dominion over the Creatures And now the more of holiness is in a man and the more near God and like him the more likely to get and keep a majesty and dominion in his place Pythagoras Surely great holiness commands respect and reverence and rather choose to have your inferiours reverence than fear you for admiration and love accompany reverence but hatred fear O! what a noble thing were man Hierocles if goodness and purity did always accompany superiority and government these are and shall be honourable in spite of malice it self A right worshipping of God is the captain of all vertue and when this Divine seed is cast into the soul Idem it lays the foundation of brave and true honour and respect such a one he offers himself a sacrifice to God and makes a Temple for God in himself and then in his family and such a Master who would grudg to serve How sweet must obedience then be when nothing is commanded but what God commands and it's interest and profit to obey O Sirs 1 Pet. 5 1. little do you think how much power a meek holy grave conversation hath who that hath the least spark of ingenuity in him will not be restrained if not conquered by it O that Masters would but try this way and if honouring God do not more secure their honour than severity then let me be counted a deceiver this this is the most effectual way to make Servants good 1 Sam. 1.21 to be good your selves this will bring them to a true relish of Religion when it is pressed upon them by precept and example I have known some Servants that have blessed the day that ever they saw their Masters faces O let your excellency allure and draw those under you as the Sun doth mens eyes A● Epict. Anton l. 6. n. 27. or as meat and drink doth the hungry Secondly Endeavour the good of the souls of those under your charge with all your might be in travail to see Christ formed in their souls Rom. 10.1 Give them no rest till you have prevailed with them to be in good earnest for heaven allow them time for prayer reading of the Word hearing of good Sermons and for conversing with good Books commend to them Baxter's Call to the Vnconverted and Mr. Thomas Vincent's Explanation of the Assemblie's Catechism c. and observe what company they keep and if you know a holy experi●nced Servant commend their Society and example to them keep ●●●stent watch over your Servants remember what temptations they are exposed to know how they spend their time call them oft to an account and look well to your Books it will do them no hurt and you much good be oft in meekness and pity treating with them about their everlasting concerns and let your carriage bring full evidence along with it of your dear love to their immortal souls Labour as well as you can to convince them of the corruption of their nature of the evil of sin of their lost and undone state of their impotency and utter inability to save themselves or to make the least satisfaction to Divine justice or to bear that punishment that is due unto them for every sin shew them their absolute need of a Christ and that without him there is no salvation make them to understand what the new birth is what kind of change it is and how necessary and warn them of the danger of miscarriage in conversion and of taking up with a half work and resting in the outward part of Religion Mat. 5.20 Joh. 17.3 Prov. 3.17 Rom. 12.1 Mat. 11.28 1 Tim. 4.8 and their own righteousness Put them upon labouring to know God in Christ this is life eternal to know the only true God and Jesus Christ whom he hath sent Do what you can possibly to convince their Judgments of the reasonableness profitableness and sweetness of Religion where it is in its reality vigour and constancy take off the imputations and aspersions which the unexperienced foolish Infidel would cast upon Christianity Cant. 5.16 Prov. 3.15 Never think you can commend Christ too much to them O! if you could allure their souls captivate their hearts and make them in love with him who is altogether lovely O! let them not alone till you see them deeply affected with these things expostulate the case with them frequently by themselves ask them what they think of the estate of their Souls and leave not with their sullen silence ask them plainly how they can eat or drink or sleep without Christ and pardon and what they mean to be so unconcerned Tell them that death may be nearer them than they imagine and that as death leaveth them judgment will find them Tell them that their stupidity is an effect
of that deadness their souls lie under and that if they be not awakned quickly they must be unconceivably and eternally miserable ask them what they have to say against the ways of God and what they have to plead for their neglecting their souls for Sin and for Satan tell them these things are matters of such weight that they need not much time to determine what must be done It 's a matter of such vast importance that it calls for the greatest speed diligence and care imaginable and that you can't be satisfied till you see this work done catechise and instruct them constantly at least once a week Let the Word sound daily in their ears and pray twice a day with them let some time be allowed them for secret duties and put them upon the performance of them spiritually and constantly Keep them not too long at work or in the Shop on Saturday-night The Jews had their preparation for the Sabbath and the ancient Christians did not fall short of them in their preparation for the Lords-day Let the Sabbath be carefully spent in secret family and publick duties and for the better direction in your duties upon that day I refer you to that excellent piece Mr. Wells his Practical Sabbatarian a Book it 's pity any great Family should want Cause your Servants to bear you company to hear the most powerful Preacher you can require an account of what they hear and let the Sermons be repeated in your Family and ask them what it was that did most affect their hearts and labour to press things home afresh upon their souls and if you perceive any good inclinations in them encourage them greatly and improve them all you can and if you do not see what you would presently be not quite discouraged and cast them off as hopeless Exhort them daily while it is called to day Heb. 3.13 and if you see them still dull hard-hearted and under a spirit of slumber be yet the more earnest who knows but a little more patience and compassion and zeal may prevail But if after long using the fore-mentioned means you find them still refractory stubborn and to slight your counsel and run on in sin and to grow worse and worse you must add sharp reproofs and if they do no good Prov. 29.19 but they make a mock at them and endeavour to jeer their fellow-servants out of their duty too then you must add blows to your words Prov. 26.3 Stripes are fit for the back of a fool and if neither exhortations reproofs nor corrections will prevail but they continue still like sons of Belial rebellious to God and you Psal 101. then remember your duty is to ease your house of them consider well what danger there is of their infecting the rest of your Servants and Children consult your own peace honour and profit Let not a lyar a company-keeper 2 Cor. 6.14 a vile person dwell in your house when you have used all possible means for his reclaiming what fellowship should light have with darkness remember that God hath made you a Prophet a Priest and a King in your own Family Thirdly Another duty of Masters is diligently and faithfully to instruct their Servants in their Calling conceal nothing of the mystery of your Art from them I mean of what is lawful for if you are skil'd in the Art of cheating you must unlearn that your selves and never teach them that which will hazard their ruin Some Masters are ready to hide the most profitable and ingenious part of their trade from their Servants Remember Sirs that Law and Nature Reason and Religion all command you to be faithful in this thing their Parents or Friends put them to you to teach them an honest Calling and you promised you would do it and it's dishonesty in the highest degree to fail in this Fourthly Be just compassionate and loving be as ready to commend and encourage them for doing their duty as to reprove them for the neglect of it let them want nothing that is fitting for them in the place they are in let their food be wholesom seasonable and sufficient Prov. 31.15 let their clothing be warm sweet and decent let their lodging be warm and sweet and wholesom not too far from your eye and ear let them have rest sufficient to recruit nature and to fit them for God's Service and yours And in case of sickness let them have such tendance physick and diet as they need You can't imagine what obligations you may by this lay upon your Servants to fidelity how acceptable this is to God and how much reputation it will get you among men See an excellent example in the Centurion Mat. 8.5 6. Col. 4.1 Job 31.13 Give unto your Servants that which is just and equal It was Job's commendation that he did not despise the cause of his hand-maid Use your tongues to sweetness a soft word sooner prevails than a hard blow or curse Be punctually faithful to your contract with them pay them their wages to the full it 's better to do more than less than your bargain In a word As the Elect of God put on bowels of pity Col. 3.12 Jam. 1.20 Eph. 4.26 and put off all these anger wrath malice cursing remember the wrath of man works not the righteousness of God Be angry for nothing but sin Remember a Christ-like Gospel-spirit is a spirit of love Gal. 5.22 and peace meekness and faithfulness with these things God and man are well pleased Fifthly Discharge your Servants with sweetness and love and do not grudg that they should have a livelyhood as well as you Send them out of your Family with the counsel the good will of a Father and reckon one that was a faithful Servant to you seven years deserves to be esteem'd next a Child ever after To this end it would not be amiss if you give him as good a report as he deserves to raise his reputation and credit and if you help him as far as you are well able in his setting up you will not repent it upon a Death-bed nor at the Day of Judgment In old time God did require That when a Servant served six years Deut. 15 13 14 he should not be sent away empty but saith the Text thou shalt furnish him liberally out of thy flock out of thy floor and out of thy wine-press and that wherewith the Lord thy God hath blessed thee thou shalt give unto him And I know not why this may not be practised still where the Master is wealthy and able and the Servant poor and deserving Col. 5 13. Rom. 13.9 10 1 Thes 4.9 Neither do I know where the Gospel gives us a discharge from the works of Charity and Mercy I come now to Exhort Masters to this work to perform their Duty And this I shall press with a few Motives First Consider what a Master God is to his Servants he is
duty and not to despise the cause of his hand-maid What then said he should I do when God shall rise up and when he visiteth what shall I answer him Let death when he comes find you doing the best work Ar. Epict. l. 3. c. 15. Antoninus l. 2. n. 2. and faithful in your place I shall conclude this with the advice of that gallant Emperour Let it be thy earnest care constantly to perform every thing thou art about with justice to every one which you may well do if you go about every act as your last I am now come to the last thing which I promised to do and that is to shew What is the Duty of Servants and that I shall perform in the same method as I did before 1. By giving them some cautionary Directions 2. Some positive Directions and pressing these with some Motives and give them some Helps for the better performance of their Duty 1. I shall give Servants some cautionary Directions First Let Servants take heed of pride This was the sin of the Angels this made them Devils this was the sin of our first Parents 1 Tim. 3.6 this made them rebellious to God A humble heart is ready for any work or state that God in his providence calls him to any thing but sin will down with a humble man Remember pride unfits for the service of God and man makes one think himself fitter to command than to be commanded that makes one go on heavily with their work impatient of reproof ready to answer again malepert saucy ready to commit other sins to gratifie their pride A proud Servant will scorn to be catechized called to an account or be kept under those bounds that reason and Religion set Humility doth no body any harm brings no dishonour or inconveniency but is as good a security to reputation comfort and profit as any thing I know Secondly Take heed of disobedience to the lawful commands of your Master Think not that your arrogance bigness and parentage will bear you out It may be you think scorn that your Master should correct you and you say in your mind that you will give him as good as he brings know this that if you have a Master that may be low-spirited weak or poor and it may be such a one that is loth to deal with you as Law and Religion gives him leave yet are you too strong for God Is he afraid of your swelling and big looks Will he count you innocent Is not your rebellion and disobedience to your Master disobedience and rebellion against God And can his purity suffer long or his justice bear such imp●●●●y always without some signification of his displeasure Must the great ones of the world that break his Laws feel his power and shall such a despicable wretch as thou go unpunished Remember what is said of disobedience to the lawful commands of Magistrates holds here Whosoever resisteth shall receive to himself damnation Rom 13.2 Thirdly Take heed of negligence idleness carelesness By this you rob your Master of what in honesty you should and might have got for him by this you secretly waste your Master and answer not that trust that is put in you and is justly expected from you by this you give just occasion of displeasure to your Master by this you break your promise made to your Master and provoke God highly Mat. 5 26. Remember what a sentence the wicked slothful Servant must shortly hear Fourthly Take heed of mere eye-service Is the eye of God nothing to you and his warnings insignificant Col. 3.12 Doth not he in plain words forbid this O how many such Servants be there that when their Master is by are very diligent but when his back is turned then how lazy how wanton how careless Would you be served thus your selves if you were Masters Doth God take no notice at all and if he do how do you think he liketh such doings Is it a small matter to make light of his presence and if it be so you shall shortly find to your cost that his eye was more than your Master 's upon you and if you will not believe his knowledg observation and eye his hand shall shortly give you such a demonstration of both as you shall not be able to slight Fifthly Take heed of Lying By a lye you deny God's knowledg you make one fault two you make your self an enemy to humane society that is a sin which is hateful to every honest man and abominable to the Lord the lyar shall be shut out of Heaven Prov. 6.17 Rev. 21.8 and have his portion in that Lake that burns for ever I spare to speak how it spoils a man's credit and feeds jealousies in a Master and maketh him scarce believe you when you speak truth O! little do Servants think what folly they are guilty of by covering their faults with a lye Little do they think how dear that sin must cost them either here by deep repentance or hereafter by intolerable torments Sixthly Take heed of purloining or imbezeling any part of your Master's goods for your own use Tit. 2.10 Luke 16.6 Meddle with nothing but what is your own and is allowed you you would be loth any one should call you a Thief I pray then take care of that which will make you deserve such a name do not consent to any that are in the least guilty in that kind be not partners with a Thief and make not your self an accessory to another's wickedness by concealing any unfaithfulness of that nature in your fellow-servants after you have roundly warned them your self eat not of the junkets that sensuality wantonness and theft hath provided If you would know what such doings tend to in a word I may tell you they pamper lust many times end in uncleanness murder a prison a halter and if that were all it were not so bad in comparison by this you wrong God and man fear your conscience and make way for a world of other sins and bring speedy and sure damnation except a thorow repentance prevent it Seventhly Take heed of bad companions have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness but rather reprove them O how many hopeful youths are blasted by wicked company I am not ignorant of the high pretences of love that such may have and what excuses they may palliate their wickedness with but please none to displease God never count him your friend nor one that will do you a kindness that would lead you to sin the devil damnation Eighthly Take heed of disclosing your Master's secrets do not speak any thing that may wound his reputation make no mention of his faults without you are called to it lawfully and then not without deep regret and trouble upon the account of God's honour and his soul Some Servants make nothing of prating against their Masters and Mistresses behind their backs little considering that this is a sin
all his ●houghts How little is God in any of our thoughts according to His excellency No our shops our rents our backs and bellies usurp God's room If any thoughts of God do start up in us how many covetous ambitious wanton revengeful thoughts are jumbled together with them Is it not a monstrous absurdity to place our friend with a crue of vipers to lodge a King in a sty and entertain him with the fumes of a jakes and dunghil A wicked man's heart is little worth Prov. 10.20 The tongue of the just is as choice silver c. Apud nos cogitare peccare est Minucius Foelix all the pedling wares and works in his inward shop are not valuable with one silver drop from a gracious man's lips It was an invincible argument of the primitive Christians for the purity of the Christian Religion above all others in the world that it did prohibit evil thoughts And is it not as unanswerable an argument that we are no Christians if we give liberty to them What is our moral conversation outwardly but only a bare abstinence from sin not a disaffection Were we really and altogether Christians would not that which is the chiefest purity of Christianity be our pleasure And would we any more wrong God in our secret hearts than in the open streets Is not thought a beam of the mind and shall it be enamour'd only on a dunghil Is not the understanding the eye of the soul and shall it behold only guilded nothings 'T is the flower of the spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. Shall we let every Caterpillar suck it 'T is the Queen in us Shall every ruffian deflore it 'T is as the Sun in our heaven and shall we besmear it with misty phancies It vvas created surely for better purposes Lampridius than to catch a thousand weight of spiders as Heliogabalus employ'd his Servants It was not intended to be made the common fewer of filthiness or ranked among those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Histor animal lib. 8. which eat not only fruit and flesh but flies worms dung and all sorts of lothsome materials Let not therefore our minds wallow in a sink of phantastical follies whereby to rob God of his due and our souls of their happiness 2. Exhortation We must take care for the suppression of them All vice doth arise from imagination Upon what stock doth ambition and revenge grow Mirandul de Imaginat c 7. Isay 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way the unrighteous man his thoughts c. but upon a false conceit of the nature of honour What engenders covetousness but a mistaken fancy of the excellency of wealth Thoughts must be forsaken as well as our way we cannot else have an evidence of a true conversion and if we do not discard them we are not like to have an abundant pardon and what will the issue of that be but an abundant punishment Mortification must extend to these Affections must be crucified Gal. 5.24 and all the little brats of thoughts which beget them or are begotten by them Shall we nourish that which brought down the wrath of God upon the old world as though there had not been already sufficient experiments of the mischief they have done Is it not our highest excellency to be conform'd to God in holiness in as full a measure as our finite natures are capable And is not God holy in his counsels and inward operations as well as in his works Hath God any thoughts but what are righteous and just Therefore the more foolish and vain our imaginations are Eph. 4 17 18. the more are we alienated from the life of God The Gentiles were so because they walked in the vanity of their mind and we shall be so if vanity walk and dwell in ours As the tenth Commandment forbids all unlawful thoughts and desires so it obligeth us to all thoughts and desires that may make us agreeable to the divine Will and like to God himself We shall find great advantage by suppressing them We can more easily resist temptations without if we conquer motions within Thoughts are the mutineers in the soul which set open the gates for Satan He hath held a secret intelligence with them so far as he knows them ever since the fall and they are his spies to assist him in the execution of his devices They prepare the tinder and the next fiery dart sets all on a flame Can we cherish these if we consider that Christ dyed for them He shed his blood for that which put the world out of order which was accomplished by the sinful imagination of the first man and continued by those imaginations mention'd in the Text. He dyed to restore God to his right and man to his happiness neither of which can be perfectly attained till those be thrown out of the possession of the heart That we may do this Let us consider these following directions which may be branched into these heads 1. For the raising good thoughts 2. Preventing bad 3. Ordering bad when they do intrude 4. Ordering good when they appear in us 1. For raising good thoughts 1. Get renewed hearts The fountain must be cleansed which breeds the vermine 2 Cor. 5 17. Jer. 4.14 Wash thy heart from wickedness c. How long shall thy vain thoughts lodge within thee Pure vapors can never ascend from a filthy quagmire What issue can there be of a vain heart but vain imaginations Thoughts will not become new till a man is in Christ We must be holy before we can think holily Sanctification is necessary for the dislodging of vain thoughts and the introducing of good A sanctified reason would both discover and shame our natural follies As all animal operations so all the spiritual motions of our heads depend upon the life of our hearts * Prov. 4.23 as the principium originis As there is a law in our members to bring us into Captivity to the law of sin Rom. 7.23 so there must be a law in our minds to bring our thoughts to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 We must be renewed in the spirit of our minds Ephes 4.23 in our reasonings and thoughts which are the spirits whereby the understanding acts as the animal spirits are the instruments of corporeal motion Till the understanding be born of the spirit † John 3.6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the spirit is spirit it will delight in and think of nothing but things suitable to its fleshly original but when 't is spiritual it receives new impressions new reasonings and motions suitable to the Holy Ghost of whom it is born A stone if thrown upwards a thousand times will fall backward because 't is a forced motion but if the nature of this stone were changed into that of fire it would mount as naturally upward as before it sunk downward You
