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A15819 Gods arraignement of hypocrites with an inlargement concerning Gods decree in ordering sinne. As likewise a defence of Mr. Calvine against Bellarmine; and of Mr. Perkins against Arminius. Yates, John, d. ca. 1660. 1615 (1615) STC 26081; ESTC S120537 353,274 440

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our eyes into our owne bosomes Ier. 8.6 4. Is want of thinking of this duty toward God Ierem. 5.24 so the foolish virgins contented themselues with their lampes vnprepared neuer thinking of the oyle till the time of grace was past thus hardnesse of heart and securitie bring forth these wicked thoughts Hence obserue the strange opinion of the world men haue good hearts meanings intents and purposes howsoeuer the actions of their liues be faultie Hence learne that the Scriptures are no policies of men for nothing could reueale these wicked thoughts but the diuine truth Angels and men know not the thoughts Secondly learne that thoughts are not free though they neuer come into consent or action therefore repentance of thoughts is necessarie Ioel 2.12 Act. 8.22 1. Thess 5. Paul requires that they be sanctified in bodie soule and spirit Reas 1. Because a man is cursed for his thought Pro. 5.26 2. Because actuall sinnes proceed of euill thoughts 1. the thought thinketh it 2. after thought comes delight 3. after delight consent of will 4. after consent an execution or practise of the sinne 5. after practise comes custome in practise 6. after custome and practise death and damnation for thoughts the old world was destroyed Gen. 7.21 For repentance of euill thoughts Remedies of euill thoughts vse 1. examination 2. praier 3. reformation In examination first we must remember that all thoughts are in euery mans minde by nature therefore the least occasion turnes the mind to think them secondly we must heare the word of God attentiuely we must lay open all our senses to the hearing thereof and let it goe thorough them all 1. Cor. 4.25 2. Point Prayer A man must pray for the pardon of his thoughts Act. 8.22 3. Point Reformation of the minde for wicked thoughts Ephe. 4. be renewed in the spirit of your minds wherein thoughts and imaginations are conceiued and framed Rule 1. All thoughts must be in obedience toward God Prou. 20.18 15.22 he must not conceiue a thought in his mind before he haue consulted with the word 1. Cor. 10.4 5. Phil. 4.8 2. Rule Prou. 4.24 to keepe and counter-guard our hearts aboue all watch ward men dovsually guard their cities houses and their treasures now Salomon teacheth that the heart must be guarded more then any citie house or treasures because from it proceed the actions of life 1. Therefore make a couenant with thy senses that they be no occasion or prouocation to any manner of sinne this did Iob cap. 31. and Dauid Psal 119. Turne mine eies from beholding couetousnesse the senses are the windowes of the soule and if God enter not sathan will creepe in at them into our hearts 2. At the beginning checke an euill thought for the thought beeing checked the affections will be quiet 3. Labour with all care to cherish euery good motion of Gods spirit 1. all good cogitations by the ministerie of the word or good counsell hence quench not the spirit 3. Rule We must often vse eleuation of the heart and mind vnto heauen where Christ sits at the right hand of the Father Psal 25.1 Paul bids the Philippians haue their conuersation in heauen Iam. 4. drawe neere to God Hence the Lords Supper is a principall meanes of the eleuation of the heart and mind vnto God this eleuation must be continually practised such as are appointed to keepe clockes doe often euery day pull vp the waights because they are alwaies going downeward Pray continually 1. Thess 5. There be three speciall times the beginning of the day the first good thought affection euerie day must be the Lords The 2. time the end of the day commend our soules vnto God The 3. time receiuing of blessings or feeling the want of them to praise God for the one and call vpon him for the supply of the other 4. Rule The meditation of some speciall matters whereby saluation may be furthered which is either concerning God or our selues concerning God his presence this made Dauid to drawe neere vnto God Psal 139. Psal 19. his heart is purified by seeing God in his lawe Psal 23. in the shadow of death he wil not feare 2. Consideration of Gods iudgments not old but late and particular vpon persons cities townes we should lay these to the heart Ier. 12.11 Here we must practise three things 1. wee must obserue and carefully marke and remember Gods iudgements 2. wee must apply them to our owne persons in particular that they may make vs afraid Thus Habacuk when he heard of Gods iudgement his knees beate one against another Hab. 3. If in a familie one child be beaten others will take heed 3. We must make vse of them Luk. 13.3 Third consideration is of Gods word Psal 1. It is the propertie of the righteous man to meditate in Gods lawe day and night Luk. 2. Marie hid all those things in her heart 1. we must consider the sence of the Scriptures 2. what experience we haue had of the truth of the word of God in our own liues and consciences 3. how farre forth we haue swarued in the practise of the word or how farre forth we haue practised it Fourth consideration is of Gods works in vs and vpon vs this will make vs consider the workes of creation preseruation prouidence Isa 5.12 he pronounceth a woe to them that forget this 1. Consider the work of creation God hath made vs men when we might haue beene beasts that of nothing he made vs to be something 2. for preseruation and prouidence we must consider how he hath preserued vs from time to time from all dangers and hath giuen vs all things necessarie for this life and the life to come 3. for his patience that he hath not cast vs into hell but hath giuen vs a long and large time of repentance 4. that wee are not borne among the heathen but in the bosome of the church where hee hath giuen vs his word reformed our iudgments mollified our hearts and prouoked vs to euerie good worke Eccles 7.13 Psal 77.12.13 Second consideration of our selues 1. of our owne particular sinnes whether they be corruptions of the heart or sinnes of our liues Psal 119.59 Lam. 3. Come let vs search and try our wayes 1. In what manner we haue sinned against God whether of ignorance or knowledge of presumption or weaknes of constraint or wilfulnesse 2. The greatnesse of euerie sinne yea of the least sinne how the infinite maiestie of God is offended and his iustice violated 3. The number of them and here we shall find them with Dauid more then the haires of our head or the sands of the sea Must a man consider them whē he is sure they are pardoned yes so did Dauid Psal 25. Hee praied for the pardon of the sinnes of his youth That this may take the deeper impression let vs consider of the degrees of our misery 1. A separation from all fellowship with God Isa 59.2 2. a
which cannot be done except wisedome take notice of it and most truely God vnderstands the aberation from hence it followeth that he cōceiued it could neuer touch that goodnes which was well pleasing vnto himselfe fortune and chance to men is both in the scope and aberration to the intended scope the ignorance neuer lies in the scope but in the aberration for a man that misseth his scope intent and purpose knowes that it is so but yet he conceiues not the means that brought that thing to passe and so he is ignorant not for the scope and end that hath happened but he knows not how he came to that end therefore sinne being beside Gods scope is accidental and neuer intended of God yet God cannot be ignorant of it in so much as his eyes did see the aberration how it was the direct way to frustrate man of his good ende with himselfe Position 2 Secondly sinne is against Gods law therefore in reason sinne were no sinne except there were a law there could be no blindnesse except there were an eye this makes contrarietie hence enmitie betwixt the law and sinne and from enmitie contention therefore the law must plead for it selse and be earnest in his own defence so will sinne on the contrarie part Gen. 3. Sinne pleads Hath God said ye shall not eate of euerie tree no it is not so the lawe is