Selected quad for the lemma: knowledge_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
knowledge_n jesus_n light_n shine_v 5,880 5 9.7269 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A91363 A little cabinet richly stored with all sorts of heavenly varieties, and soul-reviving influences. Wherein there is a remedy for every malady, viz. milk for babes, and meat for strong men, and the ready way for both to obtain and retain assurance of salvation: being an abridgement of the sum and substance of the true Christian religion; wherein the cause of our salvation, the way, the guide, the rule, the evidence, the seals, &c. and the connection of these points together, and dependancy of them one upon another: this I have endeavoured to do orderly, exactly, methodically, with much plainness and clearness. / By Robert Purnell. Purnell, Robert, d. 1666. 1657 (1657) Wing P4237; Thomason E1575_1; ESTC R209217 254,040 517

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

to God but the knowledge that is in the brain is notional and neither subdues sin nor Satan 2. Spiritual experimental knowledge is a free gift of God 2 Cor. 4. 6. God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give in the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ This Divine light doth reach the heart as well as the head 3. True knowledge is a transforming knowledge 2 Cor. 3. 18. Like as the child receiveth from the parents member for member limb for limb or as the paper from the press receiveth letter for letter or as the face in a glass answereth to the face so the beams of Divine knowledge shining into the soul stamps the lively Image of Christ upon the soul and makes him put on the Lord Jesus and resemble him God will own no knowledge at last but that which leaves the stamp of Christ the print of Christ and the Image of Christ upon the heart 4. True saving knowledge doth spring from a spiritual sense and taste of holy and heavenly things this is that experimental knowledge that will turn to account at last the other litteral knowledge will only encrease our guilt and torment as it did the Scribes and Pharisees 5. True knowledge circumciseth the heart and dissolveth the dominion of sin Ephes 4. 22. The root of lust is error when Christ takes away the foundation the lust dyes and the Devils work is dissolved First the lust of the eye Christ informs the soul that there is no such excellency in riches but that they are dross and dung and therefore why should the eye or heart be set upon them So this lust is dissolved there is an end of it 6. True knowledge doth indear Christ and the things of Christ to the soul Cant. 2. 5. I am sick of love I cannot live in my self I can live only in Christ who is my life Galatians 6. 14. God forbid that I should glory in any thing but Christ 7. True knowledge is soul-humbling soul-abasing knowledge John said I am not worthy to loose his shoo Peter said depart from me I am a sinful man Abraham said he was but dust and ashes Gen. 18. 27. Jacob said he was less then the least of all his mercies Gen. 32. 10. David said he was a worm and no man Psalm 22. 2. Job abhorred himself in dust and ashes Job 42. 1 2 c. 8. True knowledge is alwaies attended with holy endeavours and heavenly desires after a further knowledge of God Prov. 18. 15. This knowledge of God goes before trusting in God Psalm 9. 10. They that know thy name will put their trust in thee There may be knowledge without grace but not grace without knowledge How one Believer differs from another in knowledge AS saving knowledge is a free gift of God so he gives to some more and to others less according to the measure of the gift of Christ and though it be freely given yet the Lord doth hand it to us and work it in us in the use of means age and time and communion and study and use of means and experience do raise the apprehension and knowledge to far more degrees and strength then at the first whereas before they saw dimly at length they rise by degrees to a more perfect light of the same truths and to a more full aad enlarged apprehension of other truths which he was ignorant of before even in this doth one believer differ from another Faith is the eye of the soul and knowledge the ground of Faith for believing is not rooted in ignorance but in light now every believer hath not so full and distinct a knowledge as another there are several promises and in them several parts and degrees Now all Christians have not been so long acquainted with the word as to know all the good which doth concern them Of what a large and vast measure of knowledge a man may attain unto and yet be without this saving knowledge HE may speak with the tongue of men and Angels and yet be as sounding brass or a tinckling Symbal as in 1 Cor. 13. 1. Again he may attain to the natural knowledge of all natural things and speak eloquently and distinctly and in many things truly he may be well skilled in Logick Rethorick Phylosophy and have the letter of the Scripture at his fingers ends and yet be an ignorant man in the knowledge of God and in the account of Christ viz. 1. A man may have a common knowledge of Christ and yet be without a spiritual knowledge of Christ he may gather together a great deal of notional knowledge of Christ and have much natural knowledge by the works of God by hearing reading conferring or the like and yet be ignorant of the Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity 2. He may attain to vast and great measures of notional and yet be without an experimental knowledge of Christ how abundantly is this proved in our dayes in all places c. 3. An unregenerate man may attain to a contemplative or speculative knowledge of Christ and yet want and be altogether without a spiritual expemental knowledge he may know Christ as a man knows his neighbour but now a believer knows Christ as a wife knows her husband a natural mans knowledge is like the Moon it hath light but no heat but a spiritual mans knowledge is like the Sun that hath heat as well as light 4. A natural man may have much knowledge but he is a stranger to an appropriating knowledge of Christ he doth not know Christ to be his Christ now in this sense a man may be a great knowing man and yet not know Jesus Christ 5. He is without a practical knowledge of Jesus Christ he may know much but do but little Tit. 1. 16. in their words they profess to know him but in their works they deny him though they know God yet they glorifie not him as God Now put all these together and they speak out with open mouth that a man may attain to a great measure of knowledge and yet be in the account of God in the account of Christ in the account of Christians an ignorant man he is without spiritual and experimental knowledge without an affective and apprehensive knowledge and without an appropriating and practical knowledge I shall close up this head with a few cautions and considerations 1. Take this for a truth that in a Scripture account to complain of ignorance is a good degree of knowledge Prov. 30. 2. And I have not the knowledge of a man c. 2. Take this also for a truth that in Gods account he knows most that doth most Psal 111. 10. A good understanding have all they that do his commandments God doth not measure our knowledge by our questions and disputes but by our practices as in Jer. 22. 16. He judgeth the cause of the poor and needy was