may force some thoughts toward heaven sometimes but they will not be natural till nature be changed Grace only gives stability † Heb. 13.9 It is a good thing that the heart be established with grace and prevents fluctuation by fixing the soul upon God as its chief end and what is our end will not only be first in our intentions but most frequent in our considerations Hence a sanctified heart is called in Scripture a stedfast heart There must be an enmity against Satan put into our hearts according to the first promise before we can have an enmity against his imps or any thing that is like him 2. Study Scripture Original corruption stuffs us with bad thoughts and Scripture-knowledg would stock us with good ones for it proposeth things in such terms as exceedingly suit our imaginative faculty as well as strengthen our understanding Phil. 1.9 1● Judicious knowledg would make us approve things that are excellent and where such things are approved toyes cannot be welcome Fulness is the cause of stedfastness The cause of an intent and piercing eye is the multitude of animal spirits Without this skill in the word we shall have as foolish conceits of divine things as ignorant men without the rules of art have of the Sun and Stars or things in other countries which they never saw The word is call'd a lamp to our feet i. e. the affections a light to our eyes Psal 119.105 Psal 19.8 enlightens the eyes i. e the understanding It will direct the glances of our minds and the motions of our affections It enlightens the eyes and makes us have a new prospect of things as a Scholar newly entred into Logick and studied the predicaments c. looks upon every thing with a new eye and more rational thoughts and is mightily delighted with every thing he sees because he eyes them as clothed with those notions he hath newly studied The Devil had not his engins so ready to assault Christ as Christ from his knowledg had Scripture-precepts to oppose him As our Saviourby this means stifled thoughts offered so by the same we may be able to smother thoughts arising in us Lecti●ne assidua meditatione diuturna pectus suum bibliothecam Christi fecerat Hierom. Ep 3. Converse therefore often with the Scripture transcribe it in your heart and turn it in succum sanguinem whereby a vigor will be derived into every part of your soul as there is by what you eat to every member of your body Thus you will make your mind Christ's library as Hierom speaks of Nepotianus 3. Reflect often upon the frame of your mind at your first conversion None have more settled and more pleasant thoughts of divine things than new converts when they first clasp about Christ partly because of the novelty of their state and partly because God puts a full stock into them and diligent trades-men at their first setting up have their minds intent upon improving their stock Endeavour to put your mind in the same posture it was then Or if you cannot tell the time when you did first close with Christ recollect those seasons wherein you have found your affections most fervent your thoughts most united and your mind most elevated as when you renewed repentance upon any fall or had some notable chearings from God and consider what matter it was which carried your heart upward what employment you were engaged in when good thoughts did fill your soul and try the same experiment again Asaph would oppose God's ancient works to his murmuring thoughts he would remember his song in the night i. e. the matter of his song and read over the records of God's kindness * Psal 77.6 7 8 9 10 11 12. David too would never forget i. e. frequently renew the remembrance of those precepts whereby God had particularly quicken'd him † Psal 119.93 Yea he would reflect upon the places too where he had formerly conversed with God to rescue himself from dejecting thoughts therefore will I remember thee from the land of Jordan and of the Hermonites from the hill Missar ‖ Psal 42.6 Some elevations surely David had felt in those places the remembrance whereof would sweeten the sharpness of his present grief When our former sins visit our minds pleading to be speculatively reacted let us remember the holy dispositions we had in our repentance for them and the thankful frames Luke 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked with us by the way and while he opened to us the Scriptures when God pardoned them The Disciples at Christ's second appearance reflected upon their own warm temper at his first discourse with them in a disguise to confirm their faith and expel their unbelieving conceits Strive to recollect truths precepts promises with the same affection which possest your Souls when they first appeared in their glory and sweetness to you 4. Ballast your heart with a Love to God David thought all the day of God's Law as other men do of their lusts because he unexpressibly loved it * Psal 119.97 113. Oh how I love thy Law It is my meditation all the day v. 113. I hate vain thoughts but thy Law do I love Aeneas oculis semper vigilantis inhaeret Aeneam animo nóxque diésque refert Ovid. Ep. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lucian Dialog 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost This was the succesful means he used to stifle vain thoughts and excite his hatred of them 'T is the property of love to think no evil 2 Cor. 13.5 It thinks good and delightful thoughts of God friendly and useful thoughts of others It fixeth the Image of our beloved object in our minds that 't is not in the power of other phancies to displace it The beauty of an object will fasten a rolling eye 'T is difficult to divorce our hearts and thoughts from that which appears lovely and glorious in our minds whether it be God or the world Love will by a pleasing violence bind down our thoughts and hunt away other affections If it doth not establish our minds they will be like a Cork which with a light breath and a short curl of water shall be tossed up and down from its station Scholars that love learning will be continually hammering upon some notion or other which may further their progress and as greedily clasp it as the Iron will its beloved Loadstone He that is wing'd with a divine love to Christ will have frequent glances and flights towards him and will start out from his worldly business several times in a day to give him a visit Love in the very working is a settling grace it encreaseth our delight in God partly by the sight of his amiableness which is clear'd to us in the very act of loving and partly by the recompences he gives to the affectionate carriage of his creature both which will stake down the heart from vagaries or giving
entertainment to such loose companions as evil thoughts are Well then if we had this heavenly affection strong in us it would not suffer unwholesom weeds to grow up so near it either our Love would consume those weeds or those weeds will choak our Love 5. Exercise faith As the habit of faith is attended with habitual sanctification so the acts of faith are accompanied with a progress in the degrees of it That faith which brings Christ to dwell in our souls will make us often think of our inmate Faith doth realize divine things and make absent objects as present and so furnisheth fancy with richer streams to bath it self in than any other principle in the world As there is a necessity of the use of fancy while the soul is linked to the body so there is also a necessity of a corrective for it Reason doth in part regulate it but 't is too weak to do it perfectly because fancy in most men is stronger than reason Mirand de Imaginat cap. 11 12. man being the highest of imaginative beings and the lowest of intelligent fancy is in its exaltation more than in creatures beneath him and reason in its detriment more than in creatures above him and therefore the imagination needs a more skilful guide than reason Fancy is like fire a good Servant but a bad Master if it march under the conduct of faith it may be highly serviceable and by putting lively colours upon divine truth may steal away our affections to it Faith is the evidence of things not seen viz. not by a corporeal but intellectual eye and so it will supply the office of sense 'T is the substance of things hoped for and if hope be an attendant on faith Psal 42.5 Why art thou cast down Oh my soul and why art thou disquieted within me Hope thou in God our thoughts will surely follow our expectations The remedy David used when he was almost stifled with disquieting thoughts was to excite his soul to a hope and confidence in God Psal 42.5 and when they return'd upon him he useth the same diversion v. 11. The peace of God i. e. the reconciliation made by a Mediator between God and us believingly apprehended will keep or garrison our hearts and minds or thoughts against all anxious assaults both from within and without † Phil 4.6 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When any vain conceit creeps up in you act faith on the intercession of Christ and consider Is Christ thinking of me now in Heaven and pleading for me and shall I squander away my thoughts on trifles which will cost me both tears and blushes Believingly meditate on the promises they are a means to cleanse us from the filthiness of the spirit as well as that of the flesh * 2 Cor 7.1 Having therefore these promises let us cleanse our selves c. If the having them be a motive the using them will be a means to attain this end Looking at the things that are not seen preserves us from fainting and renews the inward man day by day † 2 Cor. 4.16 18. These invisible things could not well keep our hearts from fainting if faith did not first keep the thoughts from wandring from them 6. Accustom your self to a serious meditation every morning Fresh airing our souls in Heaven will engender in us purer spirits and nobler thoughts A morning seasoning would secure us for all the day Intus existens prohibet alienum Though other necessary thoughts about our callings will and must come in yet when we have dispatch'd them let us attend our morning Theme as our chief companion As a man that is going with another about some considerable business suppose to Westminster though he meets with several friends in the way and salutes some and others with whom he hath some affairs he spends a little time yet he quickly returns to his companion and both together go their intended stage Do thus in the present case Our minds are active and will be doing something though to little purpose and if they be not fixed upon some noble object they will like mad men and fools be mightily pleased in playing with straws The thoughts of God were the first Visiters David had in the morning Psal 139 17 18 God and his heart met together as soon as he was awake and kept company all the day after In this meditation look both to the matter and manner 1. Look to the matter of your meditation Let it be some truth which will assist you in reviving some languishing grace or fortifie you against some triumphing corruption for 't is our darling sin which doth most envenom our thoughts † Prov. 23.7 As a man thinks in his heart so is he As if you have a thirst for honour let your fancy represent the honour of being a child of God and heir of Heaven If you are inclined to covetousness think of the riches stored up in a Saviour and dispensed by him If to voluptuousness fancy the pleasures in the ways of wisdom here and at God's right hand hereafter This is to deal with our hearts as Paul with his hearers to catch them with guile Stake your soul down to some serious and profitable mystery of Religion as the Majesty of God some particular Attribute The heads of the Catechism might be taken in order which would both encrease and actuate our knowledg Psal 40.5 his condescension in Christ the love of our Redeemer the value of his sufferings the vertue of his bloud the end of his ascension the work of the Spirit the excellency of the soul beauty of holiness certainty of death terror of judgment torments of Hell and joys of Heaven Why may not that which was the subject of God's innumerable thoughts be the subject of ours God's thoughts and counsels were concerning Christ the end of his coming his death his precepts of holiness and promises of life and that not only speculatively but with an infinite pleasure in his own glory and the creatures good to be accomplished by him Would it not be work enough for our thoughts all the day to travel over the length breadth heighth and depth of the love of Christ Would the greatness of the journey give us leisure to make any starts out of the way Having settled the Theme for all the day we shall find occasional assistances even from worldly businesses as Scholars who have some Exercise to make find helps in their own course of reading though the Book hath no design'd respect to their proper Theme Thus by imploying our minds about one thing chiefly we shall not only hinder them from vain excursions but make even common objects to be oyl to our good thoughts which otherwise would have been fuel for our bad Such generous liquor would scent our minds and conversations all the day that whatsoever motion came into our hearts would be tinctured with this spirit and savour of our morning
with crosses and then it breeds murmuring thoughts and sometimes it is crown'd with success and then it starts proud and self-applauding thoughts 1 Tim. 6.9 Those that will be rich fall into many foolish and hurtful lusts Such lusts that make men fools and one part of folly is to have wild and sensless fancies Mists and fogs are in the lower region near the earth but reach not that next the Heavens Were we free from earthly affections these gross vapours could not so easily disturb our minds but if the World once settle in our hearts we shall never want the sumes of it to fill our heads And as covetous desires will stuff us with foolish imaginations so they will smother any good thought cast into us as the thorns of worldly cares choak'd the good seed and made it unfruitful Mat. 13.22 As we are to rejoyce in the world as though we rejoyced not so by the same reason we should think of the world as though we thought not A conformity with the world in affection is inconsistent with a change of the frame of the mind Rom. 12.2 3. Avoid idleness Serious callings do naturally compose mens spirits but too much recreation makes them blaze out in vanity Idle souls as well as idle persons will be ranging As idleness in a State is both the mother and nurse of faction and in the natural body gives birth and encrease to many diseases by enfeebling the natural heat so it both kindles and foments many light and unprofitable imaginations in the soul which would be sufficiently diverted if the active mind were kept intent upon some stated work So truly may that which was said of the servant be applyed to our nobler part Mat. 25.26 Thou wicked and slothful servant Mat. 13 25. that it will be wicked if once it degenerates into slothfulness in its proper charge As empty minds are the fittest subjects for extravagant fooleries so vacant times are the fittest seasons While we sleep the importunate enemy within as well as the envious adversary without us will have a successful opportunity to sow the tares Whereas a constant imployment frustrates the attempt and discourageth the Devil because he sees we are not at leasure Therefore when any sinful motion steps in double thy vigour about thy present business and the foolish impertinent will sneak out of thy heart at this discountenance So true is that in this case which Pharaoh falsly imagined in another that the more we labour the less we shall regard vain words † Exod 5.9 As Satan is prevented by diligence in our callings so sometimes the Spirit visits us and fills us with holy affections at such seasons as Christ appeared to Peter and other Disciples when they were a fishing † Joh. 21.3 4. and usually manifested his grace to men when they were engaged in their useful businesses or religious services But these motions as we may observe by the way which come from the Spirit are not to put us out of our way but to assist us in our walking in it and further us both in our attendance on and success in our duties To this end look upon the work of your callings as the work of God which ought to be done in obedience to Him as He hath set you to be useful in the community Thus a holy exercise of our callings would sanctifie our minds and by prepossessing them with solid business we should leave little room for any spider to weave its Cobwebs 4. Awe your hearts with the thoughts of God's omniscience especially the discovery of it at the last judgment We are very much Atheists in the concern of this Attribute for though it be notionally believed yet for the most part it is practically deny'd God understands all our thoughts afar off † Psal 139.2 as He knew every creature which lay hid in the Chaos and undigested lump of matter God is in us all * Eph. 4.6 as much in us all as He is above us all yea in every creek and chink and point of our hearts Not an Atome in the spirits of all men in the world but is obvious to that all-seeing eye which knows every one of those things that come into our minds † Ezek. 11 5. God knows both the order and confusion of them and can better tell their natures one by one than Adam named the creatures Fancy then that you hear the sound of the last Trumpet that you see God's tribunal set and His omniscience calling out singly all the secrets of your heart Would not the consideration of this allay the heat of all other imaginations If a foolish thought break in consider What if God who knows this should presently call me to judgment for this sinful glance psal 44 21. Say with the Church Shall not God search this out Is it fit either for God's glory or our interest that when He comes to make inquisition in us He should find such a nasty dunghil and swarms of Aegyptian lice and frogs creeping up and down our chambers Were our heads and hearts possest by this substantial truth we should be ashamed to think what we shall be ashamed to own at the last day 5. Keep a constant watch over your hearts David desires God to set a watch before the door of his lips Psal 141.3 much more should we desire that God would keep the door of our hearts We should have grace stand sentinel there especially for words have an outward bridle they may disgrace a man and impair his interest and credit but thoughts are unknown if undiscovered by words If a man knew what time the thief would come to rob him he would watch We know we have thieves within us to steal away our hearts therefore when they are so near us we should watch against a surprize and the more carefully because they are so extraordinary sudden in their rise and quick in their motion Our minds are like idle School-boys that will be frisking from one place to another if the Master's back be turned and playing instead of learning Let a strict hand be kept over our affections those wild beasts within us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato because they many times force the understanding to pass a judgment according to their pleasure not its own sentiment Young men should be most intent upon their guard because their fancies gather vigor from their youthful heat which fires a world of squibs in a day which mad-men and those which have hot diseases are subject to because of the excessive inflammation of their brains and partly because they are not sprung up to a maturity of knowledg which would breed and foster better thoughts and discover the plausible pretences of vain affections There are particular seasons wherein we must double our guard as when incentives are present that may set some inward corruption on a flame 1 Tim. 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Timothy's office