your hinderance God knowes when ye shall eate that yee shall bee like God himselfe Hence riseth an irritation or prouocation of the lawe when man expounds him as a bridle to his libertie therefore he labours to pull his ne●ke from such a yoke now a worke of contrarietie comes from their natures and here the law works by his owne force for as often as we conceiue the lawe to be our enemie it will wrastle with vs and before we are aware the law giues vs the fall and this is called fighting against God when men will be more wise and strong then God therefore Iob 9.4 he is wise in heart and mightie in strength who hath been fierce against him and hath prospered and in this regard no strange accident befell the deuils and men when they would become disputers with the law of their maker The Smith that hath his hammer often beating against the inward parts of his hands hath them hardened euen by that mutuall opposition so the heart of man often beating against the hammer of Gods law is hardened and made senselesse vntill God mollifie it by his sauing grace Position 3 Thirdly in opposites when the one is beeing and the other no beeing that which is being is alwaies to be conceiued for the knowledge of the other I could not tell what darknes were but for the light so sinne being a priuation can no otherwise be knowne but by his contrary and that is the law except it had bin for the law there would haue bin no knowledge of sinne againe beeing is before not beeing therfore the law being before sinne detemins of sinne long before he be in his nature in his vse or in his end and why should we denie vnto God the determination of sinne long before he had any existence God must needs know mans fall long before it was and determine of it Position 4 Fourthly where there is contrarietie there is action and passion therefore betwixt the law and sinne must there needs be action and passion the weaker must alwaies suffer and good reason that sinne should suffer of the law yea and oftentimes punish it selfe with it selfe but this is not for the first entrance of sinne for man was holy vntill his first sinne which could not punish a former sinne yet for action and passion it is true in the first sinne for in that sinne man did fight against God hence no maruell if the lawe stroke him out at the first brunt A man that will fight with the stone wall may haue his fingers easily stricken out of ioynt so man beeing compassed about with Gods law as a wall of defence might most cafily breake himselfe in peices when hee laboured either to leape against it or else skippe ouer it Position 5 Fiftly in opposites the stronger cannot be resisted and the lawe of God beeing the stronger wil haue his worke neither can it any wayes be resisted of men Rom. 9.22 what and if God would to shew his wrath to make his power knowne suffer with long patience the vessels of wrath prepated to ●estruction who hath resisted his will Now if the question be whether the law was determined to refist man before he fel it is easily answered The lawe was not to prepare for man when man tooke the battel in hand he is an vnprouident Generall that hath all to do when his enemies are in the field vp in armes against him but the wise God of heauen and earth could not be out of readines when the rebellious angeli and mankind meant to wage warre with him and his lawe he had prepared yrons and harrowes sawes and gybets to bring all his enemies vnder them and after to imprison them in hell for euer Rom. 9.23 Yet what and if he would declare the riches of his glory vpon the vessels of mercy which he hath prepared vnto glorie long before they need any redemption And this is a fift way for the entrance of sinne euen the manifestation of his power Sixtly 6. Position opposites beeing laid together make things more eleare and euident and one opposite stirres vp another and they neuer cease quarrelling vntill one haue gotten the victorie and so leads his enemie in fingular triumph Pharaoh stirs vp God and God stirres vp Pharaoh now if the question be whether had the first purpose to the battell the Scripture sayes it for God Rom. 9.17 yea and to Pharaoh too that God may giue him the challenge and why should the warre be continued so long but euen for this same purpose that God might she we his power in Pharaoh and that his name might be declared thorough all the earth neither is God in any fault for he intended that Pharaoh alone should fight for the kingdom of darknes but God would fight for the cleane contrarie for his owne name and what is his name surely his glorious attributes Exod. 34.6.7 and what are his attributes all his vertues therfore God opposed Pharaoh for vertue and the manifestation of his vertues was his glorie but Pharaoh opposed God for vice and therefore for his shame and confusion Contraries can doe no better then fight but alwaies for a diuerse end purpose therefore O man Rom. 9.20 who art thou which pleadest against God will thou needs make the opposition worse consider that thou art the thing formed and therefore say not to him that formed thee why hast thou made me thus thou art the clay in the potters hand the lumpe is one therefore be content to serue thy maker as a vessell of honour
Conscientia in effectu affectu ●u●n●u vel pro effectu praeterito vel pro affectu presente vel pro euētu futuro for the fact past that is either in regard of God or man of man it either absolues or cōdemns in regard of god a witnes either to excuse or accuse for the affection that followes vpon this it is either ioy or sorrow ioy vpon absoluing and excusing sorrowe vpon accusing condemning and for the future euent it is either the expectation of reward or the feare of punishment That this may a litle the better appeare let vs see how the cōscience is locked or vnlocked this eye is alwaies as a booke that is both clasped and open at the same time or els wholly clasped and locked vp The claspes that doe all this are in number three goodnes Claspes of conscience 1. Goodnesse sinne and punishment Goodnesse clasps vp the accusation of the conscience but alwaies leaues open the conscience for excusation therefore a good conscience will open for no accusation nor shut for any vaine excusations Secondly 2. Sinne. sinne is either the clasper and vnclasper together or the clasper alone the clasper and vnclasper by excusation or accusation as in our first parents it is said when they had sinned their eyes were opened not that they were blind before but that now the eye had lost the power of excusing and therefore in that was shut vp and blinded but was altogether vnlocked for accusation and condemning of themselues yet by reason of custome and long continuance in sinne that verie selfe same thing which opened the eies of our first parents hath wholly seared vp the eyes of some that their consciences neither accuse nor excuse except you will say they falsly excuse when they make vs cry peace peace and all is well with vs. Now this for the most part is the claspe of mens consciences so that except God bring iudgement the conscience will neuer be awaked from his securitie 3. Punishment Therefore the third claspe of the conscience is punishment this holds most surely in excusation in so much that none can either vnclaspe it or by any meanes be able to mitigate the strait holding of punishment from all comfort so that neither angels nor men nor any other creature can giue a dramme of comfort but for the vnclasping of the conscience it wil do it most forcibly and exceedes all other meanes and therefore is to bee vnderstood in this place Hence ariseth a fourefold distinction of conscience the first that is at peace with it selfe Conscience quiet but not good quiet nor good but not with God and that is the conscience that is wholly locked vp the second that is neither at peace with God nor it selfe and that is the conscience vnder the horror of the punishment of sinne good not quiet the third conscience which is not at peace with it selfe but with God and that conscience hath two claspes in it goodnesse and sinne goodnes from God sin from it selfe good and quiet The fourth that hath peace with God and with it selfe and this is a conscience that feeles a claspe of Gods mercie to bind vp the broken heart and make it breake forth with ioy and gladnesse So that