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A86531 The saints dignitie and dutieĀ· Together with the danger of ignorance and hardnesse. / Delivered in severall sermons: by that reverend divine, Thomas Hooker, late preacher in New-England. Hooker, Thomas, 1586-1647. 1651 (1651) Wing H2654; Thomason E635_2; ESTC R202448 184,116 264

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dutie of all people to look to signs and to try themselves by them And if there were nothing more but this that is in the Text me thinks it is an unanswerable Argument to confute them that crie out against Signs and Evidences of the truth of grace Doth not the Apostle Paul as plain as any man in the world can put them upon the tryall of themselves by Signs telling them that if they have such and such things in them they are in a good estate and if they have not that they are in a dangerous and damnable condition Therefore I say put it not off but make conscience to practise this duty to view your souls in this and the like looking-glasses Especially considering that which our Saviour Christ hath laid down for a certain truth That there are many called but few chosen There were four sorts of grounds upon which the seed of Gods word was cast and but one of those four proved good There were six hundred thousand of the people of Israel that came out of Egypt and went toward Canaan and yet but two of them that went into Canaan There were twelve Tribes which the Lord had caused to make them cleave to himself as a girdle to a mans loins and yet there were ten of those Tribes at one clap that were all cast off from being the people of God and but two of twelve that did remain You know how that the Apostle Paul telleth us in Rom 9.27 Though the number of the Children of Israel be as the sand of the sea a remnant shall be saved The Lord will put up righteousness in a short sum I say considering these things that there are so many of those that doe profess and hope to be saved shall miscarry how much doth it concern us all to try our selves When as our Saviour Christ had told his twelve Discriples that one of the twelve should betray him every one began to put himself upon the examination and asked their master whether it were he Were they so carefull every one to try himself when Christ told them that one of the twelve should betray him and shall not we be carefull to try our selves when as the Scripture telleth us that scarce one of twelve shall be saved and that eleven of twelve Professors are like to perish and miscarry Oh the heart of man is exceeding deceitfull hypocrisie is very strong and exceeding cunning hardly is a man able to finde out the state of his own spirit when he tryeth it with all his dilgence But above all my brethren let me presse you to this duty to try and examine your selves considering the times we live in These are the times wherein the Lord putteth people upon the tryall trying times even times like the times of the Fullers purging his cloth and the Goldsmiths refining his mettall And there are more trying times like to come Have we not wofull experience of divers falling away some falling scandalously perhaps being the Saints of God Davids and Lots and Noahs and Peters for so it is possible that some that are the children of God may yet notwithstanding fall into scandalous and offensive sins through their want of watchfulness and fear and carefulness But a great many doe fall and fall scandalously yea many give all cause of fear that there never was the soundness and truth of grace in them they went out from us because they were not of us Now I say considering that there are those that doe fall such as take upon them the profession of religion and are eminent in the waies of Christ and in the Gospel and yet fall and fall desperately and damnably Doth it not concern us all to fear and upon fearing to try our selves When the Apostle discoursed of the fall of the Jewes how they were broken and cast off What use did he teach the Gentiles to make of this Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall So say I are these such times that many fall away then such of us as doe stand let us also take heed that we doe not fall How shall we take heed of falling Oh let us look to our selves that we are sound the ordinary cause of falling away is rottenness and unsoundness when people in hypocrisie take up the profession of Religion Therefore let us not make that use of the falls of holy men as the people of the world doe if there be any that falls into any scandalous sin and manifests himself to be naught at the heart what use doth the world make of it To flie upon God and upon religion and upon all professors of pietie and upon the Ministers and Preachers of the word Oh say they this is their Religion they are all but hypocrites this will be the end of them all These kind of Uses doth the world make of the falls of upright men whereas alas there is nothing lesse use to be made of them than this If so be that people were not desperately malicious against God and all goodness and that they were not shamefully ignorant they would never make this Use of the falls and scandalls of these men For first of all how can it blemish God or Religion or good men because some that seemed to be good and were not good doe discover their rottenness and unsoundness by their falls What kind of blemish was it to the holy Apostles and to the beleevers in the Primitive Church that some that were amongst them did goe out from them What kind of blemish was it to the twelve Apostles that one whom Christ kept familiar company with and was conversant with the Apostles as brethren did prove a hypocrite Was Judas his desperate fall a sign that the Religion and Preaching of Christ were naught and the other Disciples hypocrites None dare say so and if it were not then why should it now be a sign They that doe fall away they doe therefore fall away because they are not religious and not because they are religious They therefore fall away because they did not observe the rules of that religion they profest and not because they profest it And as it argueth thus an ignorance in people so further if so be that the world were acquainted with the Gospel and works of God they would know that the Lord hath decreed from all eternitie that in all ages of the Church some that have been eminent in profession should fall away There must be offences and scandalls given the Lord Jesus Christ himself layeth down the rule Matth. 18.7 It must needs be that offences come The Lord hath foretold it and hath ever made it good in all ages and times of the Church that there shall be offences and scandalls and that for good ends First to the making of them that are true hearted to be more fearfull and watchfull and more diligently to try their own estates and to fear lest they fall and by this kind of painfull and
carefull fear the Lord doth keep them that they shall never fall And another end is in regard of the wicked world the world lieth in wickedness and it is cursed and hated of God and intended to damnation and there are a generation in the Church which the Lord hateth and abhorreth and hath appointed to wrath and there are some that hate God and Religion and are glad of any occasion whereby they may reproach God and Religion and may harden their hearts from the power and practise of Religion Now in regard of these desperate wretches the Lord hath appointed it that in all ages some professors shall fall scandalously that they that have a minde to have their hearts hardned against God and Religion should have them hardned with a vengeance that even as a man that is running in a way and another having a minde to make him fall casteth some stone or block before him that may make him stumble and fall Even so when the Lord seeth men desperately cavilling against Religion studying how to harden their own hearts and the hearts of others the Lord will make his own children sometimes to fall though that it is not so common but ordinarily hypocrites to fall and lie in their way as stones that they may stumble and fall and perish for ever There is a woe to them that take scandals all profane ones that will stumble at Religion and reproach professors and profession because of scandalls there is a woe to them and what woe Even this that those scandalls are as so many stones tumbled in the way to make them break their necks in the pit of everlasting perdition And therefore thus you shall finde that usually where the ministry of the Gospell hath been any long time and people have not been wrought upon by the preaching of the Gospel are not brought to a powerfull profession of religion you shall usually finde it that the Lord doth suffer some professors or other in these places to fall scandalously Is it not so in many places in this City And therefore I beseech my brethren think of it as you are afraid to be hardened and to have a blacknesse upon you of Gods wrath take heed of making this use of the fals and scandals of any to harden your hearts against religion or to tip your tongues with reproaches against the Gospel and professors and so to grow to a hatred of the truth and power of godlinesse But the use you are to make of it is this Let him that standeth take heed least he fall Is one fallen take heed thou doest not fall also and to the end thou doest not fall have a care to trie and examine thy selfe Looke to thy selfe that thou have a sure standing Therefore I beseech you make use of this Looking-glasse take this text of Scripture and by it try your selves if you be right Christ is in you if Christ be in you there is a death or sinne and a life of righteousnesse Thus much for the first Use The second Use in a word and that is for Comfort and Terror Is it so that those that have Christ in them have a death of sinne and a life of righteousnesse then here is comfort to some of you and terror to others of you Comfort to all such of you as finde in your selves this death of sinne and this life of righteousnesse Doest thou find that there is this death of sinne in thee this life of righteousnesse in thee Oh then be comforted for thou hast Christ in thee and thou art certainly in Christ God is reconciled to thee thy person is justified thy sinnes are forgiven and thy soule must be everlastingly saved therefore be thou comforted It may be there is not so great a death of sinne in thee as there is in others but there is a death of sinne in thee It may be there is not so full a life of righteousnesse in thee as there is in others but there is a life of righteousnesse in thee If there be a death of sinne and a life of righteousnesse Christ is in thee though thou come short of that death and life that is in others I pray is not the soule of man as truly in an Infant in the wombe as in that childe that is borne and grown to some strength Is not the soule of man as truly in a weak and sickly man as in a strong and lusty man Is not the life and sap of a tree in a plant that is truly ingrafted though but newly and standeth in a manner loose and scarse buddeth or blossometh is it not as truly in that graft as in a graft that is grown strong and hath borne much fruit Even so is it in thee and therefore be comforted I desire to joy and glad your hearts that are in Christ and have Christ in you and I could not tell what better subject to pitch upon to bring you to comfort because I know this is the maine ground of all your discomfort a doubt whether Christ be in you or not therefore I thought it fit to shew you your faces in this Looking-glasse If then you finde in you a death of sinne and a life of righteousnesse know that Christ is in you When as the Scriptures and Ministers from the Scriptures doe open to you cleare signes and certaine evidences of the goodnesse and truth of your estates if you put away comfort then you put away comfort when God speakes to you you refuse to be comforted when the Lord will comfort you you give the lie to God and to his Word therefore take heed what you doe if by these signes or any such which are cleare and evident grounded upon the word of God you finde your estates to be good know then and assuredly beleeve them to be good It is true I confesse the heart of man is so deceitfull that a man cannot try his own heart and therefore the heart of man is so deceitfull that Ministers cannot try other mens hearts none but the Lord Jesus Christ is onely able to know the heart none but the King is able to discerne the man that had not on the wedding garment you may passe the judgement of all the Ministers and Servants of the King and be let in to the feast Yet notwithstanding though neither man himselfe nor Minister is able to try the heart yet this I confidently beleeve that a man himselfe and a Minister also may know and try the hearts of people if so be they deale faithfully and plainly with him Though no man can discover the secret windings of the heart yet the word of God doth this word of God doth not onely lay down infallible signes whereby people may know whether they are in the truth of grace but the word of God doth lay down signes whereby we may know whether we have those signes or no therefore if people will in the humility of their soules nakedly so farre as they know their own
of the Minister that it may go well with you and yours for ever Is not this reasonable Oh take notice what Traitors there are in your bosomes that perswade you to the contrary begin to think with thy self of thy own folly say with thy self Lord What a beast am I Is not the truth that is revealed to me a plain truth is it not the truth of God Is it not for my good to yeeld unto it Doe not I see the heart of the Minister earnest to save me what doth he say but that which is profitable for my soul What is the reason that I stoop not to this so reasonable a thing why come not I under the power of this word and submit to the government thereof Oh my corruptions say it is unreasonable what doe they say wilt thou suffer thy sin which thou hast loved and dallyed withall so long thy sin that hath been of such ancient acquaintance with thee and yeelded thee so much pleasure and profit Wilt thou suffer the Word now to pluck it away from thee My brethren labour now to lay strong hands upon the Traitor and to grapple with that bosome-corruption and work thy soul to a contentednesse to part with it And to bring thy heart to this contentedness for all the quarrell is ended if this be done you must professedly come to this Point whether it be better to lose an eie or a tooth or a limb and go to heaven lame or blind or to retain these and go to hell and lose your soule for ever Bring I say thy soul to a secrious consideration of this truth either I must lose my sin or my soul there is no third thing to be done howsoever carnall reason may suggest other matters yet it must come all to this at last Therefore thinke of it seriously and tell your souls this in secret if sin be had condemnation must be entertained by me also chuse now which you would have Every man by nature hath this principle in him to desire to sleep in a whole skin and therefore we shall observe men in times of horrour of conscience the soule is content for its own safety to fling off all for a while Bring thy heart to it now and labour to keep it close to this point either to renounce Christ or sinne Look as it is with a man that hath a gangrean in his hand or leg or some other venemous disease when a man comes to him and he asketh his counsell and he tels him that the nature of the disease is such that the part must be cut off or else all will be infected this he likes not perhaps but yet this is not enough to work in him a resolution of being dismembred and therefore he sendeth for another and another But at last one commeth and telleth him plainly either you must lose your hand or your life oh then the heart is brought to this rather take my hand than my life So it is here bring thy heart to this therefore either leave all profanenesse leave all contemning of God and love of the world or leave salvation either your life or your lust must goe your sin or your eternall happinesse Work this upon your soules every time you come to hear the Word The second thing for a man to doe that he may come to give way to the Word of God and have a teachable soule is this Take heed of admitting any carnall reasonings against the truth revealed and the plain Word of God openly manifested to you no carnall shifts and evasions for the soul will be thereby cozened In Exod. 7. you shall see there Moses commeth to work upon the heart of Pharaoh and to perswade him to let Isruel goe and to work the more effectually upon him he doth some miracles when Pharaoh saw this he sent for the Magicians to doe the like and they did t is true Moses Rod eat up their Rods but in the mean time Pharaohs heart was hardened The thing is this my brethren what Moses said to Pharaoh the Lord saith to every soule let thy soule goe that it may serve me let thy heart yeeld obedience to me that thou mayest be blessed for ever there is no remedy this must be done thou must be humbled for thy sinne and forsake it or else destruction on followeth This is the charge which God sendeth by every faithfull Minister if now a man send for some carnall reason which is as the Magitians to Pharaoh and that suggests what needeth all this adoe what needeth all this nicenesse and precisenesse is not God mercifull and shall a man look to be saved for his works why did Christ die if salvation were not for sinners Oh my brethren this will undoe you these are the delusions of Satan and meer carnall imaginations and so the soule forsakes that repentance that God requireth and gainsayes that good Word which God hath revealed Your onely course now my brethren is to admit of no carnall reasonings when the Word of God is plainly and powerfully discovered when you see a miraculous hand of God in making known your hidden and secret sinnes and laying open your estates when God discovereth your sinnes in their own fearfull and ugly shape will you yeeld to fleshly imaginations to think alas every thing is not Gospel that the Minister speakes many wise men and great Schollars and Ministers too here are that say the quite contrary This is to hinder the power and efficacy of the Word of God Admit therefore of no carnall counsell send for no Magitians when the Lords command is evident and plain heare nothing against the Word of God but yeeld and captivate your minds to the truths revealed The third Argument that will bring the heart to stoop to the Word of God it is this to consider the excellency and soveraign superiority of the Commandment of God My brethren it is in vain to dally with the Word of God you must know it is his Word the Scepter of his Kingdome that Word by which you must be judged that Word which shall stand though heaven and earth change and come to nothing that which shall be made good upon all men either to their salvation or damnation Therefore be convinced of the majesty and authority of the Word of God Doe not think that all the businesse is when you come here onely to hear a man speak an houre and so have done No that which you hear is the Word of God and that Word that is now revealed it must rule you either here to bring your soules to a subjection thereunto or else to domineer over you then when you cannot gainsay it Many are the shiftings and turnings that are in the heart of wicked men to put off the force and vertue of the Word of God alas say they these words are but wind and they break no bones and so men scoffe at the threatnings of God Oh take heed of this and know and let