medicinable Let the thoughts of old sins stir up a commotion of anger and hatred We feel shiverings in our spirits and a motion in our blood at the very thought of a bitter Potion we have formerly taken why may we not do that spiritually which the very frame and constitution of our bodies doth naturally upon the calling a lothsom thing to mind The Romans sins were transient but the shame was renewed every time they reflected on them † Rom. 6.21 Whereof you are now ashamed they reacted a detestation instead of the pleasure so should the revivings of old sins in our memories be entertain'd with our sighs rather than our joy We should also manage the opportunity so as to promote some further degrees of our conversion * Psal 119.59 I thought on my ways and turned my feet unto thy testimonies There is not the most hellish motion but we may strike some sparks from it to kindle our love to God renew our repentance raise our thankfulness or quicken our obedience Is it a blasphemous motion against God It gives you a just occasion thence to awe your heart into a deeper reverence of His Majesty Is it a lustful thought Open the floud-gates of your godly sorrow and groan for your original sin Is it a remembrance of your former sin Let it wind up your heart in the praises of him who delivered you from it Is it to tempt you from duty Endeavour to be more zealous in the performance of it Is it to set you at a distance from God Resolve to be a light shining the clearer in that darkness and let it excite you to a closer adherence to him Are they envious thoughts which steal upon you Let thankfulness be the product that you enjoy so much as you do and more than you deserve Let Satan's fiery darts enflame your love rather than your Lust and like a skilful Pilot make use of the violence of the winds and raging of the Sea to further you in your spiritual voyage This is to beat the Devil and our own hearts with their own weapons who will have little stomach to fight with those arms wherewith they see themselves wounded There is not a remembrance of the worst objects but may be improved to humility and thankfulness as St. Paul never thought of his old persecuting but he sank down in humiliation and mounted up in admirations of the riches of grace 4. Continue your resistance if they still importune thee and lay not down thy weapons till they wholly shrink from thee As the wise man speaks of a fool's words so I may not only of our blacker Eccl. 10.13 but our more acrial phancies The beginning of them is foolishness but if suffered to gather strength they may end in mischievous madness therefore if they do continue or reassume their arms we must continue and reassume our shield * Eph 6.16 Above all taking the shield of faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taking up again Resistance makes the Devil and his imps fly but forbearance makes them impudent In a battel when one party faints and retreats it adds new spirits to the enemy that was almost broken before so will these motions be the more vigorous if they perceive we begin to flag That encouraging command Resist the Devil and he will flye from you † Jam 4.7 implies not only the beginning a fight but continuance in it till he doth fly We must not leave the field till they cease their importunity nor encrease their courage by our own cowardise 5. Joyn Supplication with your opposition Watch and pray are sometimes linkt together * Mat. 26 41. The diligence and multitude of our enemies should urge us to watch that we be not surpriz'd and our own weakness and proneness to presumption should make us pray that we may be powerfully assisted Be as frequent in solliciting God as they are in solliciting you as they knock at your heart for entrance so do you knock at heaven for assistance And take this for your comfort As the Devil takes their parts so Christ will take yours at his Father's Throne he that pray'd that the Devil might not winnow Peter's faith will intercede that your own heart may not winnow yours If the waves come upon you and you are ready to sink cry out with Peter Master I perish and you shall feel his hand raising you and the winds and waves rebuked into obedience by him The very motion of your hearts heaven-ward at such a time is a refusal of the thought that presseth upon you and will be so put upon your account When any of these buzzing flies discompose you or more violent hurricanes shake your minds cry out with David Psal 86.11 12. Vnite my heart to fear thy Name and a powerful word will soon silence these disturbing enemies and settle your souls in a calm and a praising posture 4. A fourth sort of directions is concerning good motions whether they spring naturally from a gracious principle or are peculiarly breath'd in by the spirit There are ordinary bubblings of grace in a renewed mind as there are of sins in an unregenerate heart for grace is as active a principle as any because 't is a participation of the divine nature But there are other thoughts darted in beyond the ordinary strain of thinking which like the beams of the Sun evidence both themselves and their original And as concerning these motions joyn'd together take these Directions in short 1. Welcom and entertain them As 't is our happiness as well as our duty to stifle evil motions so 't is our misery as well as our sin to extinguish heavenly Strange fire should be presently quench'd but that which descends from heaven upon the Altar of a holy soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polycarp Epist ad Phil. terms holy persons must be kept alive by quickning meditation When a holy thought lights suddenly upon you which hath no connexion with any antecedent business in your mind provided it be not unseasonable nor hinder you from any absolutely necessary duty either of religion or your calling receive it as a messenger from heaven and the rather because 't is a stranger You know not but you may entertain an Angel yea something greater than an Angel even the Holy Ghost Open all the powers of your souls like so many Organ-pipes to receive the breath of this Spirit when he blows upon you 'T is a sign of an agreeableness between the heart and heaven when we close with and preserve spiritual motions We need not stand long to examine them they are evident by their holiness sweetness and spirituality We may as easily discern them as we can exotick plants from those that grow naturally in our own soil or as a palate at the first taste can distinguish between a rich and generous wine and a rough water The thoughts instill'd by the Spirit of adoption are not violent tumultuous full
of perturbation but like himself gentle and dove-like solicitings Gal 5 22. warm and holy impulses and when cherished leave the soul in a more humble heavenly pure and believing temper than they found it 'T is a high aggravation of sin to resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 Yet we may quench his motions by neglect as well as by opposition and by that means lose both the profit and pleasure which would have attended the entertainment Salvation came both to Zacheus his house and heart upon embracing the first motion our Saviour was pleased to make him Had he sleighted that 't is uncertain whether another should have been bestowed upon him The more such sprouts are planted and nourished in us the less room will stinking weeds have to root themselves and disperse their influence And for thy own good thoughts feed them and keep them alive that they may not be like a blaze of straw which takes birth and expires the same minute Brood upon them and kill them not as some birds do their young ones Psal 139.23 Try me and know my thoughts by too often flying from their nests David kept up a staple of sound and good thoughts he would scarce else have desired God to try and know them had they been only some few weak flashes at uncertain times 2. Improve them for those ends to which they naturally tend 'T is not enough to give them a bare reception and forbear the smothering of them but we must consider what affections are proper to be rais'd by them either in the search of some truth or performance of some duty Those gleams which shoot into us on the sudden have some lesson seal'd up in them to be opened and learned by us When Peter upon the crowing of the cock call'd to mind his Master's admonition he thought thereon and wept † Mark 14 72. he did not only receive the spark but kindled a suitable affection A choice graff though kept very carefully by us yet if not presently set will wither and disappoint our expectation of the desired fruit No man is without some secret whispers to disswade him from some alluring and busie sin † Job 33.14 17. God speaks once yea twice that he may withdraw man from his purpose as Cain had by an audible voice Gen. 4.7 which had he observed to the damping the revengeful motion against his brother he had prevented his brother's death his own despair and eternal ruin Have you any motion to seek God's face as David had Let your hearts reply Thy face Lord will I seek * Psal 27.8 The address will be most acceptable at such a time when your heart is tuned by One that searcheth the deep things of God † 1 Cor. 2.10 and knows his mind and what ayres are most delightful to Him Let our motion be quick in any duty which the Spirit doth suggest and while he heaves our hearts and oyls our wheels we shall do more in any religious service and that more pleasantly and successfully than at another time with all our own art and industry for his injections are like water poured into a pump to raise up more and as Satan's motions are not without a main body to second them so neither do the Spirit 's go unattended without a sufficient strength to assist the entertainers of them Well then lye not at anchor when a fresh gale would fill thy sails but lay hold of the present opportunity These seasons are often like those influences from certain conjunctions of the Planets which if not according to the Astrologer's opinion presently applied pass away and return not again in many ages So the Spirit 's breathings are often determined that if they be not entertained with suitable affections the time will be unregainable and the same gracious opportunities of a sweet entercourse may be for ever losts for God will not have his holy Spirit dishonoured in always striving with wilful man Gen. 6.3 When Judas neglected our Saviour's advertisement John 13.21 the Devil quickly enters and hurries him to the execution of his traiterous project v. 27. and he never meets with any motion afterwards but from his new Master and that eternally fatal both to his body and soul 3. Refer them if possible to assist your Morning meditation that like little brooks arising from several springs they may meet in one channel and compose a more useful stream What stragling good thoughts arise though they may owe their birth to several occasions and tend divers ways yet list them in the service of that truth to which you have committed the government of your mind that day As Constables in a time of necessary business for the King take up men that are going about their honest and lawful occasions and force them to joyn in one employ for the publick service Many accidental glances as was observed before will serve both to fix and illustrate your Morning proposition But if it be an extraordinary injection and cannot be referred to your standing Thesis follow it and let your thoughts run whither it will lead you a Theme of the Spirit 's setting is better than one of our own choosing 4. Record the choicer of them We may have occasion to look back upon them another time either as grounds of comfort in some hour of temptation or directions in some sudden emergency but constantly as perswasive engagements to our necessary duty Thus they may lye by us for further use as money in our purse Since Mary kept and ponder'd the short sayings of our Saviour in her heart † Luke 2.17 51. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hesych committing and fitting them as it were in her common-place book why should not we also preserve the whispers of that Spirit who receives from the same mouth and hand what he both speaks and shews to us It is pity the dust and filings of choicer metals which may one time be melted down into a mass should be lost in a heap of drossy thoughts If we do not remember them but like children are taken with their novelty more than their substance and like John Baptist's hearers rejoyce in their light only for a season † Joh. 5.35 it will discourage the Spirit from sending any more and then our hearts will be empty and we know who stands ready to clap in his hellish swarms and legions But howsoever we do God will record our good thoughts as our excusers if we improve them as our accusers if we reject them and as He took notice how often He had appear'd to Solomon † 1 Kings 11.9 so He will take notice how often His Spirit hath appeared to us and write down every motion whereby we have been solicited that they may be witnesses of his endeavours for our good and our own wilfulness 5. Back them with ejaculations Let our hearts be ready to attend every injection from heaven with a motion to it since 't is
by others iniquity these are most to be pityed the violent suffocation of their thoughts is not without great vexation of their hearts as Lot might be an instance 2 Pet. 2.2 8. And David Psal 39.23 I was dumb with silence I held my peace even from good and my sorrow was stirred my heart was but within me while I mused the fire burnt In others this is affected out of Moroseness doggedness or design in these the offence is most aggravated the silence is most sinful but more particularly When are we guilty of over-much silence 1. When Justice is obstructed by it my Neighbour has suffered wrong I know it without my testimony he cannot have right I conceal it my secrecy involves me in the iniquity Lev. 5.1 A pretence of peaceableness and good Neighbour-hood stops the mouths of several in this case but peace of Conscience and the cause of Righteousness should be preferred before all peace and above every other consideration take place if the matter especially be momentous 2. When Charity is omitted and is not like from other hands to be at least so seasonably and advantagiously administred there is oft-times great Charity in a word and it is the greatest cruelty imaginable to spare that word and it is often further heightned from the parties to which it is grudged For instance if we are made privy to any thing the discovery of which is for great publique good and conceal it for private advantage beyond what is fitting for our private capacity and a just reward for our ingenuity we highly transgress against publique Charity and are unworthy of the benefits of Society this we learn from the Lepers case themselves being Judges 2 Kings 7.8 9. Again if we alone are privy to a Brother or Friend's fault wherein he goes on and is not like of himself to come off bolstering himself up in the opinion of its secrecy a word of reproof from thee might save him and thou art the greatest Enemy he has if thou with-holdest it from him Lev. 19.17 Further thy own Soul is in a dark and dismal state thy Neighbour or Friend is full of light by one question thou mightest do much to thy own illumination and yet thou pinest away and perishest for lack of knowledg where is thy love to thy self in the mean time Tongue-Charity is the cheapest of all Charity and yet many certainly not without great guilt let their Countreys Friends and own Souls starve for lack of it 3. If our own Spirits be soured by it words kept in are many times like humours struck in go to the heart and offend the vital parts Maliciousness censoriousness are often so fed vent might give relief in this case and be the only means for our Cure if moderately and discreetly given Many can write their probatum est to this 4. If our Company whom we may and ought to please so far as we can be grieved or offended at it Silence where we may be free and have wont to be free and it is justly expected we should be free as among Friends Relations c. Speaks very cuttingly and should not causlesly be long kept lest it be ill interpreted it intimates anger at them or contempt of them it renders you wholly insignificant to them you had as good send your Horse among them if you will not converse like a man with them 5. If our Calling and Commission from God be to speak we may not be silent as to any one thing committed to us to speak in this case You know who said Acts 4.20 We cannot but speak woe is us if we do not Paul no other way could clear himself of their blood than by protesting that he had not shunned to declare unto them the whole counsel of God Acts 20.27 And our Saviour doth mainly comfort himself as having hid or kept back nothing given in charge to him Psal 40.9 10 11. Loe I have not refrained my Lips O Lord thou knowest I have not hid thy Righteousness within my heart I have not concealed thy loving kindness and thy truth with-hold not thou thy tender mercies from me 6. If the Cause and Honour of God call for a publique testimony no one in his way may innocently with-hold it however mean be his capacity Children therefore in Christ's day were called forth to it and justified in it Mat. 21.15 16. And when offence was took on a like occasion he tells them that if those should hold their peace the stones would immediately cry out Eccl. 3.7 You see then that there is a time to speak as well as keep silence happy he that hits his time and he that heeds it will hardly miss it or if he does shall the more easily be excused it We commonly say that little said is soon amended true but yet for not speaking as well as not doing in some cases we may be condemned It is therefore our duty to rouze our Tongue when it is sluggish as well as hold it in where it is lavish calling upon it as he Psal 57.8 Awake up my Glory or as you have another instance Judges 5.12 Awake Awake Deborah Awake Awake utter a Song 2. The second extreme to be avoided is Loquacity or over-much speaking a fault many are incident to through the levity of their temper and looseness of their Tongues and it is a very hard task for them to talk much and talk well He is peremptory Prov. 10.19 that in the multitude of words there wants not sin And I suppose he speaks modestly and that he means that there is a great deal of sin But let our Query be Quest When any one may be said to talk too much Some few of many instances take as follows 1. When talking excludes thinking the Tongue out-runs the wit a little of this talk is too much as being to no purpose but to betray our folly abuse our Brother's patience and waste precious time One may talk to Children at this rate to save a needless expence of sense where there is but little but it is an intolerable presumption upon men to entertain them with words morecrude than our belches that we fetch not so low as our breath and that little differ from an Asse's braying 2. When it will not give way to hearing especially when wiser and better men be present If they were inferior and weaker it were meet they should be allowed their turns every one may be supposed to have brought something wherewith the whole might be edified in ingrossing all the talk to thy self thou art chargeable with unseemly vaunting thou art in the ready way to emptying there is no hope of thy replenishing go hoop and hallow in the Woods if thou wilt be answered only by thy own Eccho Proud men and passionate men are apt so to offend they have no ears and so are unlike to edifie and for any thing they are like to get had as good keep out of Company Mark advice of
