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A77708 The good old way: or, Perkins improved, in a plain exposition and sound application of those depths of divinity briefly comprized in his Six principles: / by that late painful and faithful minister of the Gospel, Charles Broxolme in Darby-shire. Broxholme, Charles. 1653 (1653) Wing B5217; Thomason E1483_1; ESTC R208756 186,652 446

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and righteousness but a corrupt inclination in every faculty of soul and member of body Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth even from the very time he begins to conceive 4. By Actual transgression And thus we see how many wayes the natural man is a sinner We now come to the Application Vse 1. For Confutation To confute the Papists who affirme that the Virgin M. was without sin free from original sin and from sin all her life long but this were to make her equal to Christ as he was man and this is to cross the Apostles allegation There is none righteous no not one to wit by nature meer man or meer woman since Adams fall and that the V. M. was not exempted in this kind is evident by our Saviours reproving of her John 2.4 When she told him of a want of Wine at the Marriage-feast in Cana Woman what have I to do with thee my hour is not yet come Had she not been in fault he would not so have check'd her And further observe what she her self saith Luke 1.47 My spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour If she were free from sin what needed she a Saviour Vse 2. To reprove divers men and women The most will confess they are sinners and great sinners but with so little knowledge as when they became sinners or how or wherein or what sinne is they cannot tell As if a Debtor should acknowledge himself to be indebted to such a man and yet he cannot tell when wherein or how he became indebted to him were not this an ignorant acknowledgement And likewise with so little humility ' the most men and women will confess they are sinners but with so little sense and feeling with so little griefe and shame not considering how great an evil sinne is how odious it makes a man or a woman to God how it layes them open to Gods wrath here and hereafter The Leper we know in the time of the old Testament must be shut up must not converse with men but no Leper so odious to mans eye as sinne makes a man odious to God And no man indebted be it never so much is so in danger of an Arrest by man as the unhumbled sinner is in danger of Gods wrath to Arrest him every hour and to presse him down to the pit of Hell where his worme shall never dye and his fire never goes out Mark 9.44 Vse 3. To awaken the Natural man he being a sinner and a sinner so many wayes as we have heard Ephesians 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand up from the Dead and Christ shall give thee light Would any man unlesse he were dead drunk lay himselfe downe to sleep on the top of the Mast the Ship being under-saile in the midst of the Sea Or will any man but a mad man wittingly and willingly lye sleeping in a house that is on fire over his head O that the Natural man would take notice of his wretched condition that so he might be dejected and cast down crying out of himselfe as the Leper in the Law Leviticus 13.45 Vnclean Vnclean Crying to God with the Publican Luke 18.13 Lord be merciful to me a sinner And with more words then so for we must know we have there but the abridgement of the Publicanes Prayer and crying to the Minister of God with them in the Acts Chapter 2d. Verse 37. Men and Brethren what shall we do Now that men and women would labour for a fight and sense of their Natural misery consider 1. Some Motives 2. Some Means Motive 1. Otherwise they can never confesse their sinnes heartily What is the reason men and women confesse their sinnes so generall and carelesly but because they have not a sight and sense of their natural misery Hosea 14.2 Take with you words and turne to the Lord to wit in the way of confession saith the Prophet to the Israelites But in the first Verse they must before consider how they had fallen by their iniquity how sinful they were Motive 2. Without sight and sense of misery men and women are not capable of true Comfort and Consolation Before true Consolation goes hearty humiliation Luke 5.31 They that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick 2 Corinthians Chapter 7. Verse 6. the Apostle Paul stiles the Lord the Comforter of the abject Motive 3. Observe the Promise made to the truly dejected Matthew 5.4 Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Isaiah 37.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth Eternity whose Name is Holy I dwell in the High and Holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones We come to the Meanes to bring men and women to a sight and sence of their misery Means 1. To look themselves throughly in the glass of the Law Rom. 3.20 By the Law comes the knowledg of sin 2 By applying to themselves the curses which are without partiality threatned to every transgressor of the Law for every transgression as Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them 3. Consider of how pure eyes the Lord is how he hates iniquity and suffers no transgression to pass unpunished but doth either punish it in the party offending or hath already punished it in the Mediator Vse 4 To justifie the Lord in regard of the judgments he sends upon the world All men and women being corrupted with sin and so many wayes as we have heard no marvel then that the world is so plagued In the seventh of Genesis we read how the Lord destroyed the world by water but see the sixth Chapter from the first verse unto the fourteenth The world was exceedingly corrupted with sin We know what the Psalmist saith Psal 107.17 Fools by reason of their sins and because of their iniquities are afflicted And the Church Lament 5.16 17. Wo unto us that we have sinned for this our heart is faint and for these things our eyes wax dim Nay the very young Infant that is taken away by death the Lord is not unjust in that proceeding even the young Infant being a sinner three wayes at the least by Participation by Imputation and by natural Corruption When judgments are upon us we must not murmur and repine but consider as Solomon doth advise Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider that is consider for what and then we shall justifie him from whom the affliction comes Vse 5. For comfort and consolation to all true Converts It is true they are sinners but the Lord sees no sin in them which he will impute unto them It is true they are sinners but not such as he that was blind speaks of John 9.31 We know that God heareth not sinners for Prov. 15.8 The prayer of the upright