torments of hell was there ever love like this Suppose that Christ had given himself to die ten thousand times over and over again a bodily death it had not been in the least degree so much as is one giving of himself some six hours to the enduring of the infinite wrath of God Here is the first Use remember it and admire it and be overcome with the love of Christ Oh that God would shed abroad this love in our hearts would it not constrain us as Saint Paul said of himself In the second place as it serveth to shew the love of Christ so it serveth for a great matter and ground of assurance and consolation to you that are beleevers of having all from Christ whatsoever you stand in need of for he hath given himself for you and will he not give you all things else What is it that your souls want Do you desire Christ you shall certainly have Christ he that hath given himself for thee will he not give himself to thee If we shall see a man giving of himself to death for a woman shall we question whether that man will give himself as a husband to the woman No certainly So when thou seest alreadie that Christ hath given himself for thee doest thou think Christ will not give himself to thee when he gave himself for thee he abased himself when he giveth himself to thee he exalteth himself When he gave himself for thee he was below his condition when he giveth himself to thee hee reserveth his condition for he giveth himself to be thy God and thy King to be above thee to command thee therefore he that hath done the greater will certainly doe the lesser And if Christ will give himself to thee what else is there that thou wantest that Christ will not give thee What Saint Paul saith in regard of God the Father that may I speak in regard of God the Son Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall hee not with him freely give us all things So do I say to all you that are beleevers he that spared not himself but gave himself for you how much more shall hee freely with himself give you all things Do you want the Spirit of Christ He that hath given himself for you will much more give his Spirit to you It is more for Christ to give himself to you then for Christ to give his Spirit to you the Spirit is the Spirit of Christ and he that hath given himself must needs give whatsoever he hath together with himself The Spirit is but one of his Priviledges and his Jewels I mean the sanctifying operations of the Spirit If a man have given himself to a woman will he not give her his name his honour his wealth will he not give her all that he hath Even so consider it and apply it for your comfort and assurance he that hath given himself for you will he not give you all that he hath He that suffered the wrath of God to doe you good will hee not sanctifie your souls to doe you good Hee that lost his own peace for you will hee not give you that peace of conscience which passeth all understanding Thus it is a notable ground of strong assurance confidently to perswade our hearts of this that there is nothing we want that is good for us but Christ will give it us who hath given himself for us Again thirdly Let this be a motive strongly to perswade you to give up your selves to Christ he hath given himself to you will you not give up your selves to him It is that which the Scripture often speaks of Rom 6.13 Give up your selves as a reasonable sacrifice unto God And again Give up your members weapons of righteousness unto God Here now is an Argument above all Arguments why should you deny to give up your selves to him who hath not denyed to give himself to you why should you not give up your understandings your naturall parts to doe him service why should you not give up your hearts to be possest by him Why should you not give up all the members of your bodies to be instruments of doing his will of furthering his honour whereas he hath given up himself for you There is a great difference between Christs giving himself for us and between our giving up our selves to him When Christ gave himself for us he chang'd from the better to the worse when we give up our selves to Christ we change from the worse to the better for till we give up our selves to Christ we are the worlds sins and the Divels we are slaves vassals and drudges then onely come we to be Lords and to be Freemen and to be happie when we give up our selves to Christ Now then if he have changed from the better to the worser for your sakes will not you change from the worser to the better for his sake Consider this seriously there is no argument in the world stronger to perswade the soul to give up it self to Christ then to consider this that Christ hath given himself to us Become Christs altogether be not any longer the worlds nor your own but the Christs and Christs altogether give up your names for Christ be content the world should take away your name for the sake of the Gospel of Christ give up your goods for Christ suffer even with joy the spoyling of your goods for the sake of Christ and of the Gospel give up your liberties for Christ be content to be deprived of all your freedoms and contentments that you injoy for Christ give up your lives for Christ for he hath given up his life for you And if all this then much more give up your sins for Christ What doth Christ require of thee that art a profaner of his day but to abandon that sin to crucifie that sin Oh doe it Christ hath given himself for thee thou hast a sin perhaps that is neer and dear to thee Christ calleth for it Oh give it up to the sword of his word to be mortified and crucified he gave up his dearest life for thee Thus me thinks this same is a notable motive to perswade us to mortification to die to sin and to vivification to live to Christ to devote our selves in every thing to the Lord Jesus Let us not let us not I beseech you live any longer to our selves but to Christ who hath loved us so as to give himself for us And lastly to conclude this point let me perswade all such of you as are not yet beleevers that you would labour above all things to become beleevers Oh my brethren thrice happie are they of whom this may be said Christ hath given himself for us This is onely the happiness of beleevers they whose hearts are purified they that have a working love they that have a brestplate that secures their souls against all the wounds of the world
dominion over you For the understanding of this you must know there is a double dominion of sinne the one is when sinne reigneth to obedience the other is when sinne reigneth to death First I say there is a reign or dominion of sinne to obedience that is it which is spoken of in the 12. verse of this Chapter Let not sinne reign in you that you should obey it in the lusts thereof This dominion of sinne is when as sinne doth sit in the soule as a King sitteth upon his Throne and commandeth the heart of a man and all the members of his body as a lawfull Soveraigne doth command his Subjects The other reign of sinne which is a reign unto death is that which is spoken of in Rom. 5. 21. there the text saith Sinne hath reigned unto death and that is nothing but the power that sinne hath to damn all those whom it hath lorded it over Now both these are meant in the Text for both of them goe together the reign of sinne to obedience and the reign of sinne to death and damnation even as the light and heat of the Sun goe together so doth the dominion of sin to obedience and damnation goe together Where-ever sinne reigneth to obedience that is where-ever sin is in the soul of a man as a King making a man to obey it in his commands as a Subject doth his Prince there also will that sin reign to the damnation of that man Both of them are meant in the words So then the meaning of the words comes to this effect that sinne shall neither have dominion over you to obedience nor to damnation sinne shall neither reign over you to make you obey it as a Subject his Soveraigne nor to damn you for obedience of it This is the meaning of the promise and this is a promise that is made to all beleevers to all that are members of Jesus Christ And the observation that I note from thence is thus much that Sinne shall never reign in the children of God so as to make them obey it as a Subject their King nor so as to damn them for obeying of it The Point you s●e is no more than the words of the Text explained sinne may dwell with a child of God and sinne may dwell in a child of God Rom. 7. 17. It is no more I but sinne that dwelleth in me But sinne shall never reign over a child of God neither to make him obey it with full consent of will as a Servant doth his Masters commands or as a Subject doth his Soveraignes laws nor yet to damne him for obeying of it thus sinne shall never reign over any child of God though it may be in him and dwell with him yet it shall never reign over him The truth of this you may see in Rom. 6. 18. Being then made free from sinne you became the servants of righteousnesse He is not made free from the presence of sinne nor from the power of sinne for Saint Paul prosesseth of himselfe Rom. 7. 23. I find a law in my members that is sinne rebelling against the law of my mind that is the grace of God that is in me and bringing me into captivity to the law of sinne Therefore sinne may be in a man A child of God is not free from the guilt of sinne neither But how then is he free from sinne Thus he is free from the dominion of sinne sinne doth not reign in them as a Lord and King sinne doth not reign in them so as to damn them for it This is that also in Luke 1. 74. 75. That he would grant us that we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our life Observe this Text Every one that is a child of God is delivered out of the hands of his enemies that is out of the hands of his spirituall enemies the world and the flesh and the Devill and he is delivered out of the hands of these enemies that he might serve God without fear in holiness and righteousnesse But how can any man be thus delivered from hell and sin and the Devill to serve God without fear in holiness and righteousness if he be not delivered from the reign and dominion of sin both as a King and as a Judge to damn him So that you see the Doctrine is cleared That all that are Gods people are delivered from the reign of sin sin neither reigneth in them to Lord it over them nor to damn them I will briefly give you the grounds of the point and so come to apply it The first Reason why all Gods children are delivered from the domnion of sin is because that all the reign of sin both as a Lord and as a Judge both to damnation and to obedience it all cometh through the justice of God which hath lest us thereto to punish all sins in Adam Now Jesus Christ he satisfieth the justice of God he appeaseth the wrath of God in all particulars wherein we have provoked him Gods justice being satisfied he takes off the punishment and so delivereth his people for whom Christ hath satisfied from the dominion of sin both to obedience and to damnation This then is the first Reason Because Christ he hath satisfied the justice of God and hath delivered all his people from that curse and that misery that lay upon them by the Law This is that you have in Gal. 4. 5. God sent his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem them that were under the Law We are under the Law in a twofold respect First we were under the accidentall power of the Law whereby the Law through our corruption did multiply transgressions in our souls and beget sin upon us as a man begetteth children Secondly We were under the Law in respect of the curse of the Law the Law cursing all that broke it and cursing of them to damnation we were under the curse of the Law in this respect Now Christ hath redeemed all his children from under the Law in both these respects First in the first respect he hath redeemed all his children from under that accidentall power of the Law where by the Law had power through our corruption to multiply transgression upon occasion of every Commandement it gave for the Law of God commanding and forbidding and our corruption being strong in us we broke every Commandement and so the Law occasioned a multiplication of transgression Now the Lord Christ hath delivered us from under this accidentall power of the Law in some measure so that how soever still through the remainder of corruption the Law occasioneth a great many sins in us because it commandeth and we doe not obey yet the Law doeth not occasion any reigning sin because there is nothing the Law commandeth but we obey it in some measure I pray observe it They love the Law of God they strive to
received The last and principall thing is the stooping of the soul and subjection of the heart to that which is understood and remembred For then indeed according to the Phrase of the Spirit of God in Scripture a man is said to hearken when the soul begineth to yeeld and subject it self and to take the impression of that truth which God is pleased to make known unto it and that is the meaning of the Phrase 1 Kings 12.15 The Text saith there of Rehoboam that when the ancient men came to counsell him he hearkned not unto them as if it should be said he heard them well enough and he understood them well enough and he retained their counsel in his memory well enough but his soul yeelded not to it his heart imbraced not that counsel he did not subject himself thereunto therefore the Text saith He hearkned not to the counsell of the old men The like Phrase we have touching the sons of Eli 1 Sam. 2.25 When their father spake to them after a cold fashion the Text saith They hearkned not unto the voice of their father They heard his words well enough and understood what he said but their souls stooped not their hearts submitted not they did not subject themselves to take in the impression of the truth upon them and to be framed to the wisdome of God revealed to them in the same So that my brethren then a man is said to hearken when his ear heareth the sound his understanding closeth with the sense and his memorie retains it and his heart cometh under it stoopeth to it yeelds up it self to the impression of the truths delivered to be disposed of thereafter In brief therefore this is the meaning A carefull attention to the word that includes the three former and obedience and subjection of heart to the word thus attended to comprized in the last Now for the party to be hearkned unto that is unto me What is meant here by the word mee If you have recourse to the beginning of this Chapter you shall see it is Wisdom And by Wisdom here you are to understand the Lord Jesus Christ so far as he hath pleased to reveal himself to us either in the Word of God or work of his grace For Christ is here especially meant but not Christ meerly or barely as God nor Christ in the second person but so far as the Lord Jesus Christ the wisdome of his Father is pleased by the work of his grace by the power of his Spirit in the Ministory of the word either written or preached to reveal himself to us So far he is said to be Wisdome The words now are clear you see what is to be understood by hearkning and who the par●ie is to whom we must hearken The Point then that ariseth from these two parts of the Text thus joyned together in the Explication is evident and it is to this effect Namely ●hat The voice of the Lord Jesus Christ ought onely to be attended to and must be obeyed of all his faithfull servants I say Of all his faithfull servants The Lord Christ thinketh 〈◊〉 vain to speak to others therefore he addresseth himself onely to his children These are they that must attend and obey his voice whatsoever he shall be pleased to reveal unto them they must submit themselves unto it and that before and above all others in the world The Point is clear and evident You see it is the main purpose and intent of Christ in this place and therefore hee calleth for audience he desireth to gain acceptance at the hands of men As if he should say in other terms Lay by all other advice onely hearken unto me my children let corrupt counsell carnall advice the sinfull delusions of all ungodly persons in the world let them all passe onely hear and hearken unto me entertain and unbrace my counsell submit your hearts to my instructions And not onely Christ requires this of his children in this place under the name of Wisdome but it is the injunction of God himself and that from heaven it is such a truth and of so great importance that God himself from heaven makes it known and giveth it in speciall charge to all the sons of men Matth. 17.5 When Christ was transfigured in the Mount There came a voice out of the cloud which said This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased hear ye him Mark there came a voice out of the cloud It is not onely the voice of man that perswades you a●d enjoyns you to give audience to the Lord Jesus but God himself and that from heaven and that in mediately with his own mouth layeth this upon us as a dutie that we are to perform that we should hear his Son that is hear him above all more then all nay hear him onely and none but him It is that also which Christ himself calleth for Mat. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart As if he should say There are many masters and teachers in the world but leave all the rest and come hither and learn of me for I am c. Yea it is not onely the charge of God and command of Christ but it hath been and is the generall resolution of the Saints of God from day to day Mic. 4.2 all the people joyned hand in hand as it were Come say they and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord and to the house of the God of Jacob and he will teach us of his waies and we will walk in his paths for the Law shall go forth of Zion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem As if they should have said Because from Zion cometh the Law because at Jerusalem the word of God is taught and revealed therefore it is high time for us to go thither come let us goe let us wait upon God there he will teach us of his waies and what remaineth we will walk in his paths we will stoop unto the truth delivered we will submit our selves to it and conform our hearts and lives to the will of God revealed to us from thence And you shall observe the holy Prophet David as though there had been no Temple no Priest no Teacher besides how his good soul is still breathing upward in many passages of the 119. Psalm Lord teach me Lord quicken mee Lord give understanding to thy servant c. He repaireth ma●nly and chiefly to the Lord for guidance and direction Enough for the proof of the point But a man may aske after what manner must I hearken Hearkning I told you implyeth attention and obedience therefore you may remember that I put them both together in the Doctrine that it was our duty both to attend to the voice of Christ and to yeeld obedience unto it But how must I doe this For the opening hereof give me leave to discover unto you three particulars which are specially to be considered and are required of