one that understood the government of the Tongue as well as any other James 1.19 Let every man be swift to hear slow to speak slow to wrath The last direction is to make good the former 3. When talking shuts out working either in our common or Christian Calling Some men have got such a vein of talking that it is their great business and for which they neglect all business so many hours in a day they snatch from all occasions on purpose to chat this is more than can be justified the Apostle blames it in the Women of his day 1 Tim. 5.13 They learn to be idle wandring about from House to House and not only idle but tattlers also and busie-bodies speaking things they ought not And sure it is more to be reproved in men that should be more stayed and might be much better imployed but the Tongue is not only wont to take the hands off of business but to take upon it the business of the hands as in the great duty of distributing to the poor that will serve them with good words when the hands should be ministring good things the vanity of which he upbraids Jam. 2.15 16. And so it is apt to run all Religious Offices into mere talk which is like grain that hath only a stalk 4. When the whole man is turned into Tongue that sure is a talkative man And such there be a great many that cannot utter half their mind the Natural way whether it be from the fulness of filthiness of the matter they are stuffed with you may guess I am apt to think that they are full of filthy matter that the Tongue is e'ne ashamed to utter or else straitned to vent fast enough and therefore hands and feet and eyes must speak too for greater riddance they talk in Characters for hast sometimes you have signs for words at other times words for Sentences you must guess their meaning for instance He is I 'le say no more that is their way to brand a man leaving you to think the worst you can and at leisure to put it in reserving hereby a Liberty for themselves to creep out if called in Question This is the greatest talker I know he speaks when he says nothing and says most when he utters least Hunc tu Romane caveto look to this man I durst almost warrant him a filthy beast or crafty knave though it may be he only counterfeits one the wise man doth so represent him Prov. 6.12 13 14. He walketh with his mouth and talketh with his Feet what a Monster is this Man 3. The mean that lyes between these two extremes is neither to wrap this Talent up in a Napkin nor yet lavish it away but prudently to use it as we see opportunity to improve it that in the latter day we may give an Account of it Rules In order to the observance of which mean I would give the following Directions 1. Rest not in Ignorance that will seal up thy mouth in silence if thou beest sensible of it or let loose thy Tongue with impudence if thou over-lookest it Open thy Eyes open thy Ears open thy Heart to receive instruction that thou maist be fit for pertinent communication lay in before thou layest out and particularly know thy self know whereof thou art about to speak to whom thou dost speak and thou shalt not be to seek how to speak whether any thing or nothing whether much or little whether interrogatively or dogmatically the knowledg of thy own measure will be a great help to keep the right measure in this whole matter 2. Give not way to idleness imploy thy heart imploy thy hands charge every part with something and then this busie Member may submit to its share and go to its burthen but if the whole man be dis-engaged and unimployed all the vigor of the man doth ordinarily run to his Tongue he must be doing something though next to nothing and falls commonly into a humour of excessive talking as you may observe in Children that are not come to work and old people that are past it unless Grace or gravity of manners check it The Athenians were this way tainted that nothing but News would be disgested and in gathering and spreading that they were perpetually Exercised Acts 17.21 But business diverts and spends the humour and something tames and moderates this as well as other Members 3. Avoid Drunkenness that loosens the Reins of the whole man and especially prevents the Government of the Tongue and sets it on running and rambling without fear or wit It makes men spew that were wont only to spit it brings up all that is in our minds as well as stomacks In vino veritas all will out when the Wine is in Prov. 23.13 Persons of an airy light temper may find this inconvenience forthwith upon a sip or two of Wine or strong Drink and for every glass of Liquor abate an Ounce of wit they should be more cautious than other men Wine is indeed proper for them of a sorrowful heart to raise their dejected Spirits to a due temper but one that for ordinary is rather touched with too much levity is quickly over-born with it and his Tongue soon trips however firm his Feet may stand 4. Watch against all passionateness that is a degree of madness and precipitates wise men into great Extravagancies of Speech many can scarce hold their hands but fewer can hold their Tongues under the transport of it If ever the teeth are useful to bite in the Tongue it is when it is enflamed by Passion and has broke in heat from the Government of Reason either refrain Anger or refrain speech altogether when angry as you would not proclaim your own Folly 5. Keep under Pride that never keeps a decorum but puts you forward beyond what becomes you in contempt of others that are not Inferiors to you whereas Humility will represent them at least even with you that you would be awed into a graceful modesty If we think we have all the wit we shall next arrogate to our selves all the talk and by thinking our selves wise make our selves Fools 6. Keep up Charity which will secure from the transports of ill will and Envy 2. The matter of our Discourse is to be regulated and here occurs a twofold consideration of it 1. Something it is our sin to make matter of our Discourse 2. Other things it is our Duty 1. As to sinful matter we must wholly restrain our Tongues Let no corrupt Communication proceed out of your mouths and again Psal 34.13 Keep thy Tongue from evil The particular evils of the Tongue are not to be reckoned up in a single Sermon Some general Rules I will therefore lay down whereto the most considerable may be reduced 1. Those things are evil and not to be uttered whereby God immediately is dishonoured And by this we are admonished to take heed of venting Heresies uttering Blasphemies all rash Swearing forswearing and
taking God's Name in vain Sins all of an high Nature and committed generally in height of Spirit and look as like presumptuous sins for which God hath appointed no Sacrifice as most we can reckon up in regard of the small temptation to them Numb 15.30 31. and the impudence that is common in them 2. Those things also our Tongue is to be restrained from whereby our Brother is wronged as to his outward man whether as to Life Estate or Name unrighteousness is the evil of such Speeches a manifest evil and is aggravated from the degree wherein he suffers and from the directness of our intention in bringing it upon him though whether directly or indirectly of malice and set purpose or out of pure weakness our Brother suffers and we sin that we were no more tender of him in concerns that are so dear to our selves and about which we have been so specially cautioned of God and of this Nature eminently are slander and false Testimony 3. Those things must more especially be forborn whereby our Brother's Soul is like to be defiled and his manners corrupted in that the greatest Charity is here transgressed As for instance all unclean Speeches by which Lust may be drawn forth provoking Speeches whereby passion may be stirred up all enticements to evil and encouragements in evil any thing whereby our Brother's spirit may be lightned or his heart hardned 4. Such things whereby the fundamental Laws of Society are violated and all confidence in one another destroyed I will instance particularly in three 1. Lying that makes words signifie just nothing and cuts off all communion between one anothers Souls that we can never know each others minds we are hereby at a far greater loss than if we could not speak at all How detestable this sin is you may learn by what you read Rev. 21.8 Rev. 22.15 2. Tale-bearing that is a Trade set up directly against all Friendship and the great bane of Love in the World which yet has too much countenance from the generality of the World but God that is always more than our selves solicitous for our good has especially cautioned against it Lev. 19.16 and warned us of the evil effects of it Prov. 18.8 3. Revealing of Secrets which destroys all confidence and breaks the most sacred Bonds of Friendship And as to these we may be doubly faulty 1. In reference to such Secrets as are committed to us sub sigillo these every one is convinced he ought to keep so for his truths sake and to answer the confidence that was put in him though many are never quiet till they have broke this Bond but are rather irritated by their being bound Prov. 11.13 A Tale-bearer revealeth Secrets Especially 2. In reference to such as come to us without such a formal Bond out of weakness or good nature if there may be wrong to the party confiding in us by divulging what he hath so committed to us the very matter of the case obligeth us in justice though not in faithfulness we are bound to be his Secretaries if a far greater good may not come by the discovery And let me here give a special caution in a case wherein you may be lyable to Temptation Take heed what you do tell to a Friend lest he should after prove an Enemy this is prudence Take heed you discover not when an Enemy what was told you as a Friend that is Piety 5. The matter of the Discourse is faulty when the very ends of it are overlooked and you fruitlesly and foolishly squander away both time and Talents not considering that idle words are also evil words and to be reckoned for another day Mat. 12 36 37. Quest How shall we restrain our Tongues from all this evil 1. By purging the Seeds of it out of our hearts Our Saviour looked upon it as an unnatural thing and not to be expected that they that are evil should speak good things in as much as out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Mat. 12.34 That therefore must be first cleansed that the mouth may be kept clean while there are filthy thoughts malicious purposes impetuous passions and idle imaginations allowed there by the Tongue as well as other ways they will have their vent by every Member the heart will be discharging it self of it's abundance whence again he observes that out of the heart proceed evil thoughts murders adulteries thefts false-witness blasphemies Mat. 15.19 Mind therefore how you are still directed to lay the Ax unto the Root and crucifie the evil affections of the heart that you may prevent the Extravagancies of the Tongue Eph. 4.31 Let all Bitterness and Wrath and Anger and Clamour and evil speaking be put away from you with all malice he despaired Clamour and evil speaking should be restrained except Wrath and Malice were extirpated And to the same purpose Col. 3.8 9. Put off Anger Wrath Malice and then he hath some hopes they might also forbear Blasphemy filthy Communication Lying Let your first care then be of the Heart and it 's first Motions for every Member thence hath it's impressions and all pretence of care without a regard to this Will be but a palliation and we may expect a more violent Eruption 2. By stopping our Ears and shutting our Eyes against every thing that may feed the fore-mentioned evil humours if they be fermented afresh they will flow anew and be aware of remainders of them in the best of you If we would effectually keep a fire from smoaking we must keep it from burning and to secure it from burning keep it from blowing and fresh supplies of fewel We can easily apply this no refining of the Tongue without purging of the Heart no keeping that pure if any thing that defiles is suffered to enter there the ordinary passages into which are by the Eye and Ear avoid therefore in prosecution of this Direction all vain idle angry envious malicious Companions lest they be infusing into thee their Venom Bid adieu to all Profane Ranters and Ribalds to all Tale-bearers and Whisperers they will kindle the fire of Lust or Anger if there be a spark in thee And next to them avoid all Books that are stuffed with profane Jests or that gender to excessive heats these assault us like formed Armies when occasional words are like slight Sallies of a small party And lastly beware of vain and filthy sights and the more artificial the more dangerous● as more affecting the fancy sinking deeper into the memory and pressing more importunately into the mouth they tickle us into the talk of them 3. By laying the Laws against all idle and evil speaking before our eyes in their reasonableness and rigor their reasonableness will appear if we consider them as for us would we any body should abuse us with lyes or load us with reproaches no why then it is well God hath provided by his Law that they shall not and is it not alike equal
known to be really the Saviour of the World and by making his followers better than others that he and his Doctrine and Religion are known to be the best Travellers tell me that nothing so much hindreth the conversion of the Mahometans as their daily Experience that the Lives of the Greek Christians and others that Live among them are too ordinarily worse than theirs More drunkenness and more falshood lying deceit it 's said are among those Christians than among the Turks If that be true those are no true Christians but woe be to them by whom such offence cometh I have oft heard those Souldiers justly censured as profane who turn Churches into Stables without great necessity But how much more hurtfully profane are they who for carnal ends confound the World and the Church and keep the multitude of the most sensual ungodly Persons in their Communion without ever calling them Personally to Repentance and use the Church Keys but to revenge themselves on those that differ from them in some Opinions or that cross their Interest and wills or that seem too smart and zealous in the dislike of their Carnality Sloth and Church-pollutions When the Churches are as full of scandalous sinners as the Assemblies of Infidels and Heathens the World will hardly ever believe that Infidelity and Heathenism is not as good as the Christian Faith It is more by Persons than by Precepts that the World will judge of Christ and Christianity And what Men on Earth do more scandalize the World more expose Christianity to reproach more harden Infidels more injure Christ and serve the Devil than they that fill the Church with impious Carnal Pastors as in the Church of Rome and then with impious Carnal People maintained constantly in her Communion without any open disowning by a distinguishing reforming Discipline When such Pastors are no better than the soberer sort of Heathens save only in their Opinion and formal words and when their ordinary Communicants are no better it 's no thanks to them if all turn not Infidels that know them and if Christianity be contemned and decay out of the World And it 's long of such that disorderly separations attempt that Discipline and distinguishing of the godly and the notoriously wicked which such ungodly Pastors will not attempt See Lev. 19.17 Mat. 18.15 16. 1 Cor. 5. Tit. 3.10 Jer. 15.19 Psal 15. 2 Thes 3. Rom. 16.17 2 Tim. 3.4 5. III. But O how great an honour is it to God and to Religion when Kings Princes and States do zealously devote their Power to God from whom they do receive it and labour to make their Kingdoms Holy When Truth Sobriety and Piety have the countenance of humane powers and Rulers wholly set themselves to further the faithful Preaching and practising of the Holy Faith and to Unite and strengthen the Ministers and Churches and to suppress Iniquity and be a terror to evil doers it taketh Satan's great advantage out of his hand and worketh on carnal Men by such means as they can feel and understand Not that God needs the help of Man but that he hath setled Officers and a Natural Order by which he usually worketh in the World And as it cannot be expected that an unholy Parent and Master should have a Holy Family or an unholy Pastor a Holy Church unless by extraordinary Mercy no more can we expect that ungodly Magistrates should have a godly Kingdom or Common-wealth of which the Sacred History of the Jewish and Israelitish Kings doth give you a full confirmation But this I must now say no more of And thus I have told you in Twenty particulars what are those good Works in which the Light of Christians must shine before Men to the Glorifying of God Object Doth not Mat. 5.10 11 12. Contradict all this Blessed are ye when men revile you and persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsly for my sake Answ No You must here distinguish 1. Of Men. 2. Of Righteousness and Good Works I. The Men that we have to do with are 1. Ordinary Natural Men Corrupted by Original sin but yet not hardened to Serpentine Malignity as some are 2. Or they are Men that by sinning against Nature and common Light are forsaken and given up to malignant minds II. The Good Works which Natural Light and humane Interest can discern and commend do differ from those which are merely Evangelical of Supernatural Revelation 1. Malignant Persons hardened in Enmity will scorn and persecute Holiness it self and even that Good which Reason Justifies and therefore are called unreasonable wicked Men 2 Thes 3.2 Good works with these Men make us odious unless they are such as gratifie their Lusts 2. But there are Natural Men not yet so hardened and forsaken who are usually them that the Gospel doth Convert And these have not yet so blinded Nature nor lost all sense of good and evil but that they honour him that doth good in all the Twenty particulars which I have named and think ill of those that do the contrary though yet they relish not the Christian Righteousness and things of Supernatural Revelation for want of Faith Let us briefly now apply it This informs us what an honourable state Christianity and true Godliness Vse 1 is when God hath made us to be the Lights of the world to shine before Men to the Glory of his Holiness as the Sun and Stars do to the Glory of his Power No wonder if in Glory we shall shine as Stars in the Firmament of our Father if we do so here Dan. 12.3 Mat. 13.43 Phil. 2.15 This must not make us proud but thankful for our Pride is our shame and our Humility is our Glory And what wonder if all the Powers of darkness do bend their endeavours Vse 2 to obscure this Sacred Light The Prince of darkness is the Enemy of the Father of Lights And this is the great war between Christ and Satan in the world Christ is the Light of the World and setteth up Ministerial Lights for the world and for his House his work is to send them forth to teach them and defend them and to send his Spirit to work in and by them to bring Men to the everlasting Light And Satan's work is to stir up all that he can against them high and low learned and unlearned and to put Christ's Lights both Ministers and People under a bushel and to make the world believe that they are their Enemies and come to hurt them that they may be hated as the Scorn and off-scouring of the world and to keep up Ignorance in Ministers themselves that the Churches Eyes being dark the darkness may be great But let us pray that God would forgive our Enemies Persecutors and Slanderers and turn their hearts and that he would open our Lips that our mouths may shew forth his praise and though his Ministers and People have their faulty weaknesses that he would be merciful to our Infirmities
