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A63684 Christ's yoke an easy yoke, and yet the gate to heaven a strait gate in two excellent sermons, well worthy the serious perusal of the strictest professors / by a learned and reverend divine. Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667.; Hove, Frederick Hendrick van, 1628?-1698. 1675 (1675) Wing T295; ESTC R38275 26,780 106

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comprehensions of the whole Duty of Man that may be excellent guides to us in this particular Heb. 12.1 Let us lay aside every weight and the Sin that doth so easily beset us For he that contendeth for Mastery is temperate in all things saith St. Paul There is first an obligation of all Sin whatsoever every weight every Sin every hindrance abstaining from all things whatsoever that are impediments And we do not strive to do this unless we use all the means we can to learn what is our Duty and what infinite variety of Sins there are that so easily beset us And let me desire you to observe one thing make a tryal in any one Sin that is or hath been most pleasing to any of you and according to your Duty set upon its mortification heartily and throughly and try whether it will not be a hard strife with flesh and blood and a great contention to kill that one crime I mean in the midst of your temptations to it and opportunities of acting it and by this you may make a short conjecture at the greatness of this Duty And this is but the one half For the extirpation of Vices is not always the introduction of Virtues For there are some Men that have ceased from an act of Sin that still retain the affection and there are others who have quitted their affection to Sin who yet are not reconciled to the difficulty and pains of acquiring Vertues I thank God I am no Extortioner no Adulterer not as this Publican saith the Pharisee So far many go and then they think themselves fairly assoiled who are only like misguided Travellers that upon discovery of their error cease to wander further but are not yet returned nor have made any progress in the true way Some Men cease to oppress their Neighbours and will do so no more but they think not of making restitution of what wrongs have been done by them long since Some Men will leave off from Drunkenness but they think not of fasting and enduring Hunger and Thirst and Pains to punish their past Intemperance There is a further striving or we shall not enter into the narrow Gate St. Peter gives an excellent account of it 2 Pet. 1.4 Having escaped the corruption that is in the World through Lust that 's one half but he adds And besides this giving all diligence add to your Faith Vertue and to Vertue Knowledge to Knowledg Temperance to Temperance Patience to Patience Godliness to Godliness Brotherly kindness to Brotherly kindness Charity these things must be in you and abound saith St. Peter and therefore as himself prefaces you had need give all diligence and strive earnestly to all these purposes In the mean time I pray remember that this is not to strive when we only do perform those Offices of Religion which Custom or the Laws of a Church enjoyn us to nor this when our Religion is cheap and easy when we use arts to satisfie our Conscience and heap up Teachers of our own to that purpose that by a stratagem they and we may bend the Duty to our Conscience not measure our Conscience by our Duty when we call security a just peace want of understanding a sufficient warrant for quietness the not-committing of deformed and scandalous Sins a pious Life this is far from striving here is no striving in this but how to cozen and abuse our selves If the affairs of the World I do not say take up not only most of our time but most of our affections if the returns of Sin be frequent and of Religion be seldom and unpleasant If any Vice hath got possession of us or that we have not got possession of all those Virtues we have use of we have not striven Lawfully Shall I tell you how St. Paul did strive that thence we a so may have a fair patern and president to imitate 2 Cor. 6. you have his course of Life largely described Giving no offence in any thing but approving our selves in much Patience in Afflictions in Labours in Watchings in fast●ngs by Pureness by Knowledge by Long-suffering by kindness by the Holy Ghost by Love unfeigned by the Word of Truth by the Power of God by the Armour of Righteousness and by an evenness of Temper in the midst of an uneven unquiet and contradictory condition this was his course of Life thus did he labour Mortifying his Soul heightening his Devotion bringing his Body under and advancing the interests of the Gospel lest by any means he had run or should run in vain I speak not these things to discourage you but to provoke you to good Works and a Holy Life For if you ask who does all this or indeed who is able I answer it is no good argument of an affection to God when we make such scrupulous questions concerning his Injunctions He that loves God does all this Love is the fulfilling of the Commandments Love hopeth all things endureth all things thinketh nothing impossible attempteth those things as most easie which to natural Reason seem impossible For consider that as without God's Grace we can do nothing so by his Grace strengthening us we can do any thing Faith works Miracles and Charity does more Through Christ that strengthens me I can do all things saith St. Paul and Christ's Grace is sufficient for me sufficient to all God's purposes and to all mine For it is not commanded to us to remove Mountains from their places which we never plac'd there but to remove our Sins which we our selves have made We are not commanded to do things which are not in our Power but such things which God enables us to and to which we disable our selves by cowardice intimidating our own Spirits by despairing of God's Grace by refusing to labour by deferring our endeavours till the weight of our sin grows great and our strength grows less till our iniquities are many and our days are few and then indeed we have some reason to say we cannot strive in such measure as the greatness of these Duties does require And yet remember 't is but striving that is doing the utmost of our endeavour the best Man in the World can do no more than use all his endeavour and he that is weakest can do so much that is he can do his endeavour And although a Boy cannot strike so great a stroke as a strong Man yet he can put forth all his strength and the just and merciful Lawgiver never requires more of us than all we have upon the stock of Nature and all he hath given us in the Banks of Grace So that the Duty we are here engaged upon is but an earnest endeavour to do our best and all we can and every Man can do that But because they will not because Men have habitual aversations from the practices of a holy life because to do actions of severe Religion and strict Piety is troublesom to their affections because contrariant to their