now if we looke into the world wee shall find that euerie man is either a Prince or a peasant either the basest among the sonnes of men and most ignoble or els couragious as a lyon and stout hearted as a gyant If a man were as poore as Lazarus and as naked as Iob yet if he bad a good conscience he would be higher then Princes and scorn to yeild a foote for the proudest but on the contrarie if hee were as stout as Alexander as merry as Belshazzar as wise as Ahithophel as proud as Hammon and as rich as Nabal yet hauing an euill conscience he would tremble with Alexander for the touch of an ague quiuer with Belshazzar for the appearance of a finger hang himselfe with Ahitophel for that his counsell was brought to nought mourne with Hammon vpon his bed for the losse of his honour or his heart would die within him as it did within Nabal for the losse of a field or in a word hee would tremble at a very leafe and therefore fearfull shall bee the estate of these men when the Lord shall thus vnlocke their consciences as he hath promised he will doe in this place Now this vnlocking is threefold Keyes to vnlock conscience 1. Amazement First by a generall amazement when a man is suddenly stricken but he knowes no particular cause as Belshazzar was in the 5. of Dan. the writing on the wall vnclasped his conscience by a sudden amazement Secondly 2. Particular knowledge by a particular knowledge of the sinne that they haue commited as it was with Indas who said Phaue sinned in betraying inocent blood this did strike so deepely into his conscience that be departed and hanged himselfe and for verie greife the rimme of his bellie rent in peices Thirdly and lastly 3. Gods departure by a most lamentable farwel in hell when the Lord shall say O my creature I made thee glorious but thou hast spoyled all thy glorie and lost my fauour farewell my creature I the fountaine of liuing water I the liuing God I thy life and length of dayes thy verie breath must leaue thee and come vnto thee as a consuming fire as a roaring lyon heape vpon thee all torments in bodie and soule Again thou shalt say Farewell creator farwell louing wife farewell my children and all my freinds farewell my pleasures prosits and all my worldly lusts Alas will none of you pitie mee wilt thou O Lord looke on and take no compassion and will you my freinds if with me curse me and cry A vengence on me will you thus reward my loue vpon earth If in heauen will you crie with father Abraham Remember that you had your pleasure when many a Saint starued at your doore and therefore iustly art thou tormented and we most mercifully rewarded you did vs much hurt in your pretended loue and blessed be God you preuailed not in your will Alas is it so why then O worme of conscience doe thy worst burne fire that can not be quenched I gnash with my teeth to see the prosperity of my freinds blaspheme God with the rest of my freinds here in hel not as sinning for that we did in brauery vpon earth to teare God in peices was our credit but now we together see all to be our punishments and we can take no sweet solace in our companie as we did vpon earth Thus the wicked goe downe to hell to see their sinnes set in order before their consciences to their euerlasting shame and confusion that could not see it vpon earth the deuill hath lead them into the mids of hel as the Prophet the Aramits that came to take him into the mids
conclude her saluation out of Gods word without any further reuelations yet still did the temptation grew vpon her insomuch that hauing a venice glasse in her hands and the selfe-same minister setting by her presently breakes forth into lamentable words You haue often told mee that I must seeke no further then Gods word but I haue been long without comfort and can indure no longer therefore if I must be saued let this glasse be kept from breaking and so she threw it against the walls Here might the Lords hand for this tempting of his maiestie haue left her to the euerlasting woes of her distrustfull heart yet the Lord that is rich in mercie hauing stamped her with the seale of his election was content to satisfie the languishing soule with a miracle the glasse rebounds againe and comes safe vnto the ground which the minister hauing gotten into his hands sayeth Oh repent of this sinne blesse God for his mercie and neuer distrust him more of his promise for now you haue his voyce from heauen in a miracle telling you plainly of your estate This was curiositie and might haue brought despaire yet it was the Lords mercie to remit the fault and graunt an extraordinarie confirmation of her faith But to proceede melan cholie persons that are giuen to contemplation if they be not well grounded in the word of God and haue resolued in all their speculations not to remooue one haire from the same are easily ouertaken and plunged in miserie and especially all such as haue their vocation consisting in such studies as philosophie c. which if they cary not a low saile and sometime to strike and lie at the anker of the Scriptures of God but hoist vp saile leaue it to the tempest of presumption are presently carried into the whirle-poole of Gods infinite secrets and are in daunger without the speciall grace of Gods mercie neuer to deliuer themselues for these men being not balanced with knowledge of Gods scriptures and assurance of his spirit are neuer able to abide the vglines of their sinnes when they shall once be vnfolded that narrow point of reprobation and election propounded vnto their melancholie braines and hearts and most miserable polluted soules Others which haue but some little knowledge of Gods word and practise answerable for want of the true apprehending of Gods reuealed will touching election and reprobation and the right methode of learning and conceiuing the doctrine causeth them to stumble and fall at this stone for a sword taken at the wrong ende is readie to wound the hand of the taker yet held by the handle is a fit weapon of defence so Predestination preposterously conceiued may through fault of the conceiuer procure hurt whereas in it selfe it is the most strong rock of assurance in al storms of temptations that can befall vnto bodie or soule because predestination is Gods immutable will the cause and rule of all iustice and vttermost of all reason in his workes Now if reason ascending to this supreame cause descend not againe to the meanes then when our sinnes shall meete with Gods iustice and we haue no eye to looke vpon his mercie in his sonne Christ we shall find nothing but the assurance of our owne destruction Againe if with the world we eye alone his mercie and consider not his iustice then miserable man who melteth as snow and vanisheth like a vapour before his iustice must needes perish eternally in that his carelesse presumption Againe as the melancholie person in generall and secondly in speciall 1. of giuing himselfe to contemplation 2. knowing Gods word vngroundedly so in the 3. place this makes the melancholie nature subiect to this passion when with a passionate humour he reads G●ds word and doth as melancholy persons doe in regard of their bodie for if they read or heare of any disease presently they conceicue they haue it so deale they with the Scriptures they are guiltie of all iudgements and no sinne or iudgement but they either haue it or presently expect it and especially they resemble the one the other in this that they haue the strongest conceit of the most deadly diseases as consumptions and sicknesses incurable so the other of nothing but the sinne against the holy Ghost So that as ignorance before was their guide here ignorance and infidelitie linked together A fourth speciall manner in this melancholike subiect is the good and christian heart the waight of whose sinnes exceeding for a time the strength of their faith see not so clearely as they desire but euen as in a stormy tempest the ship seemeth at euery blast and sourge of the sea to be in danger of wracke and as the young ash bending to euerie blast of wind seemeth in perill of breaking and rooting vp when notwithstanding both the ship keepeth her constant course and the tree yet hath the rooting In winter we thinke the trees are dead and in a tempest we thinke wee haue lost the brightnes of heauen yet summer prooues the contrarie and the