Divine meditation Faith is enlarged and grows up by converse with divine objects meditate upon these things 1. Christ's Deity Be well stored with Scriptural knowledg of this great truth set thy heart to it and let it be fixed in the midst of thy heart assure your selves that the eternal Godhead of Jesus is the most practical point in Heaven and will be so while Heaven is Heaven 2. Be intimately acquainted with Christ's righteousness that it is the only righteousness that can present us holy unreprovable unblameable in God's sight that it was his business in the world to bring in this everlasting righteousness that it is done and finished that he hath nothing to do with this righteousness now in Heaven but to cloath us with to present us in before God 3. Meditate on God's righteousness that it is not only his will but his nature to punish sin sin must damn thee without Christ there is not only a possibility or probability that sin may ruine but without an interest in Christ it must do so whet much upon thy heart that must God cannot but hate sin because he is holy and he cannot but punish sin because he is righteous God must not forego his own nature to gratifie our humors 8. Direct Be well skilled and settled as it becomes a Christian in the great article of justification before God thy Faith and duties and comforts depend might and main upon this Know that no servant of God be he Abraham Moses or Paul if God enter into judgment with him can stand justified in his sight God will not justifie us without a righteousness and that righteousness must be unblamable and therefore in all numbers perfect God will not call that perfect which is not so for his judgment is according to truth Rom. 2.2 where shall we find this perfect righteousness but in Christ who is Jehovah our righteousness Jer. 23.6 and made of God to us righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 how shall this become ours but by imputation Rom. 4.6 how shall we receive this gift of righteousness but by Faith Rom. 5.17 be well skilled in the good old way go in the foot steps of the flock and feed besides the shepherds tents Believe it Sirs there is no way but Christ unto the Father his blood is that new and living way Heb. 10.19 there is no standing in God's presence but in him no acceptance but by him no comfort but from him Be wise and wary there are many adversaries Only give me leave to say this I think that the Socinians had never set up man's obedience for his righteousness if they had not with wicked hands quantum in illis first pulled down Chist's Deity and as they are abhorred for this blasphemy of blasphemies so I cannot abide them for dawbing over man's obedience in this affair so deceitfully and deceivingly viz. in saying it is not only causa sine quâ non in our justification as if the material cause or the matter which God imputes for righteousness were only a poor causa sine quâ non but no more now of this jugling 9. Direct If you would preserve a right understanding of the nature of Faith take heed of advancing it into Christ's place as if God should impute the act of Faith for righteousness or that God should impute Faith and obedience as the condition or matter of our righteousness and not Christ's obedience for both cannot be imputed if God imputed Christ's obedience then not ours if ours then not Christ's The nature of Faith consists in coming to Christ for righteousness and pardon only the man hurt with the fiery sting looks to the brazen Serpent for cure Fides que that Faith which is justifying takes in Christ as Lord with all the heart but qua justificat in the business of justifitation qua sic it looks only to Christ as crucified This plain old distinction will stand If the nature of Faith did consist in Christianity I say if this were true I believe all believers could be contented to have it so for any harm they should have by it for they willingly devote themselves to the obedience of God only they cannot make this Faith or Christianity to be the condition or matter of justification for this were to fall from grace to make of none effect the death of Christ and to drive Christianity and comfort out of the world 10. Direct Get and keep this Faith specially by a constant and conscionable living in duty and living above it Say to the commandements you are my rule and love and joy to Christ thou art my life Col. 3.4 'T is the height of Christianity to live in duties and to live above them 'T is quickly said 't is an easie matter to distinguish in the Schools or pulpit but to distinguish in the conscience practically to distinguish is not so easie qui novit distinguere inter legem evangelium sciat se esse edoctum à Deo Had I all the holiness of the Saints from the beginning to this day I would bless God for the least and prize it above all treasures yet I would lay all aside and be found in Christ In the midst of thy duties ask thy soul the question soul what is thy title thy plea If I were to dye this day what have I to plead in what shall I stand before God what have I to plead why I should not perish in hell ask thy self what is thy righteousness ask it solemnly frequently is it not Christ and he only this would much conduce to confirm thy Faith such a Faith that would bring in comfort The thoughts of this so affected Dr. Mollius that he seldom names Jesus with dry eyes 11. Direct Be much in secret prayer ejaculations this will breed acquaintance and that comfort the non exercise of this breeds a strangeness between God and the soul and that 's uncomfortable This and meditation who can hinder The soul is active breathings and thoughts are quick it is soon done it will never hinder your business and in this way the blessed spirit causeth us to know and believe the love that God hath to us 1 Joh. 4.16 and refresheth the soul with joy and comfort in believing Do not only pray for the comforts and supplies of the holy spirit but pray to him to this purpose Blessed spirit convince me of my sins more and convince me more and more of Jesus Christ Holy Spirit take of Christ's and shew it unto me and the like To pass by the prophane scoffs of many and the gross ignorance of more I take it to be a very great neglect in believers that they do not glorifie the Holy Spirit as the Lord and giver of Faith and comfort Remember this qui unum honorat omnes he that honoureth one person aright honoureth every one and he that doth not honour every person honoureth none qui non omnes nec unam 12. Direct If you would get and keep this
The ground that lies lowest usually is most fruitful the earth that hath the richest mines in it commonly is most barren Who serves God less than they who are most wealthy to their shame be it spoken You would have more of this world and fret that God keeps you so much under alas you know not what you desire had you more it would be hurtful if the estate was better the heart would be worse Again Eccl. 5.13 as 't is not best for Duty so neither for Safety who are exposed to so many dangers as they who swim in earthly treasures Saepius ventis agitatur i●gens Pinus c. Horat. The higher is the building the more 't is endangered by fierce winds great Vessels strike where lesser go with safety the Ship that Sails with a full wind and all its fails up is apt to overset such who feed high are in most danger of Feavers and Surfeits Every condition hath its snares but the high condition is exceeding full of them And once more 't is not the best for Comfort the poor envy the rich when in truth they have more cause to pitty them Oh the cares distractions hurries that they live under In all their great enjoyments how little do they enjoy either God or themselves Pauperes diti●ribus eo plerumque laet●ores quò animus eorum in paucioribus distringitur Sen. ad Helvid c. 12 and can any state be comfortable without these Luk. 12.15 Take heed of Covetousness for a man's life i. e. the comfort of his life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth Tantis parta malis cu●á majore metúque Servantur misera est magni custodia census Juven Sat 14. The easiness of the garment or shoe doth not lie in its bigness but in its fitness And so 't is not the greatness of the Estate that gives comfort but the suiting of the mind and of the elate be it what it will There often is that serenity of mind in a poor cottage which is not enjoyed in the stately palace The mean man sleeps better on a hard bed than he who lies upon his bed of down and there is a more chearful spirit where the fare is course than where there are the greatest dainties You fondly imagine could you but skrew up your estates to such an height then you should and would live with comfort but I pray you why may you not do so now under what you have already as that Commander answered Pyrrhus designing so and so to enlarge his conquests which when he had done then he would fit down and be quiet and live merrily should you arrive at what you aspire after you would find your selves then to be as far from what you promise to your selves as now you are It appearing then that the great Estate is not the best why should any vex and be disturbed because that is denied to them Cui cum paupertate bene convenit dives est Sen. Non qui parū habet sed qui pl●s cupit pauper est Idem Ep. 2. Nihil interest utrum non desideres an habes Ep. 119. Desunt inopiae multa avaritiae omnia Ep 108 Nunquam parum est quod satis est nunquam multum est quod satis non est Ep. 119. Semper inops quicunque cupit Claud. Multa petentibus desunt multa bene est cui Deus obtulit parcâ quod satis est manu Horat. c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato 6. The contented man is never poor let him have never so little the discontented man is never rich let him have never so much He is not rich who possesseth much but he who desires no more than what God gives him The way to be rich indeed is not to encrease the wealth but to lessen the covetings of the heart after more He that is ever desiring is ever wanting and he that is ever wanting is ever poor 7. What are these earthly riches that any should be thus insatiably greedy of them Surely there 's but little in them fancy mistakes ignorance being laid aside they are no better than unsatisfying perishing uncertain things Eccles 5.10 He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied with silver nor he that loveth abundance with increase Men may fill their bags and chests with silver nnd gold but they cannot with them fill their Souls no the Soul is a thing too great to be fill'd with such little things as these are Had you all that you desire you would be but where you are dissatisfied still for your * Auri naque fames parto fit major ab auro Prudent Crescentem sequitur cura pecuniam Majorumque fames Horat. Inflammatur lucro avaritia non restinguitur Ambros desires would still grow as fast as your riches should grow yet more must be had and that is the banc of satisfaction † Est uat insoelix augusto limite mundi Unus Pellaeo juveni non sufficit orbis Alexander could conquer the World but the world could not satisfie him he wept because there was no more worlds to conquer Vanity of vanities all is vanity and vexation I say too they are perishing and uncertain things that 's the Epithete of the Apostle trust not in uncertain riches 1 Tim. 6.17 Wilt thou set thine eyes upon that which is not for riches certainly make themselves wings they fly away as an Eagle towards heaven This we see verified every day and if so doth it become a man much more a Christian to be discontented because he hath but little of such vain things as these are Methinks such should scorn to have their generous minds discomposed for such trifles 8. As they are dying things so we are dying Persons What though we be straitned in them 't is not necessary our Estates should be very large when our Lives are not like to be very long A little money serves the Traveller that hath but a short journey to go Parum viae quid multum viatici Might we either alwayes live or when we die carry with us into another world what we have laid up in this then our greediness of these things would be more excusable but neither of these are to be expected Job 1.21 Naked came I out of my mother's womb and naked shall I return thither 1 Tim. 6.7 For we brought nothing into the world and it is certain we can carry nothing out Grace will accompany us into the other World but other things must be all left behind And which I would further add Is it not stupendious folly for dying men who yet have never-dying souls to trouble themselves so much about dying things have not they other things to mind and should not all their sollicitudes be employed about those things such as the things above Col. 3.1 Math 6.33 Math. 6.20 the Kingdom of God and his righteousness treasures in Heaven c. If eternal things and the eternal state was
but thought of every state here would be good enough 9. The less any have the less they are to account for at the Great Day Every man is accountable to God for what he hath of this world 's good for that is but a Trust and he that is the Lord and owner of all will reckon with men how this trust is fulfilled and according to the proportion which they are entrusted with so will the account be taken They therefore who have great Estates and do but little good with them will have a sad account to make at the Great Day Now how little is this considered We are alwayes grasping at more not considering that the more we have the more we stand accountable for when we shall be judged Do we improve what we have if we do not 't is mercy that the Lord intrusts us with no more One Talent will be too much if that be not traded for God why then should we be angry if we have not five All would live in large houses but vvill they be able to pay the Rent that such houses are set at if not 't is better for them to content themselves with a meaner habitation and so 't is with the thing which I am upon Many at the Great Day will rejoyce they had no more whilst many will wish they had not had so much 10. To conclude this Head doth any man better his Estate by discontent Plutarch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is that the way to improve it certainly No It often makes us to lose what we have but it never gets us vvhat vve want as was said before in the general In the distribution of his blessings God will not be dealt with in this way He that will eat or drink more than what is sufficient often vomits up all so he that will have more than what God sees convenient for him loseth all by this greediness I have been large upon this because of the Commonness of discontent in this Case and the exceeding great sinfulness of it You whom the Lord hath blessed with competent Estates especially You whom the Lord hath blessed with full Estates be sure you learn and live contentment and whenever the heart begins to be unquiet about the proportion allotted to you go over in your thoughts what hath been propounded for you to consider of and I trust you vvill find good by it 3. There is a third Case viz. Some have lost what once they had C nsideration to further Contentment under L●sses or God pursues them in the way of their Callings with Loss upon Loss This is a trial under which means hearts are prone to be enflamed 't is no easie thing to bear it with patience and contentment Especially when losses come thick and go very deep Cogita●dum est quanto levior dolor sit non habere quam perdere intelligemus paupertati eo minorem tormentorum quo minorem damnorum esse materiam Senec. de Tr-An Tolerabilius est faciliusque non acquirere quam amittere ideoque laetiores videbis quos nunquam fortuna respexit quam quos deseruit idem ibid. when a considerable part of the estate is taken away nay as it often falls out the whole Oh! this is greatly afflictive and wounds the spirits of men very much Of the two we find it by experience an easier matter to be contented under that poverty which a person hath alwayes been in than under that which he is brought into by some severe interposures of Providence Former plenty puts more bitterness into present penury 't is a greater affliction to common sense to have an estate and to lose it than to be without an estate where it was never had this fuisse foelicem is a great aggravation of misery But to the thing it self It pleased the Lord lately to lay this City in ashes and O how great how universal were the losses then sustained your houses were burnt down many of your goods consumed by the merciless flames the great supports of your livelyhood removed and many thousands of you had that Wound then given you that you must halt of all your daies Since that you feel the sad effects of War losses at Sea decay of Trade c. upon which it is not with you as formerly it was there 's a great diminution in your estates Now was and is all this undergone with contentment In these dispensations of Providences have you learnt contentment would to God it was so If it be not so as yet I would desire you to fall upon Consideration and I hope for the future it will be so How or wherein is Consideration to be acted so as that under worldly losses you may be contented why thus Consider God's hand is in them and they all issue out of his will Men may be the instruments but that 's all they do but accomplish that which God will have to be done Therefore whatever thy loss be for the matter and degree of it however it befalls thee eye God in it see it as ordained and ordered by him let thy thoughts fix upon this and thy heart will not dare to murmur What are thy losses to those which Job underwent all was swept away from him in a moment yet he considered the Supreme Agent in all this and this kept down all passion The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken Job 1.21 Abstulit sed dedit Sen. Ep. 64. Hos 2.9 blessed be the name of the Lord O saith he 't is the Lord and the Lord who gave I submit May not the great Soveraign of the world do with us and ours what he pleaseth may not he diminish and withdraw all our blessings as he he sees good he that gives may not he take hath not he a greater propriety in what we have than we our selves It being his corn his wine his wool and flax may not he dispose of it at his pleasure doth it not become us contentedly to * Quandocunque redde●e jubebitur non queretur cum fortunâ sed dicet gratias ago pro eo quod possedi habuique Idem de Tranq An. return what he sees meet to lend us but for such a time Pray think of this or you 'l never learn in a losing state to be content 2. Possibly something is taken away but all is not more is left than what is taken He that might have stript thee to nakedness hath only cut off a skirt of thy garment hast thou any reason to fret against the Lord that would be highly base and dilingenuous He to whom all was forfeited takes but a part instead of the whole surely thou art not to impeach his justice but to admire his goodness 3. Whenever we meet with these rebukes 't would be well to consider whether we did not need them A full dyet is naught for distempered bodies 1 Pet. 1.6 therefore these Physician prescribes a more sparing dyet When we are full
