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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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before he knew it to be his own case could say As sure as the Lord lives he shall dye that hath done this and Nathan said Thou art the man c. And this sin so provoked the Lord that the sword never departed from his house and his repentance could not cut off that part of the sentence but his own son Absalom must defile his Fathers Wives in the sight of all Israel Hence it was also that our Lord answering Pilate aggravated the sin of Judas Joh. 19.11 He that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sin hee knew he delivered an innocent to death he was warned he was a friend and familiar his sin was a great sin and so great as God took him in hand and laid the burden of it presently upon his soul and hee found no ease but in hanging himself 2 Satan knows these sins more trouble and wound the Conscience than other because this circumstance lays the sin directly upon our selves and takes away excuses God was not wanting to prevent such a man cannot say he could not remedy it no good means was wanting to him only hee was wanting to himself and the means And thus the Lord reasoneth with his people to bring them to the sight of their own corruption Isa 5.4 What could I doe more to my vineyard which I have not done 3 Satan knows that to sin against means is a compound sin and like