space of an houre may shewe the cleare heauens againe So when this tempest of Gods anger is ouer-blowne and his gracious countenance beginneth to shine on vs againe then the saith which was as it were hid for a time taketh life and sheweth foorth it selfe and plainely prooueth that as the trees when they bud in the spring time and bring forth fruite were not dead in the winter as they seemed so the faith of Gods children springeth afresh after the stormie winter of temptation and therefore no dead faith The diseases of the bodie make vs sometime seeme little better then dead corpses and yet the hidden life is after recouered and raised vp againe Thus saith by reason of our owne weakenes and thorough Sathans tempestuous malice bendeth seemeth feeble and yeeldeth to the force while notwithstanding it is built on the rocke and planted with the hand of God in the Eden of his gracious election and doth remaine a plant for euer in his Paradise of euerlasting felicitie Thus the lilly of God and euerie member of it though among many thornes is preserued because they are planted by the good husbandman watred with the dewes of heauen hedged and preserued by his continuall care for this husbandman is night and day in his field and yet he neuer sleepeth no not so much as slumbereth by his watchfull care for Israel his flocke Psal 121. In deed we had need of a good shepheard for wee are extraordinarie wandring sheep we had need of good gouernours for we are but punies in our wayes we had neede of a good guide on the seas of this world for we are but like vnexperienced trauailers by sea fearing euery weauing of the ship and ●●ying with the disciples helpe vs Master or else we perish we imagine euery puffe of temptation to bee nothing but the gate of destruction when indeede it is the way of Gods dearest children and appointed of the Lord to bring vs
place First it brings sinne to Gods goodnesse then along to Gods law and thirdly to Gods plagues They that tame vnruely creatures first bring them to the thing and place where they haue done the iniurie then labours to let them see the fault by beating of them So the Lord first brings vs to our selues and his silence le ts vs see what we haue done against our selues and his silence and then doth he let vs feele the power of his wrath that hereafter he may be our feare either filiall or slauish for he will haue euerie knee to bowe vnto him either a knee of power or of reuerence of loue or constraint from heart or from bodie Vse 1. reprehension First confutation of all those that denie Gods prouidence because they see not present execution of iudgement for sinne and present reward for weldoing the Lords times are in his owne hands and he is verie wise in them all therefore it is my wisdome to rest content with patience and expect Gods leasure Secondly correction of the godly that are too importunate with the Lord to destroy the wicked Wilt thou not breake the heauens and come downe but hee that beleeues will not make hast Vse 2. instruction First admonition to the wicked that they agree with their aduersarie while he is in the way least he deliuer them to the iudge and they be cast into prison and there lie vntil they haue paid the vttermost farthing Secondly direction to the godly neuer to be at rest vntill they know themselues reconciled vnto God in Christ Iesus for that is Gods heartie loue no bare silence for one may hold his tongue and yet be extreamely angrie Vse 3. From Gods direct knowledge consolation First in weldoing surely if God can agree with a sinner for a time how shall hee reioyce to doe his child good that labours to serue him Secondly in miserie this may affoard comfort that God will not bee worse vnto me then he is vnto the wicked nay he will spare me as a father spareth his child that hee sees endeauour to do well CHAP. IIII. Of the simple inuention First of Gods knowledge NOW I come to the simple inuention and consider euery reason by himselfe the sentence hath two parts Gods truth Gods holinesse Gods truth in these words these things hast thou done wherein we haue knowledge without all error secondly integritie without all partialitie thirdly equity without all contradiction Obser 1. Gods knowledge is a most exact and particular knowledge of all things these things are knowne vnto the Lord to wit the verie consent vnto adultery and theeuery the very running of the heart though the world could neuer cōdemne them of any such crimes this knowledge therefore is most particular of sinnes persons things causes ends effects and all circumstances that accompany them Reas 1. Because all things are in God long before they exist in the world Hence is God called the most perfect idaea of all things a skilfull workeman hath the plot of his building in his head long before he begin his worke out of himselfe Psal 139.2 thou vnderstandest my thought afarre off and v. 16. thine eies did see me when I was without forme for in thy booke were all things written which in continuance were fashioned when there was none of them before 2. Reason As all things were in God From creation so all things were from God and that which was from him must needes be knowne of him Psal 94.9 He that planted the eare shall he not heare he that formed the eye shall he not see Psal 139.13 Thou hast couered me in my mothers wombe therefore thou hast possessed my reynes v. 15. My bones are not hid from thee though I was made in a secret place and fashioned beneath in the earth And it is a most cleare knowledge for Heb. 4.13 Neither is there any creature which is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and open vnto his eyes with whome wee haue to doe The word in the originall is taken from a beast that hath the skinne fleaed off his necke so that all the nerues and arteries that runne that way may plainly be seene or els from a man cast on his backe with his face toward heauen which may be seene of all Neither is this a bare knowledge but with care and counsell Eph 1.11 Which worketh all things after the counsell of his will and most particular Matth. 10.39 A sparrow falls not to the ground without Gods will yea and all the haires of your head are numbred and most certen Numb 23.19 God is not as man that he should lie neither shall it be resisted Exod. 4.11 he will giue a mouth to man make the dumme speake it and the deafe heare it before it shall be silenced by man the very stones shall speake out of the wall and the timber before man shall burie Gods truth or obscure that which he would haue reuealed 3. Reason As all in God and from God From pro●dence so for his prouidence and preseruation of them they liue mooue and haue their beeing continued from him Act. 17.25 And therfore seeing the Lord hath gone with vs all our daies he must needes be priuie to all our doings There is not a motion in the heart a stirring of the hand a turning vp of the eye or a foote of ground troden but the Lord knoweth it because he was in that motion Againe for our liuing whether generall or speciall the Lord taketh notice of it generall with what conscience good or euill with what faith or infidelitie whether we haue had our conuersation in heauen or vpon earth particular first to himselfe what pietie in his worship thankfulnes for his blessings praier in our needes prouidence in the vse of meanes and without meanes Secondly towards man first all in generall what charitie iustice peace loue in speciall towards superiours what reuerence equalls humilitie inferiours kindnes lastly to thy selfe what modestie temperance sobrietie 4. From the ende Reason God must dispose of all things for himselfe therfore must he know them Rom. 11.36 For in him and through him and for him are all things c. 5. From circumstances of time place and person Reason In that the Lord knoweth not all things as in himselfe from himselfe and working by himselfe and for himselfe but also in that he knoweth euery circumstance of time place person Of place Psal 139. first for the positions of it v. 3. Thou compassest my pathes and my lying downe and art accustomed to all my waies thou holdest me straight behind and before and laiest thy hand vpon me Againe for the place it selfe v. 7. Whether shall I goe from thy spirit or whether shall I flee from thy presence if I ascend into heauen thou art there if I lie down in hell thou art there let me take the wings of the morning and dwell in the vttermost parts of the