children Now if this was duly thought of would it not quiet the heart when the thing is ordered by God shall we dislike and fret at what he doth may not he dispense his blessings where he pleaseth Oh if he will give we should be thankful in the owning of his Goodness if he will deny we must be patient in the owning of his Soveraignty 2. Sometimes this mercy is denyed but better are bestowed God doth not give Children but he gives himself and is not he better than ten Sons as Elkanah said of himself to Hannah 1 Sam. 1.8 There is a better name than that of Sons and Daughters promised Isa 56.3.4 they who have that better name have no reason to murmur because they have not that which is worse They who have God for their Father in heaven may well be content to go childless here on earth If God will not give me the lesser yet if he gives me the greater Good have I cause to be angry surely no more than he hath to be angry with me to whom I deny a brass farthing and give him a purse of Gold 3. Children sometimes are withheld a long time but they are given at last of which we have many Instances The case is never desperate so long as we can submit and wait 't is to be hoped God designs to give us that comfort under the want of which we can be contented 4. If Children be given after froward and irregular desires of them 't is to be questioned whether it be done in mercy and 't is to be feared this frame will very much spoil the mercy What we get by discontent we seldom enjoy with comfort How many Parents have experienced the truth of this they were not quiet till they had Children and less quiet after they had them they proved so undutiful stubborn naught that there was much more of vexation in the having than there was in the wanting of them 5. Many wanting the comfort of this Relation it pleaseth God to fill up the comfort of their other Relations The Husband or the Wife are the better because there are no childrn and so the Lord recompences what is denied in one Relation by doubling the comfort of another Relation 6. Children are great comforts but they are but mixt comforts The Rose hath its sweetness but it hath its pricks too and so 't is with Children Oh the cares fears distractions that Parents are filled with about them they are certain cares uncertain comforts as we usually express it We eye the sweet only of this Relation and that makes us fretful did we eye the bitter also we should be more still and calm 7. Had we this mercy in the height of it fill'd up in all respects according to our desires and expectations 't is a thousand to one but our hearts would be too much set upon it And that would be of fatal consequence to us upon many accounts and therefore God foreseeing this 't is out of kindness and love that he withholds it from us These things being considered as to this affliction methinks they should very much dispose the heart to contentation under it 2. Secondly when dear Relations are taken away by death then it 's a time of Discontent To lose a tender Husband an affectionate Wife an hopeful Child How as to the loss of Relations a faithful Friend oh this is a cutting tryal a very smarting rod under which 't is no easie thing to keep the spirit sedate free from all passion and discomposures Yet as hard as it is Consideration would much facilitate it Consider therefore 1. About the true stating of this affliction 'T is great to us because of the greatness of our affection but otherwise as to the thing in it self is it more than the breaking of a pitcher than the dying or withering of a flower than the nipping of a blossom and vvill any considerate person be much moved at such things as these The Heathen bore the death of his child very well upon this consideration vvhen news thereof was brought to him he was not disturbed for said he I knew I begot my child mortal We forget what these comforts are and then we fret at the loss of them 2. Think of the commonness of this affliction You think never was any sorrow like to yours never did any lose such a Husband or such a Wife or such a Child as you have done alas this is but the fondness and excess of love Many have lost as dear Relations as you have lost let them be what they will you are not the first nor will be the last who are thus exercised When a Mercy is common in our eye we set it too low when an Affliction is singular in our eye we set it too high 3. 'T is God himself who makes this rod If a sparrow doth not fall to the ground vvithout him Math. 10.29 certainly a dear Relation doth not shall we not be silent before him He that gave he hath taken he that hath a greater right to Husband Wife Child than any of the Possessors have he hath seen good to call back vvhat is his own shall any vex at this Dead Relations are not * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lost but restored to their first Owner and though 't is our Affliction to lose them yet 't is † Sustulisti liberos quos ipse dederas non contri stor quod recepisti ago gratias quod dedisti Hier●n ad Julian Non moeremus quod talem amisimus sed gratias agimus quod habuimus Idem mercy that ever vve had them both must be put together and then the heart vvill be quiet 4. Is all taken if not thou hast no reason to complain The child is taken but 't is but one of many but the Husband is yet spared thou must not be impatient for what is removed but thankful for vvhat is continued as Themistocles when Amyntas took away some of his dishes bore it contentedly saying he might have taken all And pray keep down all passion for this may make you lose vvhat you have though it vvill not regain you vvhat you have lost Oh but some will say my only child is dead Is it so thy affliction is the greater but thy contentation must be never the less He that gave an only son to thee may take an only child from thee Isaac vvas an only son and yet Abraham vvillingly offered him up to God 5. 'T was high time for God to make a breach upon you 'T is the vvisdom of God to his he vvill not let them have long what they over love had you loved less the child might have lived longer When these comforts are too much in our hearts they must not be long in our hands It 's infinite mercy that God will secure our love to himself and take that away from us which would take off our affections from him 6. 'T is that temper of soul which
because they being conjoyned do make the Christian Compleat in Godliness he submitting to the Praeceptive in Contentment to the Providential will of God or because Godliness gives the highest motives to contentment and that again reflects a great beauty and lustre upon Godliness but chiefly because Godliness issues out in contentment and causes that blessed frame of heart and because without Godliness there can be no Contentment He that is not a Godly man i. e. a sanctified and gracious man for I shall consider Godliness principally in its habitual notion cannot be a contented man in that sense wherein the Apostle speaks of it in the Text. Many of the old Heathens seemed to go very far in contentment to have a great mastery over passion in all occurrences to be very sedate and calm They notably improved their Reason and consideration if not wholly to suppress Discontent yet however to keep it in so as that Others should not perceive it and many of them through the firmness and greatness of their spirits could and did bear much with great tranquillity of mind for the spirit of a man may bear his infirmity Prov. 18.14 But yet as to true Evangelical Contentment they knew nothing of it for that necessarily requires a divine principle within and a divine and special assistance from above to both of which they were altogether strangers And so it is still with all mere Moral men such as are destitute of Grace and of the Spirit So that as ever you desire to learn in every state to be content you must look to this that ye be renewed and sanctified All motives without let them be never so high all consideration within let it be never so serious will not prevail to the keeping of the heart quiet under crosses unless there be a work of saving grace there The true and only way to be content is to be godly for indeed Contentment is the daughter of Godliness For the better opening of this Direction How God●iness doth further Contentment it will be requisite that we enquire How Godliness or Grace doth produce this effect of Contentation Ans It doth it by these wayes or methods 1. As it rectifies and works in and upon the several Faculties of the Soul For this is necessary to be done in order to Contentment and it being done Contentment cannot but follow upon it Let me make this out particularly 1. Grace rectifies the Vnderstanding which it doth by dispelling its natural darkness and setting up a clear and saving light in it Now this light hath a great influence upon Contentment for the Vnderstanding being thus enlightned Fancy and Imagination do not carry it in the soul as before they did and hereupon the heart is brought to a more quiet temper Our inquietudes of mind are founded in the power and prevalency of Fancy We fancy such and such things to be evill when in truth they are not so at leastwise as God sanctifies them or to be more evil then in truth they are and upon this when those things are laid upon us we fret and vex whereas do but take away this vanity and mistake of fancy Nihil est miserum nisi cum putes Boeth de Consol l. 3. Phil. 3.8 there would be no such great evil in what we suffer Nihil admodum atrox passus es nisi id tu tibi fingis as he of old truly said And again we fancy such and such things to be good yea good in a very high degree and then upon the want of them we are disturbed Whereas if Fancy did not delude us they have but very little good in themselves and as to us in our special circumstances may be none at all and therefore why should we be troubled about them The winds then arising from this point Grace lays them by freeing the person from the power of fond imagination and instead thereof by setting up solid judgment in him so that he shall be able to judge aright of things and not to perplex himself one way or another further than the nature of the thing before him will bear Men generally are unquiet because they are injudicious if sanctifying grace therefore by that heavenly light which it brings into the Understanding shall make them more judicious by doing of this it must also make them more quiet An enlightned head promotes a submissive heart when 't is right counting about worldly things then 't is contentedness No wonder that Paul had learned in every estate to be content he having before learned to count all things but loss for Christ 2. Grace rectifies the Will thus in causing it to comply with and yield unto the Will of God Whenever this supernatural habit is infused into a man there is a melting of his will into God's Will so that there is but one and the same will between them Now by this means it doth the work which I am speaking of for when 't is thus certainly there can be nothing but Contentment What can put the spirit into disorder when 't is come to to this Not as I will but as thou wilt When wind and tide go contrary wayes then the waters are rough and boisterous but when they both go the same way then all is calm and smooth So here when God's will and Ours differ then storms of passion rise but when they agree there 's nothing then but evenness and stilness in the spirit Oh! we are never discontented but 't is from the jarring and clashing of our wills with God's Quod si● esse velis nihilque malis As he said Cesset voluntas propria non erit infernum so say I Let but Christians lay aside their own will and rest in the will of God and assuredly there will be no perturbation of mind in them Indeed the duty of universal contentment is unpracticable till it come to this and grace bringing the Creature to it so it works Contentment 3. Grace rectifies the Affections in taking away their inordinacy towards earthly things in keeping of them within their due bounds and limits and so it works Contentment What is it that causes unquietness in us for the most part we may resolve it into the unmortifiedness of some affection or other Lust is the fuel that kindles and feeds this fire that makes us to quarrel and fall out with God because our conditions are so and so Great Vessels must have much water or else they split themselves Where the love is too great to earthly things if much of them be not possest there 's great danger of discontent but where 't is duly bounded a little of these things sufficeth as smaller vessels sail well enough even in shallow waters The pain in the head proceeds from the foulness of the stomach Purge but that and the head hath ease Purge but the heart from its unholy affections and a man hath ease and comfort in every condition That which indangers impatience is the greatness
unbelief that is within and so it prevents or puts a stop to inordinate sorrow for what is externally afflictive as bleeding at the arm stops bleeding at the nose Where 't is repenting there 't is not repining 4. Heavenly mindedness The more a man doth mind things above the less he is concerned about things below he who hath his heart and conversation in heaven will not be sollicitous or querulous about what befalls him here on earth Math. 6.21 Phil. 3.20 Nihil sentit crus in nervo cum animus est in coelo Tertul. 5. Self-denyal A grace that hath a great tendency to Contentment because it takes men off from their own wisdom will and affections and causeth them wholly to resign up themselves to the wise and gracious dispose of God Oh saith the self-denying Christian I am not fit to be my own chooser God shall choose for me I would not have my condition brought to my mind but my mind brought to my condition I would not have God give me what I desire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iambl in V. Pythag. L. 1. C. 28. but I would desire nothing but what God sees good to give me As that Philosopher when one wished for him that he might have from the gods whatever he would nay rather saith he wish for me that I may will nothing but what the gods will give me Surely when 't is once come to this it must needs be Contentment These are some of the wayes others there are but I must pass them over by which Godliness doth promote and work Contentment So that as you desire to learn it you must look to this that you be gracious and godly persons without Grace in the habit and exercise thereof it cannot be composedness and tranquillity of spirit in every state I do not affirm that he who hath grace is so constant and universal in this frame as that he is never under discontent for even such a one hath his infirmities and surprisals and pro hic nunc corruption may be too hard for grace but this I say he as to the general course and when he is himself is contented and that he is the person who is fitted and qualified to live contentment The Third and last Means is Prayer The third Help to contentment viz. Prayer without this the two former will be ineffectual Let a man be never so considerative yea never so Godly yet Prayer is necessary to his being contented Humility Faith Repentance Heavenly-mindedness self-denial are the heart-quieting Graces and Prayer is the heart-quieting Duty He that hath not learnt to pray will not learn to be content When God is seldom spoke to he will be often hardly thought of There must be good striving with God in prayer or else there will be bad striving with him in the way of Discontent O Sirs are you afflicted pray Jam. 5.13 do you meet with crosses pray doth the Estate decay the Relations die the Body consume by pain and sickness pray The best way to be content in every state is to pray in every state We study this hard lesson best upon our knees Prayer furthers contentment 1. As it gives a vent to the mind under trouble Vessels that are full if they have not some vent are apt to burst and so when the heart is full of grief if it hath not a vent it breaks Sorrow kept in overwhelms the spirit Strangulat inclusus dolor let it be vented a little and the spirit is much at ease Now prayer is the best vent the poor Christian goes to God tells him his case pours out his heart before him upon this his heart that was ready to break before is now greatly relieved When Hannah had prayed under her trouble she went away and did eat and her countenance was no mo●e sad 1 Sam. 1.18 What sad work doth the wind make where 't is pent up whence come the dreadful shakings of the earth but from its being shut up in the cavities thereof And so here when we keep in our troubles do not open them first to the Lord in prayer and then to some experienced Christian what commotions and perturbations of mind is that the occasion of 2. As it obtains Grace and strength from God to enable the creature to be contented For 't is he and he only that can work up the heart to this excellent frame he that stills the sea when it rages doth also still the soul in all its passions and discontents When Paul had spoken thus high of his Contentment lest any should think he ascribed this * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophyl Quia de maximis ●e●us gloriatus f er●t ●e superbiae id tribueretur vel nè aliis jactantia● occasionem daret su●jicit hâ● fortitudine se à Christo instrui Calvin in loc to himself or had it from himself immediately he subjoyns I can do all things through Christ strengthning of me to note that the quietness of his mind was divine and supernatural We read of our Saviour how he being at sea and a great tempest arising he rebuked the winds and the sea and there was a great calm And the men marvelled saying what manner of man is this that even the winds and the sea obey him Matth. 8.24 c. Truly the calming of the heart in its inward storms is a thing every way as marvellous as what Christ here did and that which requires as great a power to effect it If therefore you desire to arrive at this even temper of mind in every condition often go to God and beg it of him Say Lord I have a Peevish froward discontented heart that is ready upon every cross to vex and fret against thee this I hope is my burden I would fain have it otherwise but I cannot get victory over my passion I cannot bring my self to a calm and submissive frame wherefore I seek to thee to inable me thereunto Blessed God do thou help me through the power of thy grace let there be evermore a contented mind in me such and such crosses I meet with but Lord under all let me be patient here 's an hard lesson for me to learn but through the teachings of thy spirit let me learn it Oh do but thus pray and in due time God will give you what you pray for Thus I have answered this weighty Question What Christians are to do that they may learn in every state to be content Now to close all I leave it with your selves to enquire what your attainments are as to this Contentment 'T is a sad thing that even amongst Christians there is so little of it that many mere Heathens who had nothing but reason and the dim light of Nature seem herein to outstrip those who have far greater helps to it Nemo facile cum fortunae suae conditione concordat Boeth de Co●sol Phil. l. 2. prosâ 4. Quis est tam compositae foelicitatis ut non
aliqua ex Parte cum statús sui qualitate rixetur Idem ibid. Oh this is much to be lamented Let us bring it down to our selves Paul had learnt in every state to be content we have scarce learnt in any state to be content We are not well either full or fasting When it's Summer then 't is too hot when 't is winter then 't is too cold Every condition is more or less uneasie to us If it be Mercy we complain it is not enough if affliction we complain 't is too much and so we are alwayes in statu querulo moroso as he in Seneca expresseth it The great God is willing to be pleased with what we do but how hard are we to be pleased with what he doth He finds no fault with our duties though attended with many defects if done in sincerity we will be finding fault with his Providences though there be nothing in them but what speaks infinite Wisdom and Goodness The generality of men carry it as if the fretting leprosie was upon them yea many even of those who belong to God are too much sick of this disease Surely if he was not a long-suffering and compassionate Father he would not bear as he doth with such froward Children The most like their inward state too well and their outward state too ill Such who have the world are contented without God Such who have God are not contented without the world It being thus is it not highly necessary that we should for the time to come set our selves with our utmost diligence to get a Contented spirit May be we dare not let the fire of our passion break forth but it lies smothering and hid in the heart when shall it be quite extinguished oh that that might be wholly cast out and that instead thereof sedateness of mind submission to God contentation in every condition might come in into the soul My Brethren will you fall upon the studying of this excellent lesson of Contentment You have learnt nothing in Christianity till you have learnt this you are no better than Abcedarians in Religion if you have not mastered this great piece of practical knowledg You have heard much read much of contentment but have you learnt it so as to live in the daily practice of it pray take up with nothing short of that The design of this Sermon hath been to help you herein to direct you what you are to do in order to Contentment Now will you make use of the Directions that have been given viz. to be considerative godly praying persons These are the best remedies that I could think of against that Spiritual Choler that doth so much trouble you Use them and I hope you will find the vertue and efficacy of them to this end Look to your state and course that you be godly when any thing troubles you retire for Consideration and Prayer hold on in this way and in tim you also will be able to speak these great words as to your selves that you have learnt in every state to be content How to bear Afflictions Serm. XXVII HEB. 12.5 My Son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him Prov. 3.12 THe words are an excellent passage from the Book of the Proverbs wherein the Supreme eternal Wisdom is represented giving instruction to the afflicted how to behave themselves under troubles so as they may prove beneficial to them the counsel is that they should preserve a temperament of Spirit between the excess and defect of patience and courage and neither despising the Chastenings of the Lord by a sinful neglect of them as a small unconcerning matter nor fainting under them as a burden so great and oppressing that no deliverance was to be expected To enforce the exhortation Wisdom useth the amiable and endearing title My Son to signifie that God in the quality of a Father afflicts his people the consideration whereof is very proper to conciliate reverence to his hand and to encourage their hopes of a blessed issue The Proposition that ariseth from the words is this 'T is the duty and best Wisdom of Afflicted Christians to preserve themselves from the vicious extreams of despising the chastenings of the Lord or fainting under them To illustrate this by a clear method I shall endeavour to shew 1. What it is to despise the chastenings of the Lord and the causes of it 2. What fainting under his rebukes signifies and what makes us incident to it 3. Prove that 't is the duty and best wisdom of the afflicted to avoid these extreams 4. Apply it 1. To despise the chastening of the Lord imports the making no account of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as unworthy of serious regard and includes inconsiderateness of mind and an insensibleness of heart 1. Inconsiderateness of mind with respect to the Author or end of Chastenings Job 5.6 1. With respect to the Author when the afflicted looks only downwards as if the rod of affliction sprang out of the dust and there were no superior cause that sent it Thus many apprehend the evils that befall them either merely as the productions of natural causes or as casual events or the effects of the displeasure and injustice of men but never look on the other side of the veil of the second causes to that invisible providence that orders all If a disease strikes their bodies they attribute it to the extremity of heat or cold that distempers their humours if a loss comes in their estates 't is ascribed to chance to the carelessness and falseness of some upon whom they depended but God is concealed from their sight by the nearness of the immediate agent whereas the principal cause of all temporal evils is the over-ruling Providence of God Shall there be evil in a City and the Lord hath not done it Amos 3.6 They come not only with his knowledg and will but by his efficiency Exod. 10.13 19. The Locusts that infected Egypt were as real an effect of God's wrath as the most miraculous Plague although an East-wind brought them and a West-wind carried them away The arrow that was shot at a venture and pierc't between the joynts of Ahab's armour was directed by the hand of God for his destruction 1 King 22.34 Shimei's cursing of David though it was the overflowing of his Gall the effect of his malignity yet that holy King lookt higher 1 Sam. 16.11 and acknowledged the Lord hath bidden him As the Lord is a God of power and can inflict what judgments he pleaseth immediately so he is a God of Order and usually punisheth in this world by subordinate means Now where ever he strikes though his hand is wrapt up in a cloud yet if it be not observed especially if by habitual incogitancy men consider not with whom they have to do in their various troubles this profane neglect is no less than a despising the