poor soul then of an earthly Kingdome to be bestowed upon thee 3. If thou thinkest those that have true Peace of conscience and Joy in the Holy Ghost to be the happiest people under the sun 4. If thou tremble at the Word and honour the very feet of those Instruments that bring glad tydings of peace to such as thy self to wit to wounded consciences 5. If thou send up strong and uncessant cryes to God for the assurance of his favour in and through Christ 6. If thou dost pity and compassionate all such as have broken and bruised hearts Vse 3. To exhort all such as for the present have not contrite and humble spirits to labour and endeavour for that disposition Motives 1. The contrary disposition to wit hardness of heart and impenitency is a great sin and a grievous judgement A great sin Rom. 2.5 But thou after thy hard and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath A grievous judgement Exod. 9.12 And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh See John 12.40 Now there be two kinds of hardness of heart 1. Sensible that which is perceived and felt and this may be in the godly as Isa 63.17 Oh Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and heardened our hearts from thy fear 2. Insensible that which is not perceived and felt and this indeed is a great sin and plague 2. The second Motive The sooner we labour after this disposition the more easily in likelyhood we shall attain unto it when a heart hath been long hardened with the deceitfulness of sin it will not easily become a contrite and humble heart and therefore Psalm 95.7.8 To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts So Joel 2.12 13. Besides it may be hereafter we shall not enjoy the like means this way we do for the present 3. Without this contrite and humble spirit according to the Doctrine we cannot partake of Christ and his benefits this is the Messenger that Christ ever sends before him unto those of years for we do not now speak of Infants and wo be unto us if we do not partake of Christ and his benefits it had been good for us we had never been born 4. Whosoever hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly partake of Christ and his benefits Now this may greatly induce us to labour for this disposition when the issue undoubtedly shall be so good and so happy Suppose this business be difficult and tedious why yet such an issue must needs put us on in it These are the Motives Now we proceed to the Means of a contrite and humble spirit Means 1. Prayer to God in the best manner we can it is he that must bruise our hard and stony hearts Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh to wit a contrite and humble heart 2. Because the Lord doth many times make use of afflictions and judgements for the bruising of mens hearts when he sends any great affliction upon us let us not stand out against him but joyn with him when he goes a bout to humble us let us labour to humble our selves as Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.6 trembling and astonished said Lord what wilt thou have me to do When the hand of God is upon us let us not stand murmuring and repining but fall to examination of our Spiritual estates and cases as the Wise-man adviseth us Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider 3. Constant dependance upon the Ministry of the Word Jer. 23.29 Is not my word like as a fire saith the Lord and like a hammer that breaketh the Rocks in pieces Now we are to know that the Law hath a stroke in this work and so the Gospel 1. The Law by revealing of sin and the woful consequents of it and so the Spirit of God co-operating there is caused a servile fear and trembling a kind of contrition and humiliation which the Apostle Rom. 8.15 cals the spirit of bondage causing fear when the Spirit of God puts an edge upon the Law puts a sword into the hand of the Law to prick and wound the heart and to restrain it in the wayes of sin for fear of punishment Many a man and woman hears the Law opened and the threatnings of it thundringly denounced but stir not are little moved but when once the Lord by his Spirit puts an edge upon the Law then the stoutest heart trembles and quakes Now that the Law may have a kindly work upon us 1. By the Law let us labour for a distinct knowledge of sin 2. Rightly to understand what the Curse is which the Law threatneth unto sin and sinners 3. Examine our selves how guilty we are of that which the Law threatens the Curse unto to wit sin 4. Finding our selves guilty to labour our hearts to a deep contrition and humiliation Now as we have heard before as the Law hath a stroke in this work why so the Gospel more and more melting the heart by discovering Christ whom the sinner hath pierced by his sins and by supporting the heart by a secret hope of mercy and possibility of help in and through Christ even as Jonah Chap. 2. verse 4. Then I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look again toward thy holy Temple Or as the Prodigal Son Luke 15.17 18. And when he came to himself he said How many hired servants of my fathers house have bread enough and to spare and I perish with hunger I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him father I have sinned against heaven and before thee c. Now after the Law hath humbled us and the Gospel conveyed this glimpse of hope into our hearts it must be nourished and cherished 1. By considering of the Lords Infinite and Almighty Power how he is able more and more to bruise our souls to make us more and more capable of Christ and so to bring Christ nearer unto us that we may partake of him and his benefits Luke 1.37 With God nothing shall be unpossible And Matth. 3.9 God is able of stones to raise up children unto Abraham 2. The freeness of Gods mercy must be considered of he requires nothing of thee to procure this mercy but shewes mercy because he will shew mercy Suppose thou hast never so many exceptions to thy self why yet thou belonging unto him and his mercy being a free mercy he will proceed with thee until he hath made thee capable of Christ and bestowed Christ upon thee and his benefits Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh And Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake 3. For supporting of this hope consider we of the riches of Gods mercy unto the proper objects of mercy Contrite and Humble men