discretion and that is in beeing too prompt and readie in blazing abroad the faults of others especially the infirmities of their brethren We see the Lord is silent at the grosse sinnes of prophane hypocrites and therefore shall not we passe by the infirmities of those that ought to be deere vnto vs surely this wil bring vs to communicate with the hypocrite Psal 50.20 Thou sittest and speakest against thy brother and slanderest thy mothers sonne therefore my brethren iudge your selues least the Lord iudge you with the hypocrite for this offence 2. Vse instruction First an admonitian of the wicked to consider with themselues that God will not alwaies be abused he will not alwaies keepe silence for it is but the holding of the tongue so that he is neither dumbe nor deafe but refraineth his lips for a time that a word may be spoken in his place and it shall be a most fearfull one for it shall be in flaming fire rendering vengeance vpon them for the abuse of his mercie Secondly a direction to Gods children to magnifie his maiestie for giuing them so large a time of repentance also to be carefull of the day of our visitation Hebr. 3.13 Exhort one an other daily while it is called to day least any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnes of sinne 3. Vse consolation to all those that lie vnder the burthen of their sinnes for if the Lord spare them that neuer seeke vnto him much more will he spare vs that seeke vnto him earnestly Sect. 3. Of wicked thoughts Concerning wicked thoughts First the originall of them Kinds of thoughts Thoughts haue diuers considerations First they are giuen to God and that is a direct thought whereby God first thinkes himselfe and then in himselfe all things els Gods knowledge and thoughts are direct of himselfe and indirect of all things that are not himselfe the reason because God directly knows no lesse then himselfe and therefore can thinke no lesse then himselfe so that out of himselfe he knowes all things which no creature in heauen or earth is able to doe And this thought may be called a direct thought free from all errour and false hoode because it can no wayes be blinded by any externall or internall obiect seeing it is tyed to none The second thought is indirect when the thing must first be thought and then may it thinke it selfe for as in a glasse first I must see the image of my face and then from that my natural face so in thinking I must first see the image of the thing represented vnto my vnderstanding and then by knowing of it I know my selfe to know this is a reflexed thought agreeing both to angels and men and hence riseth the possibilitie of being deceiued because they may iudge of the obiect amisse and if they doe so then they iudge amisse of them-selues Hence the Angels and Adam ouerthrew themselues the angels by proud thoughts of their estate and in contempt and disdaine to be ministring spirits for the good of man Adam againe was deceiued in neglecting of his true conformitie with Gods lawe but thought it was to limite him from a great good in becomming like God A third thought is when a man will thinke all things out of himselfe and through his owne corruptions and therefore all the beames of Gods wisedome comming through so corrupt a medium must appeare according to his corruption euen as the sunne shining through a glasse windowe which is painted resembles the colour of the glasse And thus man that would needs become like God is in a paritie of contraries like God God thinks himselfe first and then all things out of himselfe so corrupt man will now needs thinke himselfe and so all things out of himself but here lies the difference that God being no thing bur goodnesse it selfe can thinke nothing but good thoughts but man beeing nothing but a lumpe and masse of sinne can think nothing but euil thoughts it is Gods happinesse to thinke himselfe but mans miserie as long as he flickes to his owne thoughts and therefore no maruell if the silence of the Lord take no better impression in his mind but become like his mind a wicked thought Yet obserue this by the way that as the beams of the sunne comming through the glasse are not changed by the glasse into another nature nor lighting on the dunghill polluted by the filthines thereof so the beames of Gods goodnes passing through the soule of a sinner though he abuse them yet still they retaine their goodnesse Hence we learne three kind of thoughts first a direct thought the secōd a reflexed thought the third a corrupt thought which is meant in this place the fountaine of corrupt thoughts is the heart Gen. 6.5 whose conception is in imaginations the verie forming and laying of an accursed birth shewing that the frame of the heart is full of corruption and secondly that his fruits are accursed as the conception is so is the birth for the thoughts comming frō the corrupt frame of the heart cannot be cleane but must needs rellish of their originall and therefore the holy Ghost hath stiled the verie imaginations of the heart to be euil onely and continuall Gen. 8.21 euen from his childhood as soone as we begin to vse reason wee frame euill in our hearts Hence the cause plainely riseth want of all good thoughts or want of all consideration with the concourse of all the contraries want of consideration made the couetous man euen in temporall things destitute of all the comfort of them Isa 44. the cause of all that strange Idolatry is v. 8. because they haue not known nor vnderstood and v. 19. none considereth in his heart neither is there knowledge nor vnderstanding to say how foolish haue I beene to burne halfe of my wood in the fire for to bake my bread and rost my flesh and yet of the residue to make an abhomination to bowe vnto it Ier. 8.4 5 6. There is more consideration in the verie bruit beasts then in Gods Israel and therefore the heart beeing so polluted and destitute of all good consideration how should it possibly prooue otherwise then that man should become full of all euill thoughts And thus much of the fountaine which will better be discouered in the other points For the second The wayes to discerne of mens thoughts there bee two wayes of knowing mens thoughts 1. immediate and direct and this is proper vnto God 1. Kin. 8.39 2. indirect and by meanes For as God onely first knowes himselfe and then all things by himselfe so euery creature euen angels themselues first knowe the thing and then themselues by the thing this makes their knowledge indirect And there be foure meanes to helpe in the knowledge of thoughts First the agreement of natures as spirit with spirit may haue secret familiari●y and a communication of thoughts Thus the deuill beeing a spirit can come more neere our soules
then suggestion by obiects euen to a spirituall communication else tell me how it is possible that the deuil can often informe ignorant persons with the knowledg of tongues and artes which cannot be done by obiects but by familiar conuerse of natures agreeing And this is one dangerous way how the deuill may come to haue knowledge of out thoughts Act. 16. how learned the woman her diuination but from the information of the deuill how made she that confession These men are the seruants of the most high God which shewe vnto vs the way of saluation this was not the holding out of an obiect but effectuall operation vpon the glasse of her mind therefore the deuill is said to worke powerfully in the hearts of vnbeleeuers Working by obiects cannot bee so powerfull for how long might ministers preach the way of saluation before men would confesse as much as this woman hath done how long might a schoolemaster hold the Grammar before the eyes of an vnlearned man before hee would come to vnderstand the tongue or any Artist holde the Art before an ignorant man before he would make a syllogisme c. And therefore necessarily betwixt spirits must there bee a communication Hence the Scripture defines a witch a woman or ignorant person that hath a familiar spirit 1. Sam. 28.7 Seeke me a woman that hath a familiar spirit 2. Meanes is by instinct examples of this 2. Kin. 6.12 5.26 Act. 5. Peter knewe the thoughts of Ananias and Saphyra when Eliah complained 1. King 19.18 Yet will I leaue seuen