that against fundamentals of Faith Christ and his Offices those are fundamentals 1 Cor. 3. 11. Eph. 2. 20. yet the Apostles as we said before till the sending of the Holy Ghost upon them were in an errour about Christs Kingly Office taking it to be temporal rather then spiritual Justification by Faith alone is a Fundamental Rom. 3. 28. Gal. 4. 5 6. yet for a season as before the Galatians lay under that gross errour of that necessity of Legal works with Faith But it is a dangerous thing for any of the Lords people to fall into such gross errours hereby their minds are darkened Eph. 4. 18. and corrupted 2 Cor. 11. 3. bewitched Gal. 3. 1. Now consider how grievous it is to have a mans mind corrupted if the mind be darkness how great is that darkness c. Oh here is the love of God in restoring his people again into the truth and yet for all this he calls them the children of truth 1 Joh. 3. 19. they can do nothing against the truth but for the truth 2 Cor. 13. 8. their loins are girt about with truth Eph. 6. 14. whereas carnal men remain in errour and are men 1. Of corrupt minds destitute of the truth 2 Tim. 3. 8. and turning away their ears from the truth 2 Tim. 4. 4. 2. Or they hold the truth in unrighteousness Rom. 1. 18. 3. Or they are not able to come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3. 7. 4. They have no love to the truth 2 Thes 2. 9 10. and no wonder if such persons be unstable and led away with the errour of the wicked c. Of Knowledge first of God secondly of our selves the properties of it and means of attaining it and the benefits we have by it Of Knowledge TO lack knowledge is a very evil thing to scorn to learn is worse and to hate knowledge is worst of all Hos 6. 6. I desired the Knowledge of God more then burnt offerings Hos 4. 1. The Lord hath a controversie with the inhabitants of the Land because there is no knowledge of God in the Land 1 Cor. 15. Some have not the knowledge of God I speak this to your shame Hos 4. 6. My people perish for want of knowledge Prov. 1. 22. How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity and fools hate knowledge Prov. 2. 16. When wisdom entereth into thy heart and knowledge is pleasant to thy soul discretion shall preserve thee understanding shall keep thee Eph. 2. 17. Therefore be ye not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is What shall I say more knowledge is that understanding which we have both of God and his Word and Will and of our own selves it is a store-house of all wisdom and the beginning of salvation it is a spiritual vertue to speak little and well words are the shadow of works and works the substance of words much talking and little practising is like to an empty vessel that doth give a greater sound then they that be full much knowledge little practise is like a great tree that makes a large shew but bears no fruit To close up this first of knowledge in general let me tell the Reader that a man without knowledge is as a workman without hands or as a painter without eyes or as a traveller without legs or as a ship without sails or as a bird without wings or as a body without a soul there is a threefold knowledge or illumination First general and natural the light of Reason Secondly spiritual and supernatural Thirdly there is a knowledge of middle illumination betwixt these two more then meerly natural but less then truly supernatural Of the knowledge of God SOme have not the knowledge of God saith the Lord by his servant Paul I speak this to your shame 1 Cor. 15 c. Again another Scripture saith This is life eternal to know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent John 17. 3. Again it is death to be ignorant of him for he will come in flaming fire rendering vengeance on them that know him not 2 Thes 1. 8. So that all regenerate persons have true knowledge though it be an imperfect knowledge they do truly though weakly know God as doth appear in these Scriptures Jer. 31. 34. John 6. 45. 1 Cor. 13. 9 12. 1 John 5. 20. In a word to know him is to know all things for they have their being from him to be ignorant of him is to be ignorant of all things So that such an one doth know nothing as he ought to know Let the reader turn to the first page of this book where I have laid down as much as I understand in this mysterie Of the knowledge of our selves IT is a most excellent thing for a Christian to know himself and then at the best he would see himself to be but vanity and an unpofitable servant to God and so begin to cease from man whose breath is in his nostrils Oh what are the best of men they have no better lodging for his noble soul then a cottage of clay and that so frail and crasie as were it not once or twice a day dawbed over it would fall about his ears and wheresoever he goes he is forced to carry this clog this clay Whereas Angels free from these shakels of flesh can move from heaven to earth even as swiftly as can our very thoughts Nay take the best piece in man his soul search and see his understanding is full of darkness blindness and vanity Psal 94. 11. 1 Cor. 2. 24. Unteachableness and incredulity See 2 Cor. 4. 4. Secondly the will of man is wholly depraved as being contrary to God his will word and spirit in all things it will not depend nor wait on God it is unconstant in good resolutions it is very apt to disobey the will of God as we may see in Father Adam Thirdly as for the memory that is also full of corruption that it will forget the things that it should remember and remember the things it should forget it will hold fast trifles and let go matters of moment Fourthly The Conscience that is wholly corrupted that is without feeling whereas it should excuse or accuse It doth abuse and pervert the light it hath by making great sins small and small sins great Fifthly Our affections they are also corrupted they come as a tempest and carry us away either to make us over-love or over-grieve or over-joy and so we hate our brother whom we should love and love our lusts whom we should hate What shall I say our understanding is darkened our will depraved our affections disordered our memory misimployed and conscience benummed c. We were conceived in sin brought forth in iniquity we have lived in vanity and without the riches of Gods grace we shall dye in misery The Charecters or Properties of true knowledge 1. THE knowledge that is from God subjects the soul