every soule that would make conscience of discharging this duty First of all we are then said to hearken to the voice of Christ as we should doe when we first seek to him and depend wholly and onely upon him for direction I doe not say but we may use all good meanes and helpes that God shall please to put in our hands But this I say howsoever we may use other meanes yet we must depend upon no other but the Lord Jesus first of all have recourse unto him and withall resolve that he onely shall cast the scale that his direction shall onely stand with us in whatsoever case it is we desire counsell And then the soule is said indeed to depend upon Christ for direction when it doth acknowledge a kind of soveraignty in him and also an all-sufficiency to direct a man so that howsoever we sometimes heare the counsell of others and hearken to the voyce of the Minister and of private friends yet we ever use them but as means to bring us to Christ and to reveale his counsell unto us and there being diversity of opinions and variety of judgements in many matters of Religion and that amongst godly and learned men yet in all points that which mainly casteth the scales with us is not the learning or holinesse of this or that man but the so veraignty and authority of Christ what he saith what his mind and his judgement is and what he would have us to doe This is the depending of the soule upon Christ You shall observe in the Old Testament how this course was ever taken up by the Saints in any matter of difficulty how they had alwayes recourse to the counsell of God and made their repair to his mouth We may read how often David did this 1 Sam. 23. When the matter was in much question and he in a great straight and every one gave in their severall opinions he went and enquired of the Lord saying Shall I goe and smite these Philistines verse 2. And when the Lord bad him goe and his followers were utterly against it he enquired yet again verse 4. and in the conclusion the counsell of the Lord bore the sway with him though in the judgement of flesh and blood it seemed the worse So again verse 11. Will the men of Keilah deliver me up into the hands of Saul will Saul come down c. So Psal 85. when he had long pleaded with God as it were in the time of Extremity see whither he had recourse at the last and upon what he setled himselfe verse 8. he resolveth upon this I will hear what God the Lord will speak that is I will not eye meanes nor look upon any mens opinions but I will hear what the Lord will say My brethren this is the course that every one of us must take if ever we purpose to hearken to the Lord in a right manner we must upon all occasions in all doubts and questions have recourse to him and labour to captivate our judgements to that truth that shall be delivered to us from him as knowing all other directions are good onely so farre as they are squared by that standard Look as men doe in their Law matter If one have a sute depending in an inferiour Court and cannot meet with satisfaction there according to the state of his cause he appealeth to a higher Court and there standeth at the judgement of the cheif Judge so ought it to be with us in all spirituall doubts and difficulties we must appeale from the conceits and counsels of men to the authority of Christ This is a point that is grosly mistaken and the contrary professed and maintained in popery But I shall not meddle with that at this time This is the first rule so to repair to Christ as wholly to depend upon him for direction But marke this we must repaire to him in the first place and not suffer our judgement to be forestalled with former counsels but first while the minde lyeth equally and indifferently disposed then set the word step in then let us repaire to Christ for guidance in the cause The contrary is a great hinderance to the effectuall passage of the Word of God into the hearts and soules of men and the world may easily observe it For look what points men have drunk in or what customes they have entertained they keep and retain them and there is no speaking against them their hearts are forestalled against the truth and possest with other principles or carnall customes and therefore the word of God takes no place in them The second thing we are to take notice of concerning the manner of our hearkning to the voyce of Christ is this As the soule must first seek unto Christ and depend upon him for direction so in the next place the heart must settle it selfe upon the truth revealed and quiet it selfe in the manifestation of that direction that God hath been pleased to make known unto it We must not listen and hearken to any of those delusions and silly devises wherewith Satan by the ministery of his instruments laboureth to draw us from the truth but our minds being enlightned the counfell of God being made known unto us we ought to take up our rest and standing there settle there let heaven and earth move but stirre not a foot from that truth God hath made known to us It was great folly in that good Prophet 1 Kings 13. to doe otherwise and he suffered for it He was sent on a message against Jeroboam and the Altar at Bethel and was charged by the Word of the Lord nor to eat bread nor drinke water in that place nor turn again by the same way that he came and accordingly he refused divers offers and withstood su●dry perswasions to the contrary But at length there came an old Prophet to him as subtill as ancient and he takes upon him to perswade him to return back to eat and drink and to refresh himselfe and he pleadeth I am a Prophet as well as thou and an Angell spake unto me by the word of the Lord and charged me to reveal to thee that thou shouldst come home with me though with no body else Hereupon the young Prophet yeelded to him and went back with him and eat bread in his house and drank water wherefore the Lord flew him My brethren take heed of this The Prophet had a plain charge the will of the Lord was openly revealed to him he gave him an express command to denounce the sentence against Jeroboams Altar at Bethel and that he should not stay to eat or drink in that place when the word of the Lord is so clear if an Angell from heaven should come and teach otherwise let him be accursed saith the Apostle So in ought to be with every Christian when once the truth is clearly revealed unto us and our mindes truly inlightned with the knowledge of Gods will we must resolve not to
love and respect that I have alwaies had from him if now I enter upon such a course The husband he complaineth and saith A holy conversation is good and such duties as you call upon me to exercise in my family cannot but be pleasing unto God and such as he requires but if I should take up such a practice my wife would be continually besieging me with daily vexations I should neglect my calling and incur the censure of my neighbours and friends and bee counted too too precise These and many others that I could instance in are not hearkners to Christ In the last place there come in also another sort to be reproved and these are such as can be content to give the Lord the hearing but will doc nothing when it should come to performance Howsoever happily they will approve and applaud that which the Minister delivers to them from God yet in the conclusion if their ease and honours and liberties lie at hazard they fail in matter of practise they will doc nothing they dare doc nothing further then they are advised unto by those Counsellors that keep a kinde of audit in their hearts and what sentence they deliver shall be yeelded unto and no more To instance a little The world knoweth that it is the will of God that every man should deny himself and take up his crosse and follow Christ that a man should hate father and mother and wife and children and friends and all for his sake and the Gospels that a man should renounce all those courses of sin that carry with them the most appearance of profit and pleasure that he should pluck out his right eie and cut off his right hand These are truths that are clearly discovered in the Word of God and every soul that is rightly informed yeelds unto them and men in the world are acquainted with them hearing them pressed from day to day in the preaching of the Word And so also that it is the will of God that men should be pure as God is pure and be holy as he is holy in all manner of conversation that they should abstain from all appearance of evill this the Lord requireth and this men commend and approve of But now come to matter of practise If a dutie be required that will crosse their ease or their honours or in the least measure diminish their outward comforts Mark what followeth then they are at ademurr they will stay there and thinke twice of it before they will doe any thing they must first take counsell and be well advised of it And what counsell doc they take Not from the Lord and his word but from their pleasures and profits and carnall delights and contentments The ambitious man asketh his honour Shall I be sincere and zealous in the cause of God The covetous man asketh his wealth Shall I be exact in a Christian course Shall I lose this gain or that advantage for the keeping of a good conscience The voluptuous man asketh his pleasure Shall I abstain from the appearance of evil Shall I hate the garment spotted with the flesh Shall I enter upon the way that is called holy and walk therein with that preciseness and strictness that the word of God requires Then they all cry unto a man as sometime Peter said unto Christ when he had told his Disciples That he must suffer many things of the Elders and Scribes and be killed Be it far from thee Lord this shall not be unto thee Matth. 16.22 and they hang about him as once Pauls friends hung about him when they heard that he must be bound at Jerusalem Acts 20.37 38. and 21.12 No saith honour if once you take that course then I must be abased No saith profit if once you walk that way I must be neglected No saith pleasure if you mean to walk so strictly and exactly before God and men then abandon all pleasure you and I must bid farewell for ever Now the poor soul returneth this answer to God and to his Word and Minister I have taken counsell concerning that which you require of me and am advised to the contrary my pleasure and my profit and my preferment tell me that it will be marvellous tedious irksome and grievous to take such courses I find this way every where spoken against and therefore conceive it better to lie quietly and sleep in a whole skin then to bring an old house upon my head Thus you see what the pleas of carnall men are To all which I say but one thing Let them ask their own hearts but this one question Is this to hear the voice of Christ or not If it be not as most certain it is not then the case is clear He that doth not hear the voice of Christ is none of Christs It is our Saviours own conclusion John 8.47 Hee that is of God heareth Gods words yee therefore hear them not because ye are not of God That is Whosoever they be that will hear any counsell but the counsell of God that will bee content to be ruled by any thing rather then by his word God will not own them hereafter they are none of his that is they have no work of grace in them for so the Apostle expounds it 2 Cor. 5.18 All things are of God that is God is the worker and framer of saving grace in the soul of his servants He therefore that will not stoop and be obedient to the voice of Christ hath no saving grace as yet wrought in his heart and consequently is not of God This me thinks should awaken the souls of all such poor carnall creatures as love their pleasures and profits and preferments more then God I beseech you think of it and know it for a certain that while you hear these counsellers you hear not God and so long as you hear not God he hath no part in you neither will he hereafter if you so continue shew mercy unto you I have one thing more to say before I conclude and that is a word of reproof even for the Saints and people of God who though they walk with God in truth and sinceritie yet are often worthy to be blamed in that they wrong the Lord and their own comforts by their not hearkning and stooping to the command of Christ by their not inquiring of him in the first place and by their not resting upon him when they have his will revealed to them These are two main weaknesses and infirmities in the godly themselves and they ought to take speciall notice of them Many a Saint of God there is that is daily vexing himself by poring on his own weaknesses by hearing whatsoever carnall reasons flesh and bloud and sense can possibly raise against him together with all the false suggestions and perswasions of Satan and at last when he hath wearied and tired himself and knoweth not what to doe then he goeth home to God and is contented to hear what
he will say whether he will speak comfort to his soul or no and then away with carnall reason and delusions of Satan My brethren yee should in the first place go to God and advise with him and hear what his good pleasure is toward you and never inquire of your own carnall reason Again there is oft another great fault in the people of God that as they go not to Christ in the first place for advice and counsell so in the second place when they have it they rest not upon it Many a one there is who after he hath been convinced evidently and clearly by the power of the word rightly and strongly applyed that his estate is good before God and that his conscience is sincere his heart upright and that the spirit of God hath begun an everlasting work of grace in him yet notwithstanding oftentimes relinquisheth that ground that God hath given him to stand upon and letteth go that hold that hath been reached out from heaven for him to sustain himself by and returning home again to a view of his own weaknesses and infirmities he forsaketh his own mercies and groweth forgetfull of his former comforts the consolations of the Almightie seem small unto him hee will not quiet himself in that truth which God hath made known nor rest upon his word as he requireth Yea but the soul replieth alas should a man content himself with a blind perswasion that his estate is good and not try his title to heaven or search whether his interest in Christ be such as will not deceive him at the last I say Yes a man should look into himself and examine himself whether he be in the faith or no but alwaies let the Lord be Judge let his word onely passe sentence upon thee Never Judge thy self barely by what either Satan seems to suggest or thy own sinfull weakness would perswade thee unto but when the Word of God is revealed and his truth manifested unto thee when the Minister out of the Seripture hath setled thy conscience and declared thy case good by such assured Evidences as thou maist safely build upon then hold there and beleeve nothing to the contrary search your selves but still doe it by the word of God If this course were taken and well observed where there are thousands of complaints among Christians there would be scarce one For my brethren the ground of all our feebleness and distrust and distemper lieth especially in this that we neglect our grounds and doe not fix upon those truths which God hath revealed and made known unto us either publikely or privately Hold this therefore for ever as the best direction I can give thee If my soul shall be condemned the word of God shall condemn it If I must judge my self to have no grace the Word of God shall say it If I must conclude salvation as yet belongeth not unto me it shall be because the Word saith so and not because Satan or my own imagination saith so This carrieth thousands of poor souls into manifold distempers because they settle not themselves upon the truth of God which alwaies standeth as mount Zion unmoveable and would make them rest in abundance of peace in the midst of all those disquiets that are raised by Satan and our own distrustfull hearts Lastly in a word doth the Lord himself call for and require this at our hands the Lord I say who onely hath right and authority to command us Doth he injoyn us when he speaks to hear and obey Oh now therefore though an unworthy Minister cannot perswade you to yeeld up your selves to the practice of this duty yet let the Lord himself prevail with you and woe to that soul that will not bee perswaded by the Lord himself Take notice of that place before alledged Acts 3.23 Every soul that will not hear that Prophet shall be destroyed from among the people Let every one therefore now in the fear of God observe that which Christ himself injoyneth and so often calleth for in the second and and third Chapters of the Revelation He that hath an ear to hear let him hear The Lord saith the same now to every soul in this place Let every soul that hath an ear to hear hear what the Lord saith unto him not onely now but hereafter whensoever God shall be pleased to reveal any of his counsell to him for his direction Labour to bring your hearts to that temper we read to have been in Cornelius and those that he had gathered together to be partakers of Saint Peters Ministerie Acts 10.33 When the Apostle was come mark what Cornelus saith to him We are all here present before God to hear all things that are commanded thee of God My brethren the same frame of spirit ought we to have whatsoever it is that the Lord shall speak unto us wee must hear him in all things as I told you before not onely in some easie kind of dutie such as every man is willing to imbrace but in every thing be it never so crosse to carnall reason and corrupt nature when the Lord teacheth we must bring docile hearts hearts inlarged to hear and entertain his doctrine hearts willing to be moulded into that good word of God that he shall reveal to us neither must we thinke this dutie tedious we should never be weary of it Observe what Christ saith Luke 10.24 Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see those things which yee see and have not seen them and to hear those things which ye hear and have not heard them What things Even those that are preached unto you and made known from day to day the great things of the Gospel which are now published in open view great men of great place and eminencie have desired to see and hear them The holy Patriarchs and Prophets whose spirits are now in heaven looked long for Christs day Abraham saw it afar off his eies dazeled in beholding of it If they rejoyced and delighted in these things should not we much more Nay the blessed Angels come down and delight to pore into these sacred mysteries that are now revealed to the people of God Which things saith the Apostle the Angels desire to prie into 1 Pet. 1.12 Those blessed spirits that are the subjects of joy and happiness are so ravished with those glorious mysteries that they are contented to come to our Congregations not a step or two as we doe who assoon almost as we are out of our doors are in the Church but a great journey even from heaven and with a great deal of liking and complacencie they behold the services of Gods people and are glad to see a poor soul converted and report it again in heaven rejoycing there together that a sinner is turned unto God My brethren thinke of it Shall we now that have most reason to attend these things they being that upon which our everlasting salvation depends be utterly careless of them Alas the