thousand in Israel c. Rom. 11.4 3. Meanes is reuelation by the Scriptures by it we may know what be the maine thoughts of all men naturally Heb. 4.12 4. By signes as by speech gesture c. Gen. 4.6 Beside these fowre the Papists haue two more 1. Of the Saints in heauen to wit the glasse of the Trinitie but this glasse was neuer reuealed vnto any neither is it possible that it should bee reuealed for whatsoeuer is in God is God himselfe and therefore if wee cannot see God according to his glorious essence and perfection Iob 11.7.8.9 Exod. 33.20 Thou canst not see my face for there shall no man see mee and liue yet may we see Gods backe-parts which are his attributes and his workes which onely are to be seene in this world and in the world to come Therefore a meere dreame of seeing any thing in the glasse of the Trinitie any further then the reuelation of diuine attributes Isaiah the Prophet neuer learned or tanght such a doctrine as this nay he hath taught the contrarie when he saies Abraham knowes vs not and Iohn that euangelicall Prophet called the eagle for soring aloft into deep mysteries and the diuine because hee was most exercised in vnfolding the diuinitie of Christ yet neuer reached so high as this point neither euer acknowledged any such diuinitie nay he hath taught the contrarie in the Reu. How long Lord holy and iust his holines and iustice they know and acknowledge but of the time when the Lord shall manifest his holinesse and iustice they are wholly ignorant which could not haue been if they had beene able to looke into the glasse of the Trinitie Thirdly Iosias 2. Kin. 4.22 was taken away that he might not see the euill to come therefore the Saints in heauen see not the euill dayes here vpon earth In a word against all Papists God as he is one most simple act cannot be apprehended of any creature for God in himselfe is infinite therefore no finite thing can apprehend him Secondly he is most simple therefore one now many acts of vnderstanding cannot apprehend this one therfore is it absolutely impossible to reach vnto God by one act of vnderstanding which is absolutely necessarie to vnderstand God simply one therfore God alone knowes himselfe and his creature according as he hath reuealed himselfe A second the chamber of meditation wherein they put men and bid them meditate and afterward they inquire of them what they thought and so see what they are fit for if bloodie minded then treason if deepe meditations then Iesuites A strologians haue found out a seuenth way of knowing the thoughts and that is by the starres but they are to know that the starres worke nothing further then their proper subiect and naturall qualities and therefore haue no worke vpon the mind wherein the thoughts are framed for corporall things cannot worke vpon spirituall things saue only in the altering of their instruments An 8. meanes is invented which we call physiognomie that can tell mens destines by their hands called palmestrie by the face as the eyes nose for-head or the countenance but this is an idle coniecturing and full of vncertainties and if the heart be deceifull aboue all things surely if we try by the face and hands we shall neuer vnderstand the least of his imaginations therefore I rest content in these meanes as sufficient to wit beside that direct knowledge that the Lord hath mans knowledge or angels by communication spirituall by instinct reuelation of Scripture and signes The hypocrits thoughts are here detected of the Lord The kinds of wicked thoughts that euery man may take notice of them therfore let vs proceed to the third point to see what be the heads of these thoughts They may be reduced to three heads either they concerne God or his neighbour or himselfe God profanation of his ordinances and yet thinke God was like him his neighbours breach of charitie and yet thinke God did approoue of him in these sinnes thirdly against himselfe in conceruing so well of himselfe as against both sobrietie and modestie to pull God into any comparison with him The first point of thoughts concerning God Fowre capitall thoughts against God There are 4. capitall thoughts and damnable imaginations that runne naturally in euerie sinners mind touching God First that there is no God Psal 10.4 and 14.1 Touching this thought fowre things First in whom it is Answ It is in the corrupt minde and imagination of euerie man naturally that comes of Adam this appeares Psal 14.1 for the foole in Scripture is euerre sinner vncalled and vnrepentant Againe Rom. 3. Paul goes about to prooue that all are sinners by proofes out of the Psal 10. 14. thereby intimating that the foole is to be vnderstood of all sinners whosoeuer Obiect But nature tels euerie man that there is a God Sol. These two contrarie thoughts may bee both in the profane mind By nature a man thinkes that there is a God by corrupt nature that there is no God for two contraries may be in one subiect as light and darkenesse cold and heat when neither is in the highest degree But in what manner shall any man deny God by his thoughts Ans First by turning the true God into an Idol of his owne braine and thus euery man doth by nature Cal. 4.8 Eph. 2.12 why so because in heart they did not
him how much more horrible is it to curse the King of kings the God of Gods therefore euerie one must labour to know see and discerne this wretched thought in his heart which wee may doe by Gods grace not onely the damnable actions of our times but the inward thoughts of the spirit within vs. A second thought touching God is that the word of God is foolishnesse this must especially be vnderstood of the Gospel 1. Cor. 1.21 Paul calls it foolishnesse according to the opinion of the world not because it is so in it selfe but in the iudgment and imagination of the Grecian and 2.14 that a man should be saued iustified and sanctified by Christ is foolishnes to the naturall man this also in part is to be vnderstood of the lawe Deut. 29.19 Moses bids the people take heed least when they heare the curses c. where hee intimateth that this euill thought is in mens minds to thinke that the lawe is foolishnesse and therefore not to hearken vnto the curses thereof Now this is a dangerous thought as appeares by the fruit 1. Hence riseth that deuillish opinion that religion is but a policie to keepe men in awe from treasons and rebellions Secondly hence springeth all apostasie and all departing from the faith Gal. 1. the Galatians were a worthy Church of God planted by Paul yet there he saith that some of them were departed from the truth the reason is because they thought the word of God to be foolishnes Many in the East countries and in Asia where the Gospel was planted by the Apostles by this damnable thought fell first into the herefie of Arrius and many 600. yeares after Arrius departed to the religion of Mahomet In the West church in Europe and Italio the Gospel was planted by the Apostles yet afterward fell to Papistry and about 600. yeares after Arrius death Papisme ouerspread all Europe except in some little parts of Greece and so hath raigned till this day the reason is plaine in euery mans heart lieth this corruption to thinke the word of God foolishnesse and hereupon men by nature can embrace any religion but the truth And so in England let a man broach an herefie it shall not onely at the first but afterward haue strong and stout patrones When the family tooke shipping and came out of Germany into England though it were but a very brutish herefie yet it was much broached and had beene more had it not beene repressed by the preaching of the word and good order of godly Magistrates The cause why men are so readie to entertaine a schisme or heresie is because mans heart by nature is full of blindnes and error and thinkes the Gospel foolishnesse and madnes Examination of our hearts touching this thought beeing seriously performed we shall find it to raigne in high degree for we are all content to come to the assemblies where Gods name is worshipped and submit bur selues to be taught we are content to heare the preaching of the word and herein our personall sinnes displayed the terrible curses of the lawe denounced against them viz. iudgements in this life in death and at the day of iudgement and yet we tremble not at all this our hearts are not amased and