judgment of things we have not the least cause to suspect the love of God when he chastises us to take away sin the only abominable object of his hatred and deep detestation and to render us partakers of the divine nature And the present peaceable fruit of righteousness is the product in those who are duly exercised by their troubles It is an allusion to the reward of the conquerers in the Olympick games who had a crown of Olives the embleme and shadow of peace But true peace a divine calm in the conscience shall be the recompence of all that exercise the graces suitable to an afflicted state In short the Apostle assures Believers 1 Cor. 11.32 that they are chastened of the Lord to prevent their condemnation with the world 'T is this rod truely delivers them from hell 't is this consideration that changes thorns into roses and extracts honey out of worm-wood If the way be stony or flowry that leads to blessedness a Christian should willingly walk in it To conclude from the consideration of what the Scripture declares concerning temporal evils Let us lift up the hands that hang down and the feeble knees and make straight paths for our feet lest that which is lame be turned out of the way but let it rather be healed i. e. in our affliction let us take courage and resolution from the promises and live in a holy conformity to God's will that the weak or faint may be restored The first and last ●●sson of Pagan Philosophy was to support men under the storms to which 〈◊〉 are liable in this open state to render the soul velut pelagi rupes im●●●● ●s a rock unshaken by the waves But all their directions were unsuccessful and so could not secure them from impatience or despair but the Gospel that assures us of the love of God in sending afflictions for our spiritual and eternal good is alone able to compose the mind And when ever we faint in troubles 't is either from infidelity or inconsideration 'T is impossible a person should be a Christian and be incapable of comfort in the most afflicted state for we are really so by the holy Spirit who is the Comforter When we speak sometimes to those we judge infirm we speak to Infidels who only receive remedy from time which they ought to receive from Faith they have the Name of God only in their mouths but the world is in their hearts their passions are strong and obstinate not subject to sanctified reason the difficulty they have of being comforted discovers the necessity of their being afflicted they need conversion more than consolation Others who are sincere in the Faith yet are apt to faint under troubles from an errour like that of the Apostles when their Lord came upon the waters in a stormy tempestuous night to their assistance they though he was a spirit so they look on God as an enemy when he comes to sanctifie and save them The soveraign remedy of our sorrows is to correct the judgment of sense by a serious belief of God's promise thus we shall reconcile the roughness of his hand with the sweetness of his voice He calls to us from heaven in the darkest night 't is I be not afraid he corrects us with the heart and hand of a Father A due consideration of these things will produce a glorified joy in the midst of our sufferings Rom. 15.4 Whatsoever things were written afore-time were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope How we may bring our Hearts to bear Reproofs Serm. XXVIII Psal 141.5 Let the Righteous smite me it shall be a kindness and let him Reprove me it shall be an excellent Oyl which shall not break my Head for yet my Prayer also shall be in their Calamities IT is generally agreed by Expositors that this Psalm as that foregoing with two of those that follow were composed by David in the Time of his Banishment or slight from the Court of Saul The state wherein he describeth himself to have been the matter of his Pleas and Prayers contained in them with sundry express circumstances regarding that season and his condition therein do manifest that to have been the time of their composure That the Psalmist was now in some distress whereof he was deeply sensible is evident from that vehemency of his spirit which he expresseth in the reiteration of his request or Supplication v. 1. And by his desire that his Prayer might come before the Lord as Incense and the lifting up of his hands as the evening Sacrifice v. 2. The Jewish Expositors guess not improbably that in that Allusion he had regard unto his present exclusion from the Holy services of the Tabernacle which in other places he deeply complains of For the matter of his Prayer in this beginning of the Psalm for I shall not look beyond the Text it respecteth himself and his deportment under his present condition which he desireth may be harmless and holy becoming himself and useful unto others And whereas he was two wayes liable to miscarry First by too high an exasperation of spirit against his Oppressors and Persecutors and Secondly by a fraudulent and pufillanimous compliance with them in their wicked courses which are the two extremes that men are apt sinfully to run into in such conditions he prays earnestly to be delivered from them both The first he hath respect unto v. 3. Set a watch O Lord before my Mouth keep the door of my Lips namely that he might not under those great provocations which were given him break forth into an unseemly intemperance of speech against his unjust Oppressors which sometimes fierce and unreasonable Cruelties will wrest from very sedate and moderate spirits But it was the desire of this Holy Psalmist as in like cases it should be ours that his heart might be alwayes preserved in such a frame under the conduct of the Spirit of God as not to be surprized into an expression of Distempered passion in any of his words or sayings The other he regards in his earnest Supplication to be delivered from it v. 4. Incline not my Heart unto any evil thing to practise wicked works with men that work iniquity and let me not eat of their Dainties There are two parts of his request unto the purpose intended 1st That by the Power of God's grace influencing his mind and Soul his heart might not be inclined unto any Communion or Society with his wicked Adversaries in their wickedness 2ly That he might be preserved from a liking of or a longing after those things which are the baits and allurements whereby men are apt to be drawn into Societies and Conspiracies with the workers of iniquity And let me not eat of their Dainties See Prov. 1.10 11 12 13 14. For he here describeth the condition of men prospering for a season in a course of wickedness They first joyntly give up themselves
or other make them ashamed and so will the hopes of the Hypocrite too but the hopes of pardoned persons which they have of future blessedness have an excellency in them beyond the hopes of all others and they shall never be ashamed of them The happiness they hope for they shall certainly have none can deprive them of it men cannot deprive them they may take away their earthly Inheritance but they cannot touch their Heavenly Inheritance Devils cannot deprive them they may attempt it but they cannot effect it Death cannot deprive them death will bereave of whatever riches of the world any of them have but it will put them into the possession of their Treasures in Heaven none can deprive them but God and God will not do it as hath been already proved and therefore their hopes are of a certain thing which they shall not fail of and withal they know that the happiness of Heaven will exceed all their expectations even the highest which ever they have had of satisfaction and contentment there that they shall find more sweetness and joy there than ever hath entred into their hearts to conceive and therefore their hopes shall not make them ashamed yea in their very hopes of Heaven especially at some times they find more real satisfaction than ever was found by any in the fullest and sweetest enjoyment which they have had of the good things of this life 3. Pardoned persons have the beginnings of future blessedness here in this life in the Work of Grace and sometimes foretasts and first fruits of it through the witness seal and earnest of the Spirit and this renders them blessed in this life 1. They have the beginnings of Heaven in the work of Grace upon their hearts Grace is the beginning of Glory Grace is Glory in the bud Glory is Grace in the flower and when the work of Grace is carried on the Scripture saith that they proceed from Glory to Glory 2 Cor. 3.18 But we all with open face beholding as in a Glass the Glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord They are happy here as they have some degrees of that Holiness and likeness unto God in the perfection of which hereafter in Heaven their perfect happiness doth consist 2. They have the beginnings of Heaven in the first fruits and foretasts of it through the witness seal and earnest of the Spirit God sometimes gives them first fruits of the Heavenly Canaan he sends in a few bunches of those sweet Grapes that are there and lets them have some foretasts of those Soul-ravishing Heavenly joys which hereafter will be full and for ever abiding he sometimes takes them up into the Mount and gives them a Pisgah-sight of the Land of promise through the prospective-Glass of his Ordinances he brings some even to the Gate of the New Jerusalem in their Heavenly Contemplations and le ts out such beams of that Glorious Heavenly light and drops into their hearts such taste of future joys through the sudden elapses of the Spirit of Glory upon them that they are rapt up into an extasie and such a sweetness they feel in their Spirits as is ineffable such as words cannot utter nor the minds of any conceive but those that have had the like when God giveth them the witness of his Spirit that they shall assuredly attain eternal life and sealeth them up by his Spirit to the day of Redemption he doth commonly give the earnest also of the Spirit in some Soul-ravishing joys in comparison of which the softest pleasures of the flesh and the sweetest delights that can arise from any objects of sense are most vain thin empty and not worthy to be named with them And thus the Eternal blessedness which pardoned persons shall have doth render them blessed here in this life beyond all others whatever confluence of good things they be surrounded withal The fore-sight first fruits hopes and sweet fore-tastes of this future blessedness do sweeten their life but especially they do sweeten their death they knowing that death will be their friend and prove an out-let to all earthly misery and an in-let to their heavenly glory that death will open the prison doors of this world unto them and usher them into the palace of the great King they know their death will be like a Ship to convey them over Sea as it were from the far strange and Enemies Countrey unto the heavenly Countrey where their glorious Jehovah their heavenly Father where the Lord Jesus Christ their elder Brother and dear Saviour and where the departed Saints their chief kinred are together and where their inheritance doth lye and where they shall take up their Eternal abode Where pardoned persons have a clear fore-sight and strong hope of this death is no more to them than a sleep they can as willingly put off their flesh and go into their graves as they can put off their clothes at night to go into their beds they can as willingly compose themselves to die as they can compose themselves to sleep after a weary day Thus much for the proof of the blessedness of forgiveness or of all those persons whose sins are pardoned Quest 2. The second Question wherein I must be more short is How this blessedness of forgiveness may be attained That this blessedness of forgiveness may be attained there are some things must be known and believed and there are some things must be done and practised 1. Some things must be believed I shall instance in one or two chief Doctrines of the Gospel which all sinners must know and believe if they would attain forgiveness of sin The First is The Doctrine of Christ's satisfaction unto God's Justice for the sins of men The Second is The Doctrine of justification by the righteousness of Christ 1. Sinners must know and believe the Doctrine of Christ's satisfaction unto the Justice of God for the sins of Men. To discourse fully of this great Doctrine of Christ's satisfaction would require a Treatise which might fill a great volume but I must comprize it within a little room who am to speak of it only in the direction of a Sermon Briefly 1. That there is absolute need of satisfaction to God's justice for the sins of men without which forgiveness of sins would be impossible and utterly unattainable is evident both from the nature of God's justice which doth oblige him to punish all sinners Eternally without it and from the truth of God's threatnings wherein he hath revealed that he will thus punish them without it 2. That there is need of the satisfaction of Christ is evident because sinners themselves being finite cannot give that satisfaction unto God which shall bear any proportion to the demands of his infinite justice and if any be in a capacity to give it it must be such a one as is both innocent and so cannot suffer for his own faults and
whose person is of infinite dignity that thence may arise an equivalency of merit in his sufferings as may prove satisfactory to God's infinite justice and because no mere man being a finite creature hath this dignity and God cannot suffer because this would argue weakness and infirmity which is infinitely removed from him therefore it is requisite that the person who can satisfie should be God-man that as in one nature he may be capable of suffering so the other nature may put a vertue and efficacy upon it and such a person was Jesus Christ 3. That Jesus Christ hath done that which is sufficient to satisfie God's justice for the sins of men is evident from his Death and other sufferings which we have upon record in the Gospel which sufferings were not for himself he being an innocent person and it would have argued injustice in God had he permitted such sufferings to have been laid on his body especially had he himself inflicted such dreadful inward sufferings on his Soul were it not that he stood in the room of sinners and endured all these sufferings for their sins that he might give satisfaction to his justice hereby 4. That Christ's sufferings have given to God satisfaction and that he hath accepted of this satisfaction in the behalf of sinners is evident from the Compact and Covenant which he made with Christ that if he would offer up this sacrifice of himself he would be well pleased and sinners should hereby be justified from his sending his Son into the world for this very end and anointing him to the office of High-Priest that he might first make satisfaction and then Intercession for the people from his owning him when here raising him when dead receiving him to glory when raised which he would not have done had not he accepted his satisfaction from his Covenant he hath through him made with man and promises therein of remission of sins through his blood which he would never have made had not Christ's death given him satisfaction Moreover all those places of Scripture which speak of Christ's death as a sacrifice as a ransom as a punishment which he endured that sinners might be and whereby believers are actually reconciled unto God do clearly and abundantly prove that Christ hath given satisfaction to God's justice and which God is well pleased withal 5. That all sinners must know and believe this Doctrine of Christ's satisfaction that they may attain remission of sins is evident because God never did never will forgive any sin without respect unto it this way of remission is the chief thing which he hath revealed in the Scriptures In the Old Testament it was shadowed under the sacrifices for sin which were offered in the New Testament it is the end of the Revelation of Christ this being the chief design of his sufferings and death to give satisfaction to God's justice in order to the forgiveness of man's sin And they that are ignorant hereof or do not believe this do not know nor believe in Jesus Christ and him crucified and therefore cannot obtain forgiveness by his death 2. Sinners must know and believe the doctrine of Justification by Christ's Righteousness that they may attain remission of sins 1. They must know the nature of Justification it self that it doth consist in the remission of our sins and the acceptation of our Persons as perfectly Righteous in God's sight they must know that they have no Righteousness of their own to present God withal because guilty of sin and the least guilt is inconsistent with a perfect Righteousness and therefore if they were as some are really Holy yet that they could not be accepted as perfectly Righteous in God's sight upon the account of a perfect Righteousness of their own which none here do attain unto much less when they are naturally void and empty of all good and real Holiness and polluted all over with Sin 3. They must know that the Righteousness of Christ is perfect and was intended for them and held forth to them which they must submit unto and accept of if they would be justified in God's sight 4. That the Righteousness of Christ is made theirs by Faith God imputing it and accounting it unto believers as if it were their own and they had wrought it out in their own persons This way of Justification by Christ all must know and be perswaded of that would obtain Justification which doth include forgiveness of sin 2. Some things must be done and practised by sinners that they may attain this blessedness of forgiveness 1. They must get conviction of sin 2. They must make confession of sin 3. They must by Faith make Application of Jesus Christ 4. They must forsake sin 5. They must make Supplication and earnest Prayer unto God for pardoning Mercy 6. They must forgive others 1. Sinners would you attain the blessedness of forgiveness Labour to get conviction of sin get conviction of your Original sin the guilt of Adam's first sin in which you are involv'd your present emptiness of all Spiritual good and the Universal depravation of all the powers and faculties of your Souls with inherent pollution which renders you opposite unto all real good and naturally prone unto nothing but evil get conviction of your actual sins of all your hainous breaches of God's Law whether the first or second Table of it whether sins against God more immediately his Nature his Worship his Name his Day or against your Neighbour whether relative sins or sins against the life or chastity or estate or good name of any and get conviction that all inordinate motions that have not the consent of the will and much more inordinate affections which are influenced by it are sinful and provoking unto God Get also convictions of your more hainous disobedience to the Gospel what an aggravation it is of all your other sins that you have repented of none when you have so much need and have been so often called hereunto what an affront is it unto God a disparagement unto Christ that you have neglected your Salvation by him and have been guilty of unbelief in not receiving yea refusing Christ so able and willing to save you and when you have had such frequent and earnest as well as gracious and free tenders of him Get conviction of the guilt of your sins and what an Obligation you are under hereby to undergo eternal Destruction in the flames of Hell fire for it and let this awaken you out of your security let the thoughts of this pierce and wound your consciences and make you cry out with those Sinners which were convinced by Peter's Sermon Acts 2.37 When they heard this they were pricked in their heart and said unto Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do Get conviction also of the horrid baseness and ungratefulness of sin as it dishonours and displeases that God by whom you were at first created are continually