hear you But that is not all I beseech you to hear it and tremble The Lord at that day will not only neglect a man that hath neglected him but he will also rejoyce at his destruction and laugh when his fear cometh Mark what the Text saith and remember it for ever Prov. 1.24 Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded but yee have set at naught all my counsell and would none of my reproof I also will laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear cometh What a fearfull thing is this that the God of heaven the God of mercy should solace himself in the ruine of all such rebellious wretches as would not hear and imbrace his blessed truth when he delivered and manifested it to them When Christ shall say This is that drunkard that will not part with his cup for all my perswasions and intreaties This is that adulterer that would not part with his lust notwithstanding all my calling upon him and reproving of him Here is a man that loved his ease his pleasure his comforts his worldly contentments more then me Here stands he that hearkned to the advice of his carnall friends and wicked companions and set at nought all my counsels and admonitions Oh my brethren then shall the just judgement of God sink these down to the everlasting pit where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth for ever I say no more but I beseech you hear me now that God may hear you at that day You will have need of a Saviour and of mercy then The soul longs for nothing in the day of death but pitty and pardon O make Christ your friend now hear him now obey him now receive him now that it may go well with you for ever If now the command of God cannot carry you nor these Arguments which I have used draw you to yeeld obedience to this truth yet remember that passage Deut. 5.27 29. with which I will conclude and me thinks if you have any good nature in you it should work much upon you When the people of Israel had said unto Moses after they had heard God speak unto them out of the midst of the thunder and lightning Go thou neer and hear all that the Lord our God shall say and speak thou unto us all that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee and we will hear it and doe it The Lord saith the Text heard the voice of their words the Lord said I have heard the voice of the words of this people which they have spoken unto thee they have well said all that they have spoken Oh that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my Commandements alwaies that it might be well with them for ever Mark my brethren it is the Lords own request that there may be an heart in you to hear and obey that so yee may live for ever Oh therefore if a man cannot prevail with you yet let the Lord Jesus Christ beg so much of you You may think it strange that the Lord should desire this at your hands but it is true he desireth it heartily and he will be exceedingly pleased if you satisfie his desire Well now seeing it is the great request that the Lord by me hath made unto you ask your own souls commune with your own hearts and tell me what answer I shall return to the Lord Shall I say you will not hear My brethren it is a grievous and tedious thing for a poor Minister to give up such an answer unto God I would not willingly have this answer from you therefore I beseech you answer again Tell me what shall I say Speak comfortably as they did Whatsoever the Lord our God shall say that will we hear and doe If so then let me conclude with the answer of God O that there were such a heart in you and that you would fear the Lord and keep his Commandements that it might be well with you for ever FINIS THE ACTIVITIE OF FAITH OR ABRAHAM'S IMITATORS By that Reverend Divine THOMAS HOOKER Late Preacher in New England JAM 2.17 Even so faith if it hath not works is dead being alone LONDON Printed by G. D. for Francis Eglesfield and are to be sold at the Sign of the Marigold in Pauls Church-yard 1651. The Activity of Faith OR Abraham's Imitators SERMON V. ROM 4.12 And the Father of Circumcision to them who are not of circumcision onely but also walk in the steps of that Faith of our father Abraham which he had being yet uncircumcised THe blessed Apostle Saint Paul from the 20. verse of the former Chapter to the end disputeth that great question of justification by the free grace of God and after many Arguments alledged to prove that it is by grace and not by works he concludeth in the 28. verse Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by Faith with the works of the Law Having dispatched this and setled his assertion by strength of argument in this fourth Chapter wherein my Text is he laboureth to make the truth yet more clearer and evident by way of example and to the end he setteth it forth in the lively colour of that faith of Abraham giving us an instance of this truth in the example of him who was the father of the faithfull a father not by naturall generation but by imitation the Lord having appointed him to be the coppy to all the Beleevers of succeeding ages that as he beleeved and by faith was saved so they that doe expect to receive salvation must walk in that way if they purpose to partake of that end Now touching this example of Abraham that I may not be long before I come to that which is the principall point I intend to deliver at this time the Apostle doth two things first he layeth down the pattern it selfe clearly both in Gods vouchsafing justification to Abraham and also in Gods sealing this by the seale of circumcision and this he doth in the 11. verse And as he hath propounded it thus both in Gods gift and in Gods sealing thereof so in the words of the Text he maketh an application of both applying it to all Abrahams children that shall live to the end of the world whether Jewes or Gentiles and in effect it is as if he had said thus Abraham when he was uncircumcised did beleeve and so was justified therefore they that are uncircumcised may beleeve and be also justified Abraham when he did beleeve was circumcised and that hindered not so those that are circumcised may beleeve and be justified that is the Jewes and the Gentiles have both liberty to come into the Covenant of grace and so also to be happy by that Covenant as Abraham was In the words therefore you have an application of the former patterne to the particular use of every faithfull servant of God that look what good Abraham
and his truth in prophaning his day blaspheming his name contemning his Word despising his Ministers c. and they presently cry out against us What will you make Pagans of us What do you thinke we are Heathens Have we not received Christian Baptisme c. This is a bottome that beareth up many But oh poor silly creatures this will not doe it be not deceived you will shrink under this shelter you will fall notwithstanding these props when you come to tryall you may have all this and yet perish this will not make you Saints in the sight of God You that are Tradesmen is it a good argument that because have good ware in your shops therefore you have no refuse no drug commodity or you that are husbandmen because some good corn grows upon your ground is it therefore all good corne Who knows not that there is Cockle amongst corn and bad wares even in your best shops So it is true here as there are many hearers in hell and many receivers in hell so there are too many in the bosome of the Church enjoying the outward priviledges of Gods people that shall never receive good by all that they partake of Therefore I beseech you be not deceived trust not to these lying words and vain hopes The Sacrament of the Lord and the Church and the Church I say trust not to these lying vanities A man may as Judas not onely have the Sacrament in his hand but Christ in his mouth and goe to Hell notwithstanding Alas at the day of judgement if thou hast nothing to say but this Lord I was a hearer of thy Word a receiver at thy Table a frequenter of thy house thou canst expect no other answer but Depart from me I know thee not He is not the Son of Abraham that hath Circumcision onely but that walketh in the steps of the faith of Abraham In the second place here is a word of Exhortation and that is this We ought hereby to be instructed and provoked to stir up our soules and not to content our selves with or settle our selves in these outward shaddows but to labour to go further and beyond all that these outward priviledges barely as outward priviledges can make us not onely to enjoy these but to strive to be bettered by them not onely to have the Word and the Sacraments but to improve them to get more then the outward shell to labour for the kernell for the comfort of them Therefoee I would advise a Christian man that liveth in the bosome of the Church where the Lord is pleased to continue helps and means to him as to esteem them great priviledges for so they are so not to content himself with the outward enjoyment of them but to call upon himself and to look inward to see what the heart saith Outward things will not doe the deed look we therefore for somewhat more that will stand us in stead when the Lord cometh with his fan in his hand throughly to purge his floor and to make a division between the wheat and the chaffe Take notice of it therefore and understand for your spirituall good When thou comest to the house of God and bringest thine hands to receive the Sacrament and thine eares to listen to the word thinke with thy self I have heard the Word I have received the Sacrament but O heart what sayest thou Have I embraced these promises Have I closed with those precepts that have been delivered Have I eaten Christ in the Sacrament Hath my faith pitched on him exhibited there under the Elements of Bread and Wine How often have I already lived under the call of God and yet have rejected it my soul is not yet humbled I onely come and hear and return without any benefit therefore now I will go further and dig deeper that my heart may be brought to the obedience of the truth Mark what our Saviour Christ faith Joh. 6 49 provoking the Jews to beleeve in him and so to receive mercy by him he speaks on this manner forcing them to goe further then outward things Your fathers saith he eat Manna in the Wilderness and are dead Who are those Fathers Those stubborn and rebellious Jewes that fell in the Wildernesse These entred not because of unbelief saith the Apostle to the Hebrews Now Christ saith Your Fathers eat Manna and are dead he meaneth are damned for he saith afterward Vers 51. If any man eat of this bread he shall live for ever thereby shewing a difference between the faithfull and unbeleevers though both die a naturall death I say making a difference between the rebellious Jews that did not beleeve and those that did beleeve Your Fathers eat Manna in the wilderness a Type and a Sacrament indeed to them as St. Paul expresseth it but that would not doe the deed though the Manna came from heaven yet it could not bring them up to heaven it could not free them from eternall death But here is the priviledge of beleeving and of right receiving He that doth not onely receive bread but Christ he that eateth this food this bread he shall never die any more he cannot perish Labour therefore for this evermore As when the woman of Samaria heard our Saviour speak of living water that would continue for ever She cryed out presently Oh Sir give me of this water that I thirst no more Joh. 4.15 So labour for this food above all Labour to settle your souls and to rest your hearts still upon these resolutions Oh what have I that a carnall man may not have What doe I that that a carnall man cannot doe I would have a Christian man to go beyond all those that live in the bosome of the Church I say therefore let this be the Question and examine thine heart What doe I more then the damned in hell have done I pray The truth is the foolish Virgins knocked too I preach so did Judas Doe I reform many things So did Herod Was I baptized So was Simon Magnus In a word am I resolved to confesse my sins and to make satisfaction for them Alas Judas did all this and yet this would not serve the turn he sorrowed and repented and when he had done he went and hanged himself It was not godly sorrow that caused repentance to salvation he repented onely for the gall of sin not for the soul of sin Labour we therefore and let us every one provoke another to go further then ever reprobates went in praying and hearing and professing labour for something that will stand us in stead in the day of tryall When the heavens shall bee rolled together as a scrole Isai 34.4 that we may appear before the Lord and receive a reward from him in his appointed time and season So much for the Negative Part. I proceed now to the Affirmative Who those are that may and doe indeed receive benefit as Abraham did The Text saith They that walk in the steps of that faith of
Abraham That man that not onely enjoyeth the Priviledges of the Church but yeeldeth the obedience of faith according to the Word of God revealed and walketh in obedience that man alone shall be blessed with faithfull Abraham Two points may be hence raised but I shall hardly handle them both therefore I will passe over the first onely with a touch and that lieth closely couched in the Text That Faith causeth fruitfulness in the hearts and lives of those in whom it is Mark what I say A faithfull man is a fruitfull man Faith inableth a man to be doing Ask the Question By what power was it whereby Abraham was inabled to yeeld obedience to the Lord The Text answereth you They that walke in the footsteps not of Abraham but in the footsteps of the faith of Abraham A man would have thought the Text should have run thus They that walk in the footsteps of Abraham that is true too but the Apostle had another end therefore he saith They that walk in the footsteps of the faith of Abraham implying that it was the grace of faith that God bestowed on Abraham that quickned and inabled him to every duty that God required of him and called him to the performance of So that I say the Question being Whence came it that Abraham was so fruitfull a Christian what inabled him to do and to suffer what he did Surely it was faith that was the cause that produced such Effects that helped him to perform such actions The Point then you see is evident Faith is it that causoth fruit Hence it is that of almost all the actions that a Christian haah to doe faith is still said to be the worker If a man pray as he should it is the prayer of faith Jam. 5.15 If a man obey as he should it is the obedience of faith Rom. 16.26 If a man war in the Church militant it is the fight of faith 1 Tim. 6.12 2 Tim. 4.7 If a man live as a Christian and holy man he liveth by fasth Gal. 2.20 Nay shall I say yet more if he die as he ought he dieth by faith Heb. 11.13 These all died in faith What is that by the power of faith that directed and ordered them in the course of their death furnished them with grounds and principles of aflurance of the love of God made them carry themselves patiently in death I can say no more but with the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether yee bee in the faith Why doth not the Apostle say Examine whether faith be in you but whether yee bee in the faith His meaning is that as a man is said to be in drinke or to be in love or to bee in passion that is under the command of drinke or love or passion so the whole man must be under the command of faith as you shall see more afterwards If he pray faith must indite his prayer If he obey faith must work If hee live it is faith that must quicken him and if he die it is faith that must order him in death And wheresoever faith is it will doe wonders in the soul of that man where it is it cannot be idle it will have footsteps it sets the whole man on work it moveth feet and hands and cies and all parts of the bodie Mark how the Apostle disputeth 2 Cor 4.13 