affrighted at these thunderbolts of Gods curses due to our sinnes If a man in the streets crie fire our hearts will be astonished but when the fire of heauen kindled by the breath of the liuing God is cried against our sinnes we are not mooued and why surely our hearts are forestalled with a false imagination that the word of God is foolishnes therefore that his plagues and threatnings and curses are nothing Againe when we heare in the Gospel of the pardon of our sinnes by Christ and life euerlasting repentance the kingdome of God few learne this doctrine repent and enter into it because their mind is forestalled and wholly possessed with this false imagination Psa 126. the Israelites deliuerance was a dreame much more then is our spirituall deliuerance from Sathan and no maruell for the Gospel is as farre contrarie to mans reason as light to darknes for that Christ by bearing death and the curse of God for sin should thereby free men from death and the curse is quite contrarie to naturall reason Vse 2. If this be so that all men naturally imagine the word to be foolishnesse then must we followe Pauls rule 1. Cor. 3.18 If any man will be wise let him become a foole first we must renounce our owne naturall reason denie our selues our own iudgement put out the eies of our naturall vnderstanding and suffer our selues wholly to bee guided by the doctrine of the Gospel of Christ Secondly we must all pray with Dauid that God would open our eyes that we may see his wil and vnderstand the words of his law because our reason and imagination is flat contrarie to the Gospel From this second thought ariseth an other viz. that if the word be foolishnes then I will performe no obedience to the word of God That this is mans thought naturally I prooue it thus Iob 21.14 he brings in the sinner saying depart c. there is none so wicked to say so in word but it is their hearts imagination and affection and he that purposeth to walke after his owne wayes he it is that saith who is the Lord that wee should worship him It is a disgrace for me to bee the seruant of God I will not doe it therefore depart from me O God Ier. 6.16 they say so in the purpose of their hearts Luk. 19.14 which place as it is meant of the Iewes so of all other men in the world by nature that are impenitent sinners for so long as a man goes on without repentance hee carries a purpose in heart to liue in his sinnes and so saith in heart I will not beare the yoake of Christ I will be none of his subiects he shall not raigne ouer me Come to an adultreer drunkard c. tell him of his sinne he will straight swell like a toade and shewe the malice of his heart to him that reprooues him reason because he meaneth to liue in his sinnes c. Examination of our hearts touching this thought Most will say they defie and abhorre all such wicked thoughts of not seruing God but after examination had it will be found that it raignes in our hearts We can bee content to heare the word receiue the Sacraments which are the pledges of Gods sauour and mercie in Christ and wee are content to looke for saluation in Christ but what is the cause why after all this there is so little obedience so litle knowledge and conscience so little mercy and compassion so little iustice and loue in our callings surely this because our hearts are wicked deceitful full of guile and what is this guile I will not obey the waies of God Vse If this be the well wished thought of mens hearts then we
insight of the mercies of God in his Christ which are the onely ioy and confidence of our soules And thus much of Gods mercie CHAP. VI. Of Gods Iustice in generall THe second part of Gods holines Iustice is his Iustice contained in the consequent part of the sentence and is distributed into two adiuncts Power and Order Power in that God will be sure to iudge and Order in that he will take no hastie courses whereby all should be done in confusion Excellent is our God for first beeing a God almightie he is able to doe what he pleaseth with his creature but secondly obserue his order and euery one shall confesse that he is a God of excellent wisdome for things done in good method stoppe the mouthes of all Two men that put on armour and like bulls of Basan push the one at the other are not discommended for their power and strength but that beeing men they wanted wisdome to vse their strength aright and that is that they kept no good order and therefore such execution of iustice as this is condemned so that if our gratious King had no more arguments but this one in forbidding all Duells it were sufficient for graunt the exercise the power of iustice yet where is this order and good method that the Lord would haue obserued of all his seruants Aristotle hath vnfolded vnto vs in his Ethicks fiue intellectuall vertues which if they concurre not in all our actions they will prooue exceedingly defectiue First intelligence which giues information of the cause and the reasons of it secondly science which disposeth of euery necessarie truth in those reasons so that thereby he shall iudge his cause to be good or bad for vt intellectus habet se ad verum ad falsum sic voluntas ad bonum vel malum the vnderstanding goes before and iudges of truth and falshood and the will follows after and embraceth good or euill the third vertue is sapience seeing how he may diduct and draw out of the truths of science other necessarie truths which could not appeare but by the discourse of this third vertue the fourth prudence which is the fourth perfection of our actions when we doe all the former in good and comely order the fifth Art the highest degree of perfection when I doe all nimbly and very skilfully in knowing in iudging discoursing applying These men may haue the three first vertues but they are altogether destitute of the two last they may know that their cause is good and that both of them hath reason to complaine of iniurie for braue spirits can not rest without mutuall prouocations secondly they may know that disgrace of their persons is their shame and the losse of their good name which they esteem better then the most pretious oyntment that they inioy to be such an iniurie that it can deserue no lesse then some kind of trial and so in the third place discourse of it and conclude that therefore they will haue iustice executed that they may bee reuenged for their wrongs but alas when they come to apply all this their former knowledge they want prudence and so leap ouer the lists of iustice and breaking good order spoile the exercise of all artes For first they breake the rule of diuinitie in sinning against God by murther the rule of ethickes for fortitude and manhood is abused the rule of politickes for the common-wealth is iniured by losse of such persons as might haue been his pillars the rule of nature complaines that would haue himselfe preserued in all his subiects Indeed special nature for the good of generall nature will seeme to crosse himselfe the fire will descend and the water will ascend before they will suffer such a stranger as vacuitie to possesse any place among them So indeed nature would neuerbe offended if they would shed their blood for their countrie Nature will make the hand to offer it selfe to be cut off before the head receiue the blowe because nature is wise in order knowing that the head is to be preferred before any other member because it hath in it the greatest part of life The people can tell Dauid thou art better then ten thousand of vs and therefore no matter if we be all cut off to saue thy life Blessed is that kingdome that is not onely powerfull in iustice but that keeps good order in the execution Indeed many may say I will reprooue thee but alas how few say I will set thine offences in order before thee Many lie in prison for a sic volo sic iubeo stat pro ratione voluntas authoritie vrged by violence of passion spoyles all Magistrates Aristotle saies that the law ought to be like the primum sensorium which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the law must sauour of no qualitie but his owne for then would it neuer iudge aright And as the lawe is so ought the Magistrate to be voide of all his owne passions let the law rule him as he meanes to rule the people and then should all be done in good order and we should not heare these lamentable