preserved and maintained and who though he could so easily destroy you and glorifie his justice hereby yet is both patient with you and willing also to be reconciled unto you and sends his Embassadors in his name to tell you that he entreats you that you would be reconciled and let these considerations affect you with ingenuous grief for sin Lastly Get conviction of the defilement of sin how your Souls are stained by it and hereby degenerated and debased into a lower degree of vileness than is in the beast that perisheth yea that hereby you are become without regeneration and until your Souls are washed more loathsom in the eyes of God than the most nasty thing in the World is in your eyes 2. Make confession of sin In some cases it is requisite you should confess some sins unto man but it is absolutely universally necessary in order to forgiveness that you should confess your sins unto God the promise of pardoning mercy is made to confession Prov. 28.13 He that covereth his sins shall not prosper but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy David found by experience the evil of covering and keeping close his sins and the benefit of acknowledgment and confession Psal 32.3 4 5. When I kept silence my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long for day and night thine hand was heavy upon me my moisture is turned into the drought of Summer Selah I acknowledged my sin unto thee and my iniquity have I not hid I said I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin Selah Sinners make a full confession of your sins that you may have a full pardon and discharge do not hide any sin as a sweet morsel under your tongue it is a vain thing to seek and endeavour the hiding of any sin from him who is omniscient God hath knowledg of all your Iniquities do you therefore acknowledg all unto him Make free confession of your sins Stay not till God force you by his Scourges and even drag you unto it by his cords of affliction but let it be your voluntary act and be ingenuous herein mingle not your confession with excuses and extenuations Say not though you are bad yet you are not so bad as others that your hearts are good though your lives have been naught that such and such gross sins were your slips and failings that you were overtaken overperswaded and drawn unto such wicked practices by your companions and so by transferring your guilt endeavour to make your selves as Innocent as you can this is abominable in the sight of God and a certain sign of sin's dominion which is inconsistent with the remission of it and will shut you out from pardoning Mercy but in confession of your sins acknowledg your selves to have been the chief of sinners Sinners take all the blame to your selves and set your sins out in the deepest Crimson and Scarlet colours and with all their hainous circumstances and aggravations tell God that your heart is the worst part and if there have been some abominations found in your lives there are a thousand-fold more abominations in your hearts Confess your sins with humility and self-loathing say with Agur Prov. 30.2 Surely I am more brutish than any man and have not the understanding of a man with David Psal 73.22 So foolish was I and ignorant I was as a Beast before thee with Job Chap. 42.6 I abhor my self and repent in dust and ashes Confess your sins with shame like Ezra Chap. 9.6 O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift my face unto thee for our iniquities are increased over our head and our trespass is grown up unto the Heavens Confess your sins with grief and godly sorrow like David Psal 39.18 I will declare mine iniquity I will be sorry for sin 3. Make Application of Christ by Faith that you may attain forgiveness There is no other Name given under Heaven amongst men whereby you can be pardoned and saved Acts 4.12 And he is able to save you and procure a pardon for you in the uttermost extent of your most hainous guilt Heb. 7.25 And the reason is given in the same Verse because he ever liveth to make Intercession for sinners it is his Office as High-Priest wherein he is most merciful and faithful to make Reconciliation for the sins of the People Heb. 2.17 Christ is near to the Father being at his right hand in Heaven and hath great interest in him being his dearly beloved Son and his Intercession for pardon is always accepted it being for no more than what himself hath purchased and what his Father hath promised and therefore you that are the worst of Sinners have great encouragement to come unto Christ and to make Application of him you have his promise that whosoever cometh unto him he will in no wise cast out Joh. 6.37 and if you apply your selves unto him and apply unto your selves his merits and Righteousness by believing you shall certainly attain the forgiveness of all your sins however numerous and hainous they have been Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins And our Saviour himself telleth us Joh. 3.16 God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And the Apostle doth discourse at large in the former part of his Epistle to the Romans concerning Justification which he proveth by manifold Arguments that it cannot be works that it must be by Faith therefore by Faith make Application of Christ and his imputed Righteousness and rest therein only that you may be justified that you may be pardoned and saved 4. Forsake every sin that you may attain the forgiveness of it Prov. 28.13 He that confesseth and forsaketh his sins shall find mercy Isa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and return to the Lord for he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon him Isa 1.16 17 18. Wash ye make ye clean put away the evil of your doing from before mine eyes cease to do evil learn to do well seek judgment relieve the oppressed judg the fatherless plead for the widow Come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as Scarlet they shall be as white as Snow though they be red like Crimson they shall be as Wool You must loath your sins that you may be pardoned and withal you must leave them you must cease from doing evil if you would have God cease from his displeasure and unless you do forsake your sins never expect that God should forgive them there must be a returning to God that you may be received unto favour and this cannot be without a turning from sin It would be a dishonour unto God to pardon you
and light transient tasts and relishes are no evidences we must have these better things to bear up our hearts against the coming of the Bridegroom It sufficeth ●ot to be enrolled among Professors and to enjoy the charitable thoughts and approbations of the wisest Virgins under Heaven It is singular mercy to be rightly guided in self-esteem and valuation for they that measure themselves by themselves or compare themselves among themselves are not wise The Apostle 2 Cor. 10.12 would not have us to take up with the positive degree of good things but to take our aims by the comparative of better These good things are more light ineffectual and superficial and too often like the Seal that is impressed upon bare Paper whereas these better things are like the Seal's impression on the Wax Yet let no trembling Soul or broken reed be affrighted at the end of these foolish Virgins to see the Door thus shut against them the tender heart of Jesus Christ aimeth not at our consternation but awaking and to prepare and hasten us unto Glory before the Key be turned Nor doth his Apostle in the foresaid place despise the day of small things but his real scope and purpose is to excite Professors to look carefully to their foundations and then to go on unto perfection Heb. 6.1 And blessed for ever be the Lord for the second part of that sixth Chapter to the Hebrews in the close whereof we may see the afflicted heart tossed with tempests and not comforted yet hoping in Mercy and fleeing to Jesus as his Refuge and casting the Anchor of his floating Soul within the Vail whither the Fore-runner is entred for us who himself was once tossed in the Ship of the Militant Church albeit without sin but is now gone ashore to heaven as our fore-runner both to look to our Anchor which is fastned there and to hold all fast and to draw our tossed Ship to shore and to see all safe that where our fore-runner is there may we be also And thus the sweet conclusion of that Chapter doth fully recompence the severity of its beginning Let us comfort our selves and one another with these things Thirdly You have heard the miserable condition of such especially Professors of the Gospel and Pretenders to Christ who have Grace to seek at his coming As for the hapy state of such as are ready to enter in with him into the Bride-chamber of eternal peace and joy I shall speak a little in the Close Now therefore in the remainder of this Exercise it will be expected as seasonable that it be considered What gifts of Grace are chiefly to be in exercise in order to an actual Preparation for the coming of Christ by Death and Judgment For his coming is first by Death and then by Judgment And I say an actual Preparation because there is always a general and habitual preparedness to meet Christ Jesus in hearts that are truly godly but not always a particular actual fitness And this we see here in the five wise Virgins who are found in their midnight-sleep with Lamps that have need of trimming at the coming of Christ Thus Hezekiah was fit to dye as to a general and habitual fitness in that he could assert his sincerity before God when the message of death was brought him but he was to seek of a particular actual fitness in that he begs for longer life with prayers and plenty of tears The Message of Death awaked him and the holy man is startled and hath his Lamp to trim for the tidings of his death at hand was as much in effect as if it had been said unto him by the Prophet Behold the Bridegroom cometh go forth Hezekiah to meet him The nature of his distemper which some by the remedy a lump of Figs applied to the Bile conceive to have been the Pestilence and this considered with the shortness and sharpness of the Message and the Prophet Isaiah's quick abrupt departure from him that the King had then no Heir to succeed him in the Throne and also that he was now at the full strength of Nature being but nine and thirty years of age and his fear also what might become of his Kingdom and of his former Reformation after the grand Apostasie of his Father Ahaz I say these considerations made him to apprehend that there was a rebuke of God in this present Dispensation and therefore he is loth to dye under a temporal frown albeit his a vowed integrity would at the worst have seen him safe at heaven For though a Child of God cannot dye in his debt yet he is unwilling to depart under the sense of his temporal displeasure so as the good Prophet did whom the Lion slew at his return from Bethel to Judah 2 Kings 13.24 When David therefore was under God's rebukes for sin and even almost consumed with the blow of his hand he betakes himself as Hezekiah did to prayers and tears saith he Psal 39.10 11. to the end Hear my prayer O Lord and give ear to my Cry hold not thy peace at my tears for I am a stranger with thee and a Sojourner as all my Fathers were O spare me that I may recover strength before I go hence and be no more Thus you see that the dear Children of God who have a general and habitual fitness to meet Jesus Christ when he is coming to them by Death and Judgment may yet be to seek of a particular actual preparation 2. Before I come to the answer of the Question let me premise this also That though a state of Grace is here supposed seeing Grace cannot be exercised where it is not yet there may be need to have it cleared inasmuch as the want thereof is a great hinderance in the way of this Duty You know that one that feareth God and obeyeth the voice of his Servant Jesus Christ may yet walk in darkness and see no light Isa 50.10 and he may say with Jonah he is cast out of God's sight and his soul is filled with troubles when his life draweth nigh unto the Grave wherefore let your eye be not only on your Lamp but also on your Vessel and examine your Oyl as well as mind your light For though you have received an Vnction from the Holy One and felt the sweet influences of the Spirit and have had the witness in your self yet the Comforter which sometimes relieved your Soul may at the present be far from you and suspend his testimony for Grace inherent is not self-enlightning but like the Moon which holdeth forth Light no longer than the Sun shineth upon it and though the Diall hath its Lines and Figures to declare the time of the day yet you will be to seek if the Sun withdraw hi● Light Even thus though the Spirit of God hath drawn the Lines and Figures of his Gifts and Graces in your heart yet if he also do not shine upon them you will not know what
and therefore the Blessing is null and moreover what the meaning of this Providence is that my Brother should come forth against me in this hostile manner I knovv not Wherefore I humbly beg thy Blessing and the confirmation of that Title vvhich hath so great an error in it Thus God brought an old reckoning to his remembrance in an evil day and set it on his conscience and put him to repent and mourn for he wept and made supplication to the Angel Hos 12.4 He came not off so easily but was fain to vvrestle hard all night to lose his rest and to struggle and sweat and pray and vveep and shed many a tear and to go halting aftervvard upon his Thigh unto his dying day Take heed therefore of old Reckonings undischarged look back and consider hovv it hath been and omit not a day vvithout revievving your Actions and Repentings I say as duly as the day determineth let not the Sun go dovvn upon any guilt contracted that so your sins may be blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord and exercise your self to have always a Conscience void of offence towards God and men and this vvill the better prepare you for the coming of Jesus Christ both by Death and Judgment Fifthly Be much in the exercise of Goodness Mercy and works of Liberality towards Christ in his needy Members according to your opportunity and power For though you shall be saved by your Faith yet you shall be judged according to your Works And it greatly concerneth us to be laborious in that Service upon vvhich the judgment shall pass at Christ's appearance Mat. 25.35 36. Call your self therefore to an account what you have done in this way for Christ as how you have fed cloathed visited relieved him in his Members here on earth And if this were more considered such as profess to Christ would be more active for him in ought wherein they might be more serviceable to him but when we see but little activity in the exercise of this Grace we may well fear there is but little Oil in the Vessel for rich anointings will make men agile and ready for every good work inasmuch as the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness and they that hope for eternal Life when Christ shall come by Death and Judgment must seek for Glory Honour and Immortality not only in well-doing but in continuance in it Beware of Omissions and among others of this great duty The Judgment will reach unto all sins In the Narrative of his Life and Death and to omissions in a special manner Mat. 25.37 38. For which that learned and holy Vsher was humbled upon his death-bed The Nobleman hath put a Pound into your hand saying Occupy till I come yea he hath given you many Pounds in a literal sense with which you must trade as well as with the Talents of your Parts and Gifts of Grace And I know you would be glad to find Mercy with Onesiphorus in the day of Christ Remember therefore Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy Mat. 5.7 But He shall have judgment without mercy who hath shewed no mercy whereas mercy rejoyceth against judgment A merciful man is so far from fearing judgment at Christ's coming that he rather rejoyceth at the thoughts of it Sixthly Exercise diligence and faithfulness in your particular Calling For when Christ speaketh of his Coming saith he Be ye ready for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh What followeth Who then is a faithful and wise servant whom his Lord hath made Ruler over his houshold to give them meat in due season Blessed is that servant whom his Lord when he cometh shall find so doing Mat. 24.44 45 46. When Christ was speaking to this Point saith Peter Lord speakest thou this Parable to us or even unto all Luke 12.41 Truly Christ spake it unto all though in a special manner to such as Peter for Christ will have an account how every one of us have managed our particular Callings But they that are Stewards in the House of God which is his Church have a very great account to give and it is required of them in a special manner that a man be found faithful and of all Christ's servants his Stewards have most to answer for that if a dispensation of the Gospel and the care of souls were not committed to them he that understandeth the weight of Stewardship would dread to undertake it but a necessity is laid upon them and wo unto them if they Preach not the Gospel It is said of Calvin that when Nature began to decline in him Melch. Adam in vit Calv. and the symptoms of a dying man appeared on him he would be diligent at his Studies from which his friends disswading him saith he Nunquid me Dominus inveniet otiosum Shall my Master find me idle Let such therefore and all be diligent and faithful in their respective place and employments And indeed every man is a Steward more or less You know what the Master saith of the slothful Servant Take him and cast him into outer darkness there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Such slothful servants shall be under the tribute of eternal pains Prov. 12.24 when the good and faithful Servant shall be made ruler over many things and enter into the joy of his Lord Mat. 25.23 Would you stand before Christ at his coming Oh dread Idleness and unfaithfulness in your Callings as you desire to be sound of him in peace at his appearance Fill up your days with Duty and give your time to him who gave it to you Paul was a great lover of Christ and his Appearance and who more abundant in his Labours for him For he had the Conscience of his indefatigable industry and fidelity in his work for his Master Saith he I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the Faith 2 Tim 4.7 8. He meaneth especially his military faith and oath in fighting a good fight for Christ And wherefore do we hear him groaning so earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with his house which is from Heaven It was because he laboured ambitiously that whether present or absent he might be accepted of him For saith he We must all appear before the Judgment-Seat of Christ that every one might receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad 2 Cor. 5 2. with 9.10 Lastly That I might not multiply particulars let me add what Christ hath joined together Sobriety Watchfulness and Prayer Luk. 21 34.36 And therefore take heed to your selves lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfetting and drunkenness and cares of this Life and that Day come upon you unawares Gird up therefore the loins of your minds be sober and hope to the end for the Grace that is to be brought