We having the same spirit of faith according as it is written I beleeved and therefore have I spoken we also believe and therefore speak The faith of the Apostle which he had in his heart set his tongue a going If a man have faith within it will break forth at his mouth This shall suffice for the proof of the point I thought to have pressed it further but if I should I see the time would prevent me The Use therefore in a word is this If this be so then it falleth soul and is a heavie Bill of Indictment against many that live in the bosome of the Church Go thy wayes home and read but this Text and consider seriously but this one thing in it That whosoever is the son of Abraham hath faith and whosoever hath faith is a walker is a worker by the footsteps of faith you may see where faith hath been Will not this then I say fall marvellous heavie upon many souls that live in the bosome of the Church who are confident and put it out of all Question that they are true beleevers and make no doubt but that they have faith But look to it wheresoever faith is it is fruitfull If thou art fruitlesse say what thou wilt thou hast no faith at all Alas these idle Drones these idle Christians the Church is too too full of them Men are continually hearing and yet remain fruitless and unprofitable whereas if there were more faith in the world we should have more work done in the world faith would set feet and hands and eies and all on work Men go under the name of professors but alas they are but Pictures they stir not a whit Mark Where you found them in the beginning of the yeer there you shall find them in the end of the yeer as profane as worldly as loose in their conversations as formall in dutie as ever And is this faith Oh faith would work other matters and provoke a soul to other passages then these But you wil say May not a man have faith and not that fruit you speak of May not a man have a good heart to God-ward although he cannot find that abilitie in matter of fruitfulnesse My brethren be not deceived Such an opinion is a meer delusion of Satan whereever faith is it bringeth Christ into the soul Mark that Whosoever beleeveth Christ dwelleth in his heart by faith Eph. 3.17 And If Christ be in you saith the Apostle the body is dead because of sin but the spirit is life because of righteousness Rom. 8.10 If Christ be in you that is Whosoever beleeveth in the Lord Jesus Christ dwels in such a man by faith now if Christ be in the soul the bodie cannot be dead but a man is alive and quick and active to holy duties ready and willing and cheerfull in the performance of whatsoever God requireth Christ is not a dead Saviour nor the Spirit a dead Spirit The second Adam is made a quickning spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 And wherever the Spirit is it works Effects suteable to it The Spirit is a Spirit of puritie a spirit of zeal c. and where it is it maketh pure and zealous c. When a man will say he hath faith and in the mean time can be content to be idle and unfruitfull in the work of the Lord can bee content to be a dead Christian let him know that his case is marvellously fearfull For if faith were in him indeed it would appear yee cannot keep your good hearts to your selves where ever fire is it will burn and where ever faith is it cannot be
kept secret The heart will be inlarged the soul quickned and there will be a change in the whole life and conversation if ever faith take place in a man I will say no more of this but proceed to the Second point arising out of the Affirmative part You will say What fruit is it then Or how shall a man know what is the true fruit of faith indeed whereby he may discern his own estate I answer The Text will tell you He that walketh in the footsteps of that faith of Abraham By footsteps are meant the works the actions the holy endeavours of Abraham and where those footsteps are there is the faith of Abraham So that the point of Instruction hence is thus much which indeed is the main drift of the Apostle That Every faithfull man may yea doth imitate the actions of faithfull Abraham Mark what I say I say again This is to be the Son of Abraham not because we are begotten of him by naturall generation for so the Jews are the sons of Abraham but Abraham is our father because he is the pattern for the proceeding of our faith Thy father was an Amorite saith the Scripture Ezek. 16.3 that is Thou followest the steps of the Amorites in thy conversation So is Abraham called the father of the faithfull because he is the copie of their course whom they must follow in those services that God calleth for So the point is clear Every faithfull man may yea doth and must imitate the actions of faithfull Abraham It is Christs own plea Joh. 8.39 and he presseth it as an undeniable truth apon the hearts of the Scribes and Pharisees that bragged very highly of their priviledges and prerogatives and said Abraham is our father No saith Christ If yee were Abraham's children yee would doe the works of Abraham To be like Abraham in constitution to be one of his bloud is not that which makes a man a sonne of Abraham but to be like him in holinesse of affection to have a heart framed and a life disposed answerably to his The Apostle in like manner presseth this point Heb. 13.7 when he would provoke the Hebrewes to whom he wrote to follow the examples of the Saints Whose faith saith he follow considering the end of their conversation So the Apostle Peter presseth the example of Sarah upon all good women Whose daughters yee are saith he as long as yee doe well 1 Pet. 36. For the opening of the point and that yee may more clearly understand it A question here would be resolved What were the footsteps of the faith of Abraham which way went he This is a question I say worthy the scanning and therefore leaving the further confirmation of the point as being aleady evident enough I will come to it that so you may know what to pitch and settle your hearts upon I aniwer therefore Six footsteps of Abraham's faith There are six footsteps of the faith of Abraham which are the main things wherein every faithfull man must doe as Abraham did in the work of faith I mean in his ordinary course for if there be any thing extraordinary no man is bound to imitate him therein but in the work of faith I say which belongeth to all men every man must imitate Abraham in these six steps and then he is in the next door to happinesse the very next neighbour as I may say to heaven The first step which Abraham took in the wayes of grace and happinesse you shall observe Gen. 12.1 to be a yeelding to the call of God Mark what God said to Abraham Get thee out of thy country and from thy kindred and from thy fathers house unto a land that I will shew thee And Abraham departed saith the Text Verse 4. as the Lord had spoken unto him even when he was an Idolater he is content to lay aside all and let the command of God bear the sway neither friends nor kindred nor gods can keep him back but he presently stoopeth to the call of God So it is my brethren with every faithfull man This is his first step He is contented to be under the rule and power of Gods command Let the Lord call for him require any service of him his soule presently yeeldeth and is content to be framed and fashioned to Gods call and returneth an obedient answer thereto he is content to come out of his sinnes and out of himselfe and to receive the impressions of the Spirit This is that which God requireth not onely of Abraham but of all beleevers Whosoever will be my Disciple saith Christ must forsake father and mother and wife and children and houses and lands yea and he must deny himselfe and take up his Crosse and follow me This is the first step in Christianity to lay down our own honours to trample upon our own respects to submit our necks to the block as it were and whatsoever God commands to be content that his good pleasure should take place with us Nay yet further Abraham was not content onely to leave his country and kindred and fathers house but he left his goods also The Text saith Josh 24.2 Your father 's dwelt on the other side of the floud in old time even Terah the father of Abraham and the father of Nachor and they served other Gods Abraham was an Idolater before God called him but as soon as God called him he left his gods behind him and God onely should be his God to exercise rule and authority over him in every particular And this is not all yet My brethren I beseech you observe it Abraham did not this as one constrained and forced thereunto but so as he would not return any more and that is a passage very observable Truly saith the Apostle Heb. 11.15 if he had been mindfull of the country from whence he came out he might have had opportunity to have returned If he would have gone back again he had liberty enough but he would have no more kindred nor no more fathers house nor no other gods because he knew the command of God was otherwise therefore he would not return though he might intimating that he was not drawn from his country by a kind of force but he so voluntarily yeelded up himselfe to the command of God and that so prevailed with him that he would never return any more But the people of Israel though they were brought out of Aegypt yet they returned back thither in their hearts So the Text speakes They thought of the Fish which they did eat there freely the Cucumbers and the Melons and the Leeks and the Onions and the Garlick Numb 11.5 and their mindes ran after the flesh-pots of Aegypt Exod. 16. Many a time a carnall wretch commeth so farre as that when God knocks his fingers off his sinnes he lets them goe for a time but his heart is still bent after his former courses and he lingereth after them still so was it not with Abraham And
this is the first step of the faith of Abraham that he was content to yeeld to the call and to be under the command of God to let his good pleasure take place in his heart to leave all kindred country fathers house and never return any more And this is that first step that God lookes every faithfull man should take that he be willing that the command of God take place in his heart that God should make room there for himselfe that he should pluck away his dearest sinnes that are as neer to him as his right hand and as his right eye If the Adulterer were converted he would be contented that God should take away his lust that is as dear to him as his very soule nay he would fain and that with all his heart have God make way in his soul for his own Majesty by beating down all the holds of Satan and tumbling that Dagon to the ground which standeth before him This is the first step of faith The next step that Abraham and so every faithfull soule sets forward is this That when ever faith commeth powerfully into the heart the soule is not content barely to yeeld to the command of God but it breatheth after his mercy longeth for his grace prizeth Christ and Salvation above all things in the world is satisfied and contented with nothing but with the Lord Christ and although it partake of many things below and injoy abundance of outward comforts yet it is not quieted till it rest and pitch it selfe upon the Lord and find and feel that evidence and assurance of his love which he hath promised unto and will bestow on those who love him As for all things here below he hath but a slight and mean and base esteem of them This you shall see apparent in Abraham Gen. 15.1 2. Feare not Abraham saith God I am thy sheild and thy exceeding great reward What could a man desire more One would think that the Lord makes a promise here large enough to Abraham I will be thy Buckler and exceeding great reward Is not Abraham contented with this No mark how he pleadeth with God Lord God saith he what wilt thou give me seeing I goe childlesse His eye is upon the promise that God had made to him of a sonne of whom the Saviour of the world should come Oh Lord what wilt thou give me as if he had said What wilt thou doe for me alas nothing will doe my soule good unlesse I have a sonne and in him a Saviour What will become of me so long as I goe childlesse and so saviourlesse as I may so speak You see how Abraham's mouth was out of tast with all other things how he could relish nothing injoy nothing in comparison of the promise though he had otherwise what he would or could desire Thus must it be with every faithfull man That soule never had nor never shall have Christ that doth not prize him above all things in the world no certainly a faithfull soule breatheth after nothing so much as mercy in Christ lookes after and longeth for nothing so much as the assurance of the love of God Though all the comforts of this world were afforded a faithfull man yet still he would plead with the Lord Oh Lord what will become of me notwithstanding all this so long as my soule is comfortlesse what availeth it me to live here Oh thy Mercy Oh thy Salvation Oh the Lord Christ these are the things my soule breatheth after This my brethren is the nature of faith if it be rightly wrought in the soul as you shall fee and find by ordinary experience For take a man that is truly awakened and whose conscience is throughly touched and offer him crowns and scepters and honours and all the delights of the sons of men alas his soul will care nothing for them but as Esau said Gen. 25.32 Behold I am at the point to die and what profit shall this birthright doe to me So will the poor soul say What will it avail me to be high in the favour of men here and to be a fiend of Hell hereafter What are all these profits and pleasures to me so long as I am not in the favour of God What good can these outward contentments afford me when I am without Christ Oh Lord what wilt thou give me unlesse I have my Saviour and mercy in him and pardon in him and all in him and through him Still thus beateth the pulse of a faithfull soule and this is the nature of saving faith the faith of Gods elect As for these things here below these matters of the world they are little in the regard and esteem of a Christian man If he have them he seeth God in them If he want them he is never a whit the worse The Apostle speaking of beleevers and the faithfull people of God Heb. 11. saith That they let their hold goe of all these things below let the world take the world if they would let the dead bury their dead but as for them Having seen the promises afar off they were perswaded of them and imbraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth even in that country that God had promised them Vers 13. The third step of Abraham's faith was this He casteth himself and flingeth his soul as I may say upon the all-sufficient power and mercie of God for the attainment of what he desireth he rolleth and tumbleth himself as it were upon the all-sufficiencie of God This you shall finde Rom. 4.18 there saith the Apostle speaking of Abrahyam Who against hope beleeved in hope That is when there was no hope in the world yet he beleeved in God even above hope and so made it possible It was an object of his hope that it might be in regard of God howsoever there was no possibilitie in regard of man So the Text saith He considered not his own bodie now dead when he was about an hundred yeers old neither yet the deadness of Sarahs wombe but was strong in faith He cast himself wholly upon the precious promise and mercie of God This then is the third step of true justifying faith That when the beleever is informed touching the excellencie of the Lord Jesus and that fulness that is to be had in him though he cannot find the sweetnesse of his mercy though he cannot or dare not apprehend and apply it to himself though he find nothing in himself yet he is still resolved to rest upon the Lord and to stay himself on the God of his salvation and to wait for his mercy till he find him gracious to his poor soul Excellent and famous is that example of the woman of Canaan Matth. 