complaints I am in prison but I knowe not for what cause and the Magistrate saies I shall lie there vntil my bones rotte For the mercies of God let vs be mooued betimes as well to set mens sinnes in order as vse our power in reproouing of them lest the Lord come and handle vs most roughly in the power of his iustice for this most hainous offence committed in diuiding iustice against it selfe So then the distribution lets vs see that the power of God is neuer without his wisedome but that the Lord workes in all things intelligenter scienter sapienter prudenter artificiosè plainly truely wisely prudently and skilfully The power of Gods iustice is laid downe in these words I will reprooue thee first the cause I the Lord which in the first verse styled my selfe the God of Gods euen the Lord from heauen in comparison aboue all and in dominion ouer all without comparison therefore a mightie iustice that hath so great a cause Secondly from the species or kind of it a reproofe therfore vindicatiue and reuenging iustice stronger then remuneratiue or rewarding iustice for here appeares ira furor excandescentia anger a displeasure of short continuance furie a short madnesse the third an inueterate hatred that alwaies smoakes against sinne that kindles hote coales hinc ira ex candore fierinesse full of brightnesse Thirdly the obiect thee the sinne and the person I am out of loue with both and therefore will I discouer thy sinne which I know thou aboue all men mayest not endure to heare of Secondly what thou thy selfe art both in deceiuing and beeing deceiued shal plainly be knowne therefore most powerfull iustice whose cause is Iehouah nature vengeance obiect the most secret sinne and most deceitfull person free from all the iudgement seats of men Sect. 1. Of the cause Observ 1. The great God
may see what a wonderful hard thing it is to conuert a sinner a man may be a long hearer of the word and by hearing his mind may be furnished with knowledge with a good conceit with verie good vtterance so that he may teach and publish the Gospel and conceiue prayer and that verie well and yet this damnable imagination may lurke in his heart therfore he may not onely hereby deceiue others but euen his owne soule for so long as this thought is in his soule hee is voide of true repentance for where true repentance is there is a resolution to please God in all things Third thought touching God It is a vaine thing to worship God Iob. 21.15 he speakes it not with the mouth but in the heart Matth. 3.14 Nay Dauid Psal 73.13 had this thought in his heart now I see I am deceiued In vaine haue I worshipped God but yet this thought comes not into mans heart at all times but vpon occasion as when the godly seeth the wicked flourish Examination This thought takes great place in our hearts for goe to the poore mans family he works and toyles all day to get riches but neuer worshippeth God or calls vpon his name why so because the heart saith so I may haue wealth it is no matter whether I serue God or no. Come to the rich mans house there is nothing but eating drinking sleeping gaming and the like why so because his heart saith all is wel so I may haue my pleasure it is enough for me it is no matter for Gods worship The ordinarie man saith he will do as his ancestors haue done he hath as good a faith as the best hee will not come to sermons for they that haunt sermons most are vsually the worst disposed persons and none so bad as they If a man professe Christ in sinceritie hee is a by-word and a mocke to men Nay almost all men betake themselues to will-worship not onely the Papist Iewe and Turke but the common Protestant he comes to Church and serues God by mumbling ouer the Creede the Lords praier and the tenne Commandements thereby thinking to serue God as well as the best the cause is because this imagination taking place in the heart hindereth all good things in vs. Fourth thought is the thought of distrust and it runnes much in the mind of man God doth not regard me God will not helpe me God will not be mercifull vnto me This made an entrance to the fall of our first parents for first Eue lookes vpon the fruit and sees it to be very beautifull 2. There enters into her heart a thought of distrust viz. It may be there is no such danger in eating this fruit as the Lord faith there is and it may be God doth not regard vs. When the Israclites murmured at the waters of strife Numb 20.12 Moses was barred the Land of Canaan for this distrust for when hee smote the rocke as God had commanded him he thought in his heart God will not giue water though I strike the rocke Dauid Psa 31.23 Psal 78.2 is full of spirituall confidence but in an other place saies I thought all men were lyers Samuel the Lords Prophet hath deceiued mee now I see that Samuel spake not by the spirit of God as aprophet but by his own sense lyingly when he said that I should come vnto the kingdome of Israel Thus Dauid did not openly distrust God but Samuel as if he had not knowne Gods will but had passed beyond the bonds of his calling Matth. 14. why did Peter sinke when Christ bad him come to him on the water because his minde was troubled with the thought of distrust it may be God will not helpe me now walking vpon the sea Christ reprooues this why didst thou doubt Touching this thought two points 1. the time when it was in mans thought 2. the danger of it For the first it takes place in the time of danger temptation aduersitie sickenesse and death it troubled Iob in his affliction Iob 16. when he said God hateth me hee is myne enemie hee makes me a but Psalm 77.9 It may be God will no more haue mercie vpon me In peace Sathan tempts by presumption The dangers hereof 1. horrors of conscience and all feares and astonishments of the heart which come when the minde distrusteth 2. Desperation whereby men confidently auouch that God hath forsaken them and that he hath cut them off and that nothing remaines but death this is often in the heart of repentant sinners 3. It weakens the foundation of our saluation which stands in the certentie of Gods promises and thus it doth by weakning faith for by faith we beleeue that God is our Sauiour and that Christ shed his blood for vs in particular now this thought is cleane contrarie to faith as fire to water and where distrust preuailes there shall be no faith hence appeareth the great danger We must take heede of it Remedie and vse all meanes in the daies of our peace that it raignes not in our hearts in the daies of trouble The meanes are three 1. the preaching of the Gospel this is the especiall meanes to applie Gods mercie truly to our soules and consciences therefore a soueraigne remedie against this thought for the speach of the minister is as though God himselfe spake by vertue of the very ordinance of God if God should say to me in his owne voice my mercie belongs to the beleeuer I would surely beleeue and not doubt now whē the minister saith beleeue in God his mercie belongs to thee it is by the power of this ordinance of God as if God himselfe had said it 2. Baptisme if a Prince shall giue a man a pardon and put his name and seale to it he will neuer doubt but assure himselfe of pardon now when a man is baptized God puts the parties name in the pardon and his owne seale to the pardon of his sinnes in Christ 3. The Lords Supper wherein the bread and wine are particular pledges of Gods particular mercie to euery particular receiuer and therefore it is that euery particular man receiues for himselfe in speciall II. Point Of euill thoughts touching our neighbour To finde out what these be we must haue recourse to the commandements especially to the second Table These beeing spirituall condemne not onely wicked actions words and affections but also the wicked thoughts of man against man And they are of two sorts in the second table First thoughts without consent Secondly with consent Without consent hath the first motions and inclinations in the mind forbidden in the tenth commādement Thoughts with consent are those wherein the wil consenteth with the first motions these as they are conceiued so are they practised and are forbidden in the 6.7.8.9 Commandements 1. Thought is of dishonour against the 5. commandement the 2. of murther against the 6. the 3. of Adulterie against the 7. the 4. of theft against