15.22 27. When Christ as it were beat her off and took up arms against her was not pleased to reveal himself graciously to her for the present I am not sent saith he but to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel And It is not meet to take the childrens bread and to cast it to dogs Mark how she replyed Truth Lord I confesse all that yet notwithstanding the dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters table O the excellency and strength and work of her faith Shee comes to Christ for mercy he repelleth her reproacheth her tells her shee is a dog she confesseth her basenes yet is not discouraged for all that but still resteth upon the goodness and mercie of Christ and is mightily resolved to have mercie whatsoever befalleth her Truth Lord I confesse I am as bad as thou canst term me yet I confesse too that there is no comfort but from thee and though I am a dog yet I would have crumbes Still she laboureth to catch after mercy and to lean and bear her selfe upon the favour of Christ for the bestowing thereof upon her So it must be with every faithfull Christian in this particular he must roll himself upon the power and faithfulness and truth of God and wait for his mercy I will joyn them both together for brevities sake though this latter bee a fourth step and degree of faith I say he must not onely depend upon God but he must wait upon the holy one of Israel The Text saith of Abraham Heb. 6.15 That after he had patiently endured he obtained the promise he received the performance after he had a little waited for it So the Prophet David Psal 101.2 I will walke in the uprightnesse of my heart till the Lord come to me As if he should say If the Lord will absent himself from me and not reveal himself to me yet wait I will and desire I will and still I will be hoping for the mercie of the Lord till he come to me So it was said of Simeon that good old man That he waited for the consolation of Israel Luke 2.25 Mine eies saith David Psal 119.123 grow dim for the looking for thy salvation He that belceveth makes not haste Isai 28.16 he makes hast to obey but makes not hast to bring mercie from God The fifth step of Abraham's faith appeared in this Hee counted nothing too dear for the Lord he was content to break through all impediments to passe through all difficulties whatsoever God would have he had of him This is the next step that Abraham went and this you shall finde Gen. 22. when God put him upon the tryall The Text saith there That God did tempt Abraham did try what he would doe for him and he bade him Go take thy son thy onely son Isaac whom thou lovest and stay him And straight Abraham went and laid his son upon an Altar and took a knife to cut the throat of his son So that Abraham did not spare his Isaac he did not spare for any cost he did not dodge with God in this case if God would have any thing hee should have it whatsoever it were though it were his own life for no question Isaac was dearer to him then his own life And this was not his case alone but the faithfull people of God have ever walked the same course The Apostle Paul was of the same spirit Acts 20.22 24. I know not saith he the things that shall befall me save that the Holy Ghost witnesseth in every Citie saying That bonds and afflictions abide me but none of these things move me neither count I my life dear unto my self so that I might finish my course with joy and the ministerie which I have received of the Lord Jesus to testifie the Gospel of the grace of God Oh blessed spirit here is the work of faith Alas when we come to part with any thing for the cause of God how hardly comes it from us But I saith he passe not no nor is my life dear unto me Here I say is the work of faith indeed when a man is content to doe any thing for God and to say If imprisonment losse of estate libertie life come I passe not it moveth me nothing so I may finish my course with comfort Hence it was that the Saints of God in those Primitive times Heb. 10.34 took joyfully the spoyling of their goods Me thinks I see the Saints there reaching after Christ with the arms of faith and how when any thing lay in their way they were content to lose all to part with all to have Christ Therefore saith Saint Paul Acts 21.13 I am rerdy not to be bound onely but also to die at Jerusalem for the Name of the Lord Jesus Mark rather then he would leave his Saviour he would leave his life and though men would have hindred him yet was resolved to have Christ howsoever though he lost his life for him Oh let me have my Saviour and take my life The last step of all is this When the soul is thus resolved not to dodge with God but to part with any thing for him then in the last place there followeth a readinesse of heart to addresse a mans self to the performance of whatsoever dutie God requireth at his hands I say this is the last step when without consulting with flesh and blood without hammering upon it as it were without aukwardnesse of heart there followeth a prestness to obey God the soul is at hand When Abraham was called Behold saith he here I am Gen. 22.1 And so Samuel Speak Lord for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3.9 and so Ananias Behold I am here Lord Acts 9.10 The faithfull soul is not to seek as an evill servant that is gone a roving after his companions that is out of the way when his master should use him but is like a trusty servant that waiteth upon his master and is ever at hand to doe his pleasure So you shall see it was with Abraham Heb. 11. 8. When the Lord commanded him to goe out of his country He obeyed and went out not knowing whither he went he went chearfully and readily though he knew not whither as who should say if the Lord call I will not question if he command I will performe what ever it be So it must be with every faithfull soule we must blind the eye of carnall reason resolve to obey though heaven and earth seem to meet together in a contradiction care not what man or what devill saith in this case but what God will have done doe it This is the courage and obedience of faith See how Saint Paul in the place before named Acts 21.12 13. flung his ancient friends from him when they came to crosse him in the work of his ministry They all came about him and because they thought they should see his face no more they besought him not to goe up to Jerusalem Then Paul answered What mean yee to weep and to break my heart as who should say it is a greif and vexation to my soule that yee would hinder me that I cannot goe with readinesse to performe the service that God requireth at
title to the Lord Jesus and the promises of God revealed in the Church Let us try a few And first this falleth marvellous heavy upon and casteth out all ignorant persons that were never inlightned never quickned never had their mindes informed touching Christ and the promises Alas they know not what faith meaneth and what Christ meaneth and how can these walk in the footsteps of the faith of Abraham when they never saw the way of Abraham But let them goe my heart pittieth them I rather chuse to grapple with those that think themselves in a better estate and condition And the first of this rank are profane persons those that live and lie in sinne in Sabbath-breaking swearing drunkennesse adultery and the like The case of such is clear and evident These are so farre from treading in the steps of Abraham that they hate purity and holinesse and goodnesse And as for these if any such be here let them not be deceived but let me tell them out of Gods Word that as yet they have not faith as yet they are not the sonnes of Abraham What they may be I know not I leave them to the Lord and wish them a sight and apprehension of their own condition and that they may be brought out of that gall of bitternesse wherein they are but as yet I dare say they are not the sonnes of Abraham Whose sonnes are they then My brethren I am loth to speak it and I will not men will not beare these words from us but think that we goe beyond our commission for my own part my soule trembleth to think of them their case is so fearfull The Lord therefore shall speak and I will say nothing Look into John 8. The Scribes and Pharisees came to Christ and began to quarrell with him and to provoke him to say many things that they might catch him in his speech opposing our Saviour in the course of his ministry and labouring to suppresse his Doctrine mark how Christ reasoneth there I doe saith he the works of my Father Yee doe the deeds of your father But say they Abraham is our father and again We be not born of fornication we have one Father even God but mark our Saviours answer verse 44. Yee are of your father the Devil and the lusts of your father yee will doe Thus Christ speakes to the Scribes and Pharisees great men of place and of great abilities You of your father Abraham No you are of your father the Devill My brethren I will not say it I beseech you be not offended it is the Lord that speaks and I would fain know that man that date contradict his Word the case is clear and the Lord will make it good upon his soule in another world His lusts saith Christ you doe What are those He is an accuser of the brethren so are these He crieth out against and opposeth the purity of Religion so doe these men exclaime against the nicenesse and precisenesse of Christians and blame those that are holy and sincere The Devill continued not in the truth no more doe these they are not governed by the truth they stoop not to it they yeeld not obedience to it The Divell is a lyer and speaketh not the truth so these men are contented to lie shamefully of their brethren to broach scandalous things of those that they know to be holy and sincere In a word the Devill is malicious and envious so are all these profane ones desperate unreasonable creatures that cast off Gods commands that neglect the Ordinances and wallow in the mire of their sins that hate the sinceritie and power of Relgion that envie and malign the true professors of godliness If the Devill himself were incarnate he could doe no more and surely if there were ever a child like the father these are like him I will say nothing the Lord himself speak to your consciences Yea but you will say It is true Christ knew who were the children of the Devill but can you discern them I say nothing but I can tell you how you may discern them A child of the Devill doth not go invisible but may be known and the Apostle tels you 1 Joh. 3.10 In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the Devill Mark that Whosoever doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loveth not his brother I observe three things in this Text 1. That there are children of God and children of the devill 2. That a man may know them The Text saith so plainly they are not my own words Consult I beseech you with the place In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the Devill 3. How a man shall know a child of the Devill He that worketh not righteousness and he that hateth his brother is of the devill Hee that worketh not righteousnesse that is he that is not willing and contented constantly to take up a Christian course to walk according to the rule of Gods word to abstain from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit to live in all holiness of life and conversation to studie and indeavour to keep a good conscience in all things both towards God and towards men and he that loveth not his brother That is he that hateth holiness where he sees it that hates a good man and one that is sincere whose colour riseth at such a one where ever he meets him who can brook a drunkard or a swearer or an adulterer but cannot endure a righteous man a holy man one that makes conscience of his waies If there be any such in this Congregation I desire to speak a word to them in the name of the Lord Let them consider that what I speak is not my own and I profesle that what I say is not out of passion or a desire to slander any but the desire of my soul is that they may come to the knowledge of the truth that they may be saved You therefore that are given to these sins and are walking in this way of death consider and bethinke your selves and say to your selves Oh Lord how neerly doth this I have heard this day concern me Alas I thought not of this before I am one that never was a worker of righteousness in all my life I am one that have hated the servants of God that have scorned and loathed the puritie of Religion and now the Lord hath said it Christ hath spoke it his word hath spoke it that I am the child of the Devill Alas it is too too manifest to my self that such a one I am and God knoweth it much more What shall I doe Now I pray thee go thy waies home break off thy sins by repentance and labour to make thy peace with God forthwith and of the son of the Devill to be the Son of God be mightie with God in prayer to make you his child And this is all I have to speak to these 2. Let me
are God respecteth no mans person if you would arrive at the same haven you must saile thorough the same sea you must walk the same way of grace if you would come to the same kingdome of glory It is a conceit that harboureth in the hearts of many men nay of most men in generall specially your great wise men and your great rich men that have better places and estates in the world then ordinary What think they may not a man be saved without all this adoe what needs all this is there not another way besides this Surely my brethren you must teach our Saviour Christ and the Apostle Paul another way I am sure they never knew other and he that dreameth of another way must be content to goe beside There is no such matter as the Devill would perswade you it is but his delusion to keep you under infidelity and to shut you up to destruction under false and vain conceits The truth is here is the way and the onely way and you must walk here if ever you come to life and happinesse therefore be not deceived suffer not your eyes to be blinded but know what Abraham did you must doe the same if not in action yet in affection If God say forsake all thou must doe it at least in affection thou must still wait upon his power and providence yeeld obedience to him in all things be content to submit thy selfe to his will This is the way you must walk in if you ever come to heaven The last Use shall be a Use of Comfort to all the Saints and people of God whose consciences can witnesse that they have laboured to walk in the uprightnesse of their heart as Abraham did I have two or three words to speak to these Be perswaded out of the Word of God that your course is good and goe on with comfort and the God of Heaven be with you and be sure of it that you that walk with Abraham shall be at rest with Abraham and it shall never repent you of all the paines that you have taken Happily it may seem painfull and tedious to you yet what Abigail said to David let me say to you Oh saith she let not my Lord doe this when the Lord shall have done to my Lord according to all the good that he hath spoken concerning thee and shall have appointed thee Ruler over Israel this shall be no greife unto thee nor offence of heart that thou hast shed blood causelesse or that my Lord hath avenged himselfe 1 Sam. 25.30 31. My brethren let me say so to you You will finde trouble and inconveniencies and hard measure at the hands of the wicked in this world many Nabals and Chins will set themselves against you but goe on and beat it patiently know it is a troublesome way but a true way it is grievous but yet good and the end will be happy it will never repent you when the Lord hath performed all the good that he hath spoken concerning you Oh! to see a man drawing his breath low and short after he hath spent many houres and dayes in prayer to the Lord grapling with his corruptions and striving to pull down his base lusts after he hath waited upon the Lord in a constant course of obedience take but such a man and ask him now his conscience is opened whether the wayes of holinesse and sincerity be not irksome to him whether he be not grieved with himselfe for undergoing so much needlesse trouble as the world thinks it and his soul will then clear this matter it is true he hath had a tedious course of it but now his death will be blessed he hath striven for a Crown and now behold a Crown now he is beyond the waves all the contempts and imprisonments and outrages of wicked men are now too short to reach him he is so farre from repenting that he rejoyceth and triumpheth in reflecting back upon all the pains and care and labour of love whereby he hath loved the Lord Jesus in submitting his heart unto him Take me another man that hath lived here in pompe and jollity hath had many livings great preferments much honour abundance of pleasure yet hath been ever carelesse of God and of his Word profane in his course loose in his conversation and ask him upon his death-bed how it standeth with him Oh! woe the time that ever he spent it as he hath done now the soule begins to hate the man and the very sight of him that hath been the instrument with it in the committing of sinne now nothing but gall and wormwood remaineth now the sweetnesse of the Adulterers lust is gone and nothing but the sting of conscience remaineth now the covetous man must part with his goods and the gall of Aspes must stick behinde now the soul sinks within and the heart is overwhelmed with sorrow Take but these two men I say and judge by their ends whether ever it will repent you that you have done well that you have walked in the steps of the faith of Abraham My brethren howsoever you have had many miseries yet the Lord hath many mercies for you God dealeth with his servants as a father doth with his son after he hath sent him on a great journey to doe some busines the weather falleth foul and the way proveth dangerous and many a storm and great difficulties are to be gone through oh how the heart of that father pittieth his son how doth he resolve to requite him if he ever live to come home again what preparation doth he make to entertain and welcome him and how doth he study to doe good unto him My brethren so it is here I beseech you think of it you that are the Saints and people of God You must finde in your way many troubles and greifes and we ought to find them but be not discouraged the more misery the greater mercy God the father seeth his servants and if they suffer and indure for a good conscience as his eye seeth them so his soul pittieth them his heart bleeds within him for them that is he hath a tender compassion of them and he saith within himselfe Well I will requite them if ever they come into my Kingdome all their patience and care and conscience in walking in my wayes I will requite and they shall receive a double reward from me even a Crown of eternall glory Think of those things that are not seen they are eternall the things that are seen are temporall and they will deceive us let our hearts be carried after the other and rest in them for ever FINIS CULPABLE IGNORANCE OR THE Danger of Ignorance UNDER MEANES By that Reverend Divine THOMAS HOOKER Late Preacher in New England 2 THES 1.7 8. The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty Angels In flaming fire taking vengeance of them that know not God and which obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ
temper he should find this that I say to bee too too true What is the reason else you will not suffer a good Minister to follow you home to search your soules but take pet at such a man presently what is the cause of this Surely your wayes are naught your mindes are blinded your hearts are hardned under the means Men are loth to let others see what they are because they are not as they should be they are like dull-headed Schollars to whom it is death to be posed But I say observe therefore the mervailous deadnesse and weaknesse the strange besotted dulnesse of our natures to good that when we have all the incouragements and meanes that may be yet we get no benefit we reap no profit by them If a man should have a tree in his garden that all the dunging and pruning and dressing that he can use will doe no good of nor make it bring forth any fruit certainly he would think that tree to be of a strange temper so here let us see and wonder when we see that the Lord hath bestowed so much cost upon us made his judgements come home even to our very doores powred his mercies on us in abundance yet we are not provoked nor quickned nor inlarged in the wayes of life that though wind and tide be both with us yet we make no progress in goodness but he that was ignorant is ignorant still and he that was filthy is filthy still That we may therefore shame our selves humble our soules and bemoan our estates before the Lord consider I pray you but these two things The variety of helps that God vouchsafeth us and the success those helps find in our hearts When all the fire in the town cannot warm a man how cold is he When all the perswasions under heaven cannot work upon a man oh how flinty is he How graciously my brethren hath the Lord dealt with you that live in this place How many helps hath he put into your hands you have prayers and sermons and exhortations and instructions and admonitions and comforts forts and all things that are available to bring a man to life and happiness Now he that groweth not under this means he that thriveth not with this food he that is not heated by this fire he that is not quickned by this dew of heaven let him take notice of the strange distemper of his own heart and the deadnesse of his spirit I know not what to say to you Certainly had the Devill himselfe but any hope of receiving mercy the sermons that are made in this City were able even to melt his heart as it were and to bring him to consider and repent of the sinnes he hath committed against Almighty God but because he hath no hope of mercy he remaineth in a forlorne and desperate condition Yet the Apostle saith Jam. 2.19 The Devils also beleeve and tremble that is they know all things contained in Gods Word are true they beleeve them and assent to them and are perswaded that God will one day make all his threatnings good upon them and upon the hearts of all the damned for ever and that they together shall be wholly deprived of all those mercies that God hath propounded in his Word and they tremble at it Look now into your own hearts and see what kind of temper they are of when notwithstanding the many judgements that have been threatned the many woes that have been denounced yet most either turn their back upon the Church or turn a deaf eare to what they hear and cast the Commandements of God behind them and rather fleer in the face of the Minister and contemn what he saith then be any wayes humbled for their sinnes or tremble at the Word of God and the threatnings denounced out of it My brethren think of it for the Lords sake reason a little with your selves and consider and say Lord what a wicked heart and what a wretched disposition have I the Sea is troubled the Mountains quake and the earth sinketh when the Lord speaks and uttereth his voice nay the Divels beleeve and tremble but oh what terrors and woes have I heard out of the Word against my pride my covetousness my swearing my drunkenness my profaning of the Sabbath yet none of them stirre me one jot I have had the fire full in my face yet remain as ycie and cold and frozen as ever I have had many a heavenly dew upon me many a silver drop yet continue a dry and barren Wilderness Oh what a heart have I Surely my brethren such a case as this is very desperate and deplorable think of it betime in vain it will be for you to put it off You dream and have conceits of knowledge and imagine that you have faith and repentance whereas alas you have little or none of these graces I pray therefore consider it now and now hear and tremble least you tremble afterwards when you are sunk down in the pit for ever When you are in hell you shall feel another manner of trembling then now is expected from you for it shall be farre greater and altogether without hope of remedy Where now are all those professed enemies and rebels against God where is Nimrod where is Pharaoh where is Sennacherib are they not in hell and there left to perish for ever Reason the case therefore seriously with your selves to the end that now you may be humbled and brought to tremble at the Word of God least hereafter you tremble when all hope is past To move you the more consider how graciously the Lord hath been pleased to work upon others They have heard the Word and have lived under the light of the Gospel and they have received benefit by it they have attained to good measures of saving knowledge Are there not some that live neer thee of whom thou mayest say such a man I know and I thought my selfe once to have had as much understanding in religion as he I made account I had as much ability to doe God service as ever he had But now the case is altered he is able to discourse savourly and feelingly of the things of God to pray sensibly and spiritually to reason of the matters of salvation profitably farre beyond that which I can doe and yet I have had as many helpes I have heard as much and understood as much as he O Lord what a case is my soule in what a sinfull creature am I Here is a drunkard converted there is a profane swearer and a Sabbath-breaker wrought upon my next neighbour that happily was as bad as I hath his soule humbled many a gain-sayer of the Gospel the Lord hath made him come crying to him for the forgivenesse of his sinnes begging pardon for such and such rebellions especially for his refusing of the offers of mercy made in Jesus Christ and all this while I stand it out What a strange heart have I That drunkard that profane
spirits now in prison What spirits were these which once were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the dayes of Noah Those spirits and damned souls those damned Ghosts now in hell the spirits of wicked men now in hell what were they they were those that were disobedient in the dayes of Noah Noah a preacher of righteousnesse whose life was a continuall preaching who daily called upon them and was earnest with them to repent and there was much long-suffering and patience afforded them God waited long for their amendment yet those souls were then rebellious under such great meanes and they are now cooped up in Hell A man would thinke it strange when he shall read the storie of Cain that he notwithstanding God himself came from heaven to teach him should yet remain obstinate and stout-hearted and yet you know the storie Gen. 4. you see it was so Cain began to be dismaid and his countenance fell because God regarded not his sacrifice Well God came from heaven and takes Cain to taske Cain what meaneth all this stir Why art thou wroth and why is thy countenance fallen If thou doest well shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest ill sin lieth at the door and unto thee shall be his desire and thou shalt rule over him A man I say would thinke that one should be instructed when God himself teacheth yet notwithstanding after all this Instruction of God himself whith in reason would be thought as effectuall as could be Cain forsakes God and flyeth off from the commandement of God stoopeth not nor yeeldeth obedience thereunto This is that which the Prophet I saiah hath Chap. 26. 10. Let favour be shewed to the wicked yet he will not learn righteousnesse in the land of uprightnesse will he deal unjustly and will not behold the majesty of the Lord. Though there be many helps afforded to him though he be planted in the Church of God where all things call and cry to him for amendment of life though the holinesse and mercy and goodnesse of God compasse him about though he have holy and religious neighbours about him though he have a good Minister in the Parish where he is yet he will not learn righteousnesse but will deal unjustly notwithstanding all the washing he will remain black still notwithstanding all the means that God vouchsafeth for his good yet he will be naught still One example you shall see of this in a passage of a Parable Mark 12. which makes good the Point in hand A certain man saith the Text planted a vineyard and set a hedge about it and digged a place for the wine fat and built a Tower here was much pains and a great deal of cost bestowed Well he let out this vineyard to husbandmen and went into a far countrey and at the season he sent to the husbandmen that he might receive of the fruit of the Vineyard Did he receive any fruit No they beat one and stoned another and killed another and all the messengers they sent away emptie At last he sent his son his welbeloved but they took him and killed him and cast him out of the Vineyard In a word The Vineyard is the Church of God and the Husbandmen were the Scribes and Pharisees they were those to whom God as it were had let out his Church He sendeth his messengers his servants the Prophets rising early and sending them his Apostles and Disciples to call for fruit for the fruits of holiness of faith and obedience but they abused his servants they made him no return of fruit but when he looked for grapes behold they brought forth wild grapes At last the Lord sent his Son the Lord Jesus Christ he came amongst them he that spake as never man did speak so that even all the world wondred at the gracious words which did proceed out of his mouth certainly saith God they will reverence my Son they will hear him they will be governed by his directions they will stoop at his command No they were then most outragious and malicious against him they all banded themselves together Come say they let us slay him they joyned heart and hand and all for his ruine I will not dwell longer upon the proof of it See it in nature The Physitian observeth it of the stomack that is naught that the best meat that a man giveth it the more cordials the better diet the worse are the humors that are bred by it Even so it is with a naughtie heart and it is an argument of a most wretched disposition when the best Physick the best Remedies the best diet as I may say that God can afford a man for his spirituall cure shall make the heart the worse And truly when the heart is naught it groweth stark naught under the best means No men are so bad as they that live where are the best helps for amendment The thing you see is evident in the proof of it we will a little further discover the nature of such men as live under the means and yet harden their necks and how that corruption that is in the heart doth discover it self most where the best means are And you shall see it made good in these two particulars That wicked men corrupt hearts are the worst under the best meanes though they have admonition after admonition though they are often reproved First of all The hearts of those men grow usually most rebellious against the Lord and against that truth that cometh with greatest power upon them either discoveriing sin to them or working effectually upon the soul and conscience The disposition of men usually that are naught is so that they manifest a marvailous fiercenesse of soul whereby they carry themselves violently against the blessed truth and Word of God and the more because it is the more powerfull we have a rule in reason that contraries when they meet the more violent one is the more the other will work against it as we may see it in fire and water So it is here the greater violence and Spirit and power the Word hath in any place the more violent the heart will shew it self in gainsaying the Ministry thereof The more home the Word cometh to the conscience and the more powerfully it is applied either in the convincing of sin or perswasion to holiness of life the greater risings and stirrings of heart there is against it You shall observe this in a passage of the story of the men of Sodom Gen. 19.9 When the cursed Sodomites came about the house and would have taken the Angels that came to Lot Lot he came out to them and spake very lovingly to them but because that which he said tended to crosse them in their wicked and unnaturall courses mark how they answered him Stand back say they This one fellow came in to sojourn and he will needs be a Judge now will we deal worse with thee than with them and they pressed sore
upon the man even Lot and came neer to break the door And why was all this because his arguments were good and seasonable by which he advised them against their wicked purpose because he opposed them in that wicked course of theirs therefore they could not now hold themselves but burst out into a strange distemper of spirit We will now say they deal worse with thee than with them And so in Acts 7. It is a very observable place vers 56. When Stephen had made a long relation to the Jews of the rebellion and stubbornness of their Fathers they heard him all along without manifesting any virulencie of spirit but at last when he came out with that Yee stiffenecked and uncircumcised in heart and ears you doe alwaies resist the Holy Ghost as your Fathers did so doe you then when they heard these things when Stephen made a powerfull application of what he had said to them in particular and told them that they had been the betrayers and murtherers of that just One of whose coming the Prophets before had shewed they were cut to the heart and gnashed upon him with their teeth and they cryed out with a loud voice and stopped their ears and ran upon him with one accord These were the workings of their corrupt hearts the more forcible Stephen was in the power of the word the more violent they were in gainsaying that Word I need say no more onely that is observable in Rom. 7. The Text saith there That sin becommeth out of measure sinfull because of the Commandment How is that It is as if he had said Sin is the greater and the more notorious doth it manifest it self by how much the more the Commandment of God is the more openly published sin becommeth out of measure sinfull because that God in the Commandment gainsayeth it and the more the Commandement is pressed the more sin opposeth it and gainsaies it and becometh the more violent and so grows out of measure sinfull Briefly look as it is with a stream and current or Rivolet set but a little dam there and it will run over it easily of it selfe but if the dam be strong and high the River grows deep and cometh to be great and large Why so because it is stopped So it is here the Commandment of God is the dam as I may say every naturall man hath a stream of corruption that is alwaies issuing forth in a continued current if it be so now that the Word of God stoppeth him at every turn in every ungodly practise admitteth of no vent giveth no way to any sinfull course gainsays him in every carnal and sensuall delight barrs him of the sinfull enjoyment of pleasures and worldly lusts then the heart of a sinner beginneth to rise up against God and against his word and Commandment and that onely because the Word of God crosseth him and gainsayes him And therefore observe it if there be but a sleepie-headed Magistrate or a carelesse Minister in a Congregation that will lot a great deal of the water go give leave for the stream and current of corruption to passe let men have a vent for their lusts all will be at great peace and the stream will run as calme as can be that Magistrate shall never have an ill word that Minister that any way permits a vent to corruption he and his Parish shall agree as quietly as may be but if a man be stout and couragious either Magistrate or Minister hee shall finde violent opposition and marvailous strivings and workings of heart against him and that word which he delivers and the means of grace which God vouchsafeth to a people Again as this corruption discovers it self in opposing the good word of God so in the second place observe another passage wherein the wickednesse and rebellion of mens hearts appeareth notwithstanding God affordeth them the most excellent means of salvation They cleave the closer and cling the more eagerly to their corruptions and sins because they seem to be crossed in the eager and violent pursuit of them As you know it is the nature of stubborn spirits the more they are forbidden a thing the more resolved they are to doe it I have my self observed it in some stubborn servants that have answered their masters Why if you had not said any thing I would never have done it but because you keep such adoe I will doe it the more You shall see a proof of it Jer. 18.12 God there had sent his Prophet early and late to that people to shew them the good and ancient waies how they should walk with God and so prevent those Judgements that were threatned and hung over their heads But mark the Spirit of this people the more earnest and violent the Prophet was out of tender compassion to their poor souls to win them to God the more desperately did they resolve upon a course of sin we will walk say they after our own devices and we will every one doe the imagination of his evill heart As if they should have said say what you will we are resolved what to doe we will have our sin we will not forsake our corruptions nay wee will rather cleave the closer to them because you labour to pluck us from them This is the nature of every man in the world I appeal to your own consciences is it not so Is it not in every son of Adam more or lesse in wicked men wholly in the Saints partly observe it in your own experience when that happily the truths of God come and lay siege close to your consciences that you cannot finde a way and vent for your base and sinfull practises but the Word of God crosseth you how doe your hearts swell and repine at the Word How weary are you of your Minister How doe your spirits vex at him And so sometime at the Magistrate if he be more zealous to reform abuses amongst men then ordinary There is I say a secret indignation of soul that every man may finde in himself against the word of God and the reproofs thereof Let us come now to see the reason why men should be so sencelesse and unreasonable to grow the worse because God is the better to them What ground is there for this Great ground my brethren The Reasons are double and both most evident and plain The first is taken from that inward and intimate love the soul of a wicked man hath to his sin This is an everlasting rule there is never a naturall man in the world but he loveth his sin as he loveth his soule Nay he makes his sin his God And my brethren the case is evident we need no proof of it take a tryall of it in your own experience Let the command of God be revealed let the word of God be never so clearly made manifest to the hearts of men let it shine never so bright even in their very faces and let there be a beloved
to the lure of a poor Minister to be at his beck and to stand at his command Alas my brethren doe you think we preach our selves Indeed in carnall reason if a Minister should come in his own name and lay upon you his own commands it were fitter for him to say nothing then to goe about such a work in regard of the great distance there is between the men of the world and him in outward respects But we come in the name of the Lord of heaven and it is his word that we preach and the Word of God is powerfull and will make the sturdiest heart to bow or break under it it is mighty in operation like a two-edged sword dividing asunder between the joints and the marrow searching even into the very thoughts of the heart Now because the heart of a naturall man is not able nor indeed willing to stoop to the authority and power of the word loth to be at the beck of Gods command such naturall pride and arrogancy of spirit there is in carnall men that in stead of submitting and yeelding thereunto they take up arms the more against it by how much the more powerfull the word it It is a pretty passage that we read of the Philistines when the Israelites brought the Ark into the field now the Ark was a Type of Jesus Christ mark the Philistines resolution when they heard of it Woe unto us for here hath not been such a thing heretofore Wo unto us who shall delive us out of the hands of these mighty Gods Be strong therefore and quit your selves like men O ye Philistines that you be not servants unto the Hebrews c. 1 Sam. 4. 8 9. So it is here when the word of God commeth with a certain kind of commanding power as it doth when it is delivered in the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit if a man indeed preach under the hatches as I may say as he may easily doe and trouble no man he shall meet with no resistance but if a man bring the Ark into the field that is set up the power of Gods Ordinance labour to advance the Throne and Scepter of the Lord Christ in the hearts of men then mark to the end that men may not be brought into subjection to the Ordinances of God that they may not stoop and be brought under the yoke of Gods Commandment they joyn hand in hand and side one with another and fight for their liberties as it were counting it a matter of basnesse and pusillanimitie to be subject to the Word of God You have an example of this spirit that is in wicked men in Jer. 2.21 Wee are lords say they there wee will ceme no more at thee And it is observable in that place I named before Gen. 19.9 This fellow came to sojourn with us and shall he be a judge there lay the pith of the Argument and that which moved their wicked spirits against Lot if Lot had ruled them by his counsell then he should have been master over them therefore say they Shall he bee a judge I could tell you wofull experience that we finde of this Wicked men when they are gainsaid and when the word of God is with that Evidence and power of the Spirit discovered to them that it will either stoop them or work upon their galled hearts and consciences they are not able to bear it they cannot endure to be under the government of it therefore they will rebell against it and resolve what shall the Minister rule us Doth he thinke to bring us under his girdle to make us doe what he will and follow what course he will have us take Shall he be lord over us It is the same also with Magistrates and with private families Any means that God useth any admonition whatsoever findeth such entertainment as this with wicked and carnall hearts Let this suffice for a second Argument and reason why wicked men are so marvailous opposite against the word of God and the means of grace even then when it is most powerfull in gainsaying them and their corruptions because of the pride of heart that is in all naturall men whereby they are not able to stoop and submit to the yoke and rule thereof but though they are often admonished yet they harden their necks Wee will now come to the Use And to let all other Uses that might be made of this truth thus cleared and confirmed alone I will onely intimate two unto you What now can we gain from hence thinke you The case you see is evident and every man must subscribe to this as an everlasting truth That wicked men are the worse under the best means You have seen the manner of it and you have seen the grounds of it What gain can we get from this truth Briefly thus much First it is a Use of Examination And next a Use of Exhortation A man may hence clearly see his own soul as in a glasse and discern very plainly what kind of person he is what kinde of course he leadeth in what state and condition he standeth whether he be a gracious man or a gracelesse man whether a wicked man or one that God hath a part in yea or no. It concerneth us all my brethren very deeply to thinke of it Consider well therefore of what hath been said I would not have you conceive that all this that we have spoken is meerly to spend out the hour No my brethren you must labour to bring your souls to be under the power of the truths delivered And know this that whatsoever the Lord saith unto you out of his word he will require it of you when you come to give up your accounts at that day Every Sermon a man heareth he is thereby nearer either to heaven or hell either he is made better or worse by it All mens estates in this world are either holy or unholy either they are in a state of grace and salvation or in a state of sin and condemnation Hence therefore you may take a scantling of your conditions and plainly and clearly see how it is with you Whether you be of the number of those that have infallible Evidences of the work of Gods Spirit in the Ministerie of the word tending to holiness and sanctification or whether you be yet in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquitie Whether you be as you came into the world the children of wrath still or whether you be begotten again by the immortall seed of the Word to a lively hope and to an inheritance with the Saints in light Observe what the frame and temper of thy soul is and how it standeth affected to the word of God when it is revealed to thy conscience If the word prevail not over thee and over-power thee if thy heart submit not to the Scepter of the Lord Christ and yeeld to his commands certainly thou art not right in the sight of God Wee
not your hearts with your conditions but confesse it confesse thou hast a graceless and naughty heart this is the next way to be a Christian It is a speciall ornament of a Christian man to be contented to be checked by the Word of God labour therefore to yeeld to the truth when it is revealed And this is the first Use a word of Examination The second is a word of Exhortation and so I will conclude We are all to be exhorted in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ to take notice of this evill that is in our hearts I say all of us for howsoever wicked men doe professedly oppose the truth of God and his Word in the faithfull ministry thereof yet the Saints of God themselves so farre as they are flesh have resistances in them but with this difference a godly man when he perceiveth his heart stubborn and rebellious against God in his Word he yet notwithstanding joyneth and sideth with the Word and laboureth to oppose that corruption of the flesh so it was with Saint Paul in the place before named A child of God that hath a holy disposition wrought in him by the Spirit of God when he seeth his heart unwilling to yeeld to Christ and his Word he cryeth shame upon himselfe that after so much hearing so many mercies received so many gracious promises revealed to him the good Word of God so often laid home to his conscience that his heart should yet remain in any measure rebellious against God and therefore he resteth not in this condition but takes up armes against this rebellion of heart as well as against any corruption else whatsoever This I say is the disposition of a gracious heart But with a wicked man it is clean contrary So then I say though it concerneth all naturall men in a speciall manner to suffer this word of exhortation but seeing every man even the Saints of God themselves so farre as there is corruption in them have in them this rebellion of nature it is therefore an exhortation to all to be perswaded if we tender our own good and comforts not to content our selves to be bare hearers to injoy the means of grace and to live under the powerfull preaching of the Gospel but to labour to bring our hearts to yeeld and submit to the truths revealed and to give way to the Word of God to be contented to be governed by the good Word of God It is better never to have known the Word of God then to have it made known and to gainsay and stand out against it Let us therefore be carefull to subject our selves and to take up the yoke of the Lord to give way to every truth revealed being willing and contented to yeeld to whatsoever the Word of God shall make known whether it declare what is amisse to take that away or whether it revealeth what is to be done to practise that This is a blessed frame and disposition of spirit and by this we shall come to have comfort and benefit by all our hearing this is the onely way to get that good that God intendeth in all those helpes and means that he hath appointed in his Church It is the commendation of Josiah that his heart melted at the hearing of the Law read 2 Kings 22.19 And I know not a greater ornament to a Christian then to have such a heart that look as it is with soft things they will take any impression that is put upon them whatsoever the stamp or seale setteth upon them they will take it print for print be it of what nature or kind soever such ought to be the temper of every soule to have a tender yeelding melting heart to be of a pliable teachable disposition to give way to whatever is made known out of the Word I beseech you therefore take this home to your soules and suffer the words of exhortation let the Word of God take place in your hearts I would have every Christian soule to look up to heaven when he commeth into the Congregation and to say speak Lord thy servant is desirous to hear and contented to hear and obey whatsoever thou shalt in this Sermon make known to me And if the Lord will have any thing give it him if he exact any thing from thee yeeld to him This is a melting heart But you will say to me I will conclude in a word or two How shall a man come to bow his neck and take up the yoke of Christ Here is all the labour my brethren and if we could once obtain this the businesse would be done God is not lesse mercifull then he was the Word is not lesse powerfull then it was but these hearts of ours are stubborn and loth to yeeld to the truth Labour therefore for this and have all But what course shall we take to compasse this In a word the means that I would suggest for the present are these First labour to work upon thy own soul a kind of reasonable contentednesse to part with that beloved corruption that lieth in thy bosome I doe not say thou canst doe it but I say labour to bring thy heart to a reasonable kind of contentednesse this way For my brethren here is all the quarrell between you and the Minister of God it all lyeth here the Lord saith thou must forsake thy sins or else I must damn thy soul For we come for souls when we come to preach we doe not come here onely to spend an hour and so an end of the matter No but we see a poor company of creatures in the Congregation and we know that many among them are yet hardned and blinded and going headlong to perdition it is now our labour and care to prevent your ruine and therefore many a prayer we put up and many a tear we shed on your behalf Oh suffer your Minister therefore because he desireth and studieth your good he sees you walking in a way in which you must needs perish and therefore he draweth the sword of the word of God against you Oh stoop to the word of God revealed Here now I say is all the quarrell the Minister saith you must leave your sins the soul saith I will not I will have those fins and I will practise those courses and therefore thou stomackst the Minister and thy heart works against the Word of God Alas Why doe you contend against him and murmure against him we seek not our selves but you nor doe we aim at our own ends but at the salvation of your precious souls and notwithstanding all your oppositions here is the comfort of a Minister that one converted soul is better then a whole world therefore well may he sweat his heart for it whatsoever you say But I say if the Minister labour thus with God and with thee for thy souls good why is all this controversie Why dost thou not labour with thy heart to part with thy sins It is the desire
your hearts be a wed with it howsoever it is true you may gainsay the commands of the Word yet you shall never be able to flie the curse of the Word A Minister may speak from God to you and labour with God for you and all may be cast aside but the Word it self remaineth and will have its effect one way or other and that which you now reject shall have dominion over you Alas my brethren the Word we preach it is not our own it is the Word of God of the God of Heaven and know this that that which will not now be obeyed in the precepts of it will hereafter be found in the curse of it I would fain hear the sinner that now takes up arms against God and his truth that makes nothing of the Commands he hears and in effect sayes that he will not obey them I would faine have such a one consider what he will say at the fearfull day of Judgement Now God bids thee repent and beleeve and obey the Gospel and thou wilt not the Lord then shall say to thee depart from me into everlasting fire I would faine hear a sinner say Lord I will not goe down to hell and be in that pit for ever My brethren you are too weak to strive with the Lord his word may now be gainsaid but then the Lord shall say by this Word that thou hast disobeyed thou shalt be condemned and that Word shall send thee down to the pit when there will be found no resistance Therefore I beseech you be perswaded rather chuse the good that your soules may live and know who you have to deal withall it is the voyce of God that speakes to you that voyce that shook heaven and earth once and will doe it again Therefore let every soule be a wed at the mighty word of God that being framed according to the rules of it now you may be blessed for ever by it Fourthly and lastly Work thou when God works and move thou when God moveth There is a time when the Spirit of God moves upon the hearts of men in the hearing of the word when God leaveth some impression behind him at a Sermon that a man may say me thought this day I was almost perswaded the thought it was reason that the Minister spoke On work now when God works take that Word home with thee and go aside and lift up thy hands to heaven and beseech the Lord to blesse that good word now that the heart hath been stirred and in some measure perswaded now intreat the Lord buckle and bow they soul in perfect obedience to his Majestie Thinke well of this counsell my brethren There is never a wicked man in the world that slights the power of the word now but he shall be terrified under it and feel the power of it whether he will or no. If God therefore be pleased to stir up any thought in thee of this kinde doe not put it out of thy heart by going about other businesse or into wicked company no take home that stroke of God make it worke more effectually upon thee converse with that word every night and labour to bring thy heart to be affected with it still more and more This is the next way to be sure to work when God works The Devill stealeth terror out of the hearts of men it should be our course therefore that what ever powerfull work God works in any of us in any measure that thou art almost a Christian as Agrippa make one step further joyn with God go home and intreat the Lord to set it deeper upon thy soul that thou mayest not onely be almost good but altogether good and be ever constant in this course FINIS Courteous Reader These Books following are printed and are to be sold by Francis Eglesfield at his Shop at the Marigold in Pauls Churchyard EXcellent Instructions for the keeping of Merchants Books and Accounts by way of Debitor and Creditor after the Italian manner by John Carpenter Gent. in Folio Aelians Tacticks or the Art of Imbattelling an Armie in folio Animadversions of War by Robert Ward Gentleman and Commander in Folio The Works of John Taylor the Water-poet collected into one Volume in Folio Heywood of Angels in folio Parcus on the Revelation in English in folio Goulston in Rhetoricam Aristotelis gr lat in quarto The Works of that famous Mathematician Edmund Gunter sometime Professor of Astronomie in Gressam Colledge London in Quarto The Works of Sir Richard Baker Viz Meditations and Disquisitions on the Lords Prayer in 4to On the First Psalm in 4to On the seven Penitentiall Psalms in 4to On the seven Consolatorie Psalms in 4to His Cato Variegatus or Cato's Morall Disticks translated into English Verse 4to On the Creed in 12. Motives for prayer upon the seven dayes of the Week in 12. The Soliloquie of the Soul in 12. An Apologie for Lay-mens writing in 12. Decimall Arithmetick or the use of Napiers bones by William Barton in 8to Butlers Historie of Bees in 4to The Seamans Secrets with the Tables new calculated very usefull for young Seamen in 4to Commentaries on the first Psalm by Phinehas Fletcher in 4to The Purple Island being Poeticall Miscelanies in 4to Joy in tribulation or Consolations for afflicted Consciences The Golden Scepter with the Churches marriage and the Churches carriage in three Treatises by that learned Divine Dr. Preston in 4to His five Sermons upon severall occasions preached at Court The needles Excellencie or a Book of Cut-works in 4to Light from Heaven by Dr. Sibbs in 4to Lydias Conversion or the Riches of Mercie by Dr. Sibbs in 12. The whole Works of that Eloquent Divine Thomas Playfer D. D. collected into one Volume 8to The Handmaid to Arithmetick refined by Nicholas Hunt 8to The Art of Dialling by John Foster in 4to An Introduction to the right receiving of the Sacrament by W. Pemble in 12. I he burthen and unburthening of a loaden conscience in 12. Spirituall food and Physick being a large Catechisme by John Mico in 8to Nichols Catechisme in 8to Corpus Christi together with the demonstration of Antichrist in 12. The Historie of Heliodorus in ten Books turned into English by W. Lisle in Quarto Aesops Fables in Prose and Verse grammatically translated illustrated with Pictures together with the Historie of his Life in 12. Divine Emblems and Hieroglyphicks by Francis Quarles in 8to The usefulnesse and excellency of Christ by C. Jelinger in 8to The Office and Dutie of Constables Churchwardens and other Officers excellently set forth by Nicholas Layer Counsellor A Collection of Speeches by Sir Edward Deering in 4o. A Discourse of proper Sacrifice by Sir Edward Deering in 4o. Posselii Syntaxis 8o. Greek Gods's Summons to a generall repentance by Adam Harsuet in 12o. Juelli Apologia in 8o. Greek and Latine Divers Sermons upon severall occasions by John Bond Master of the Savoy in 4º The Doctrine of the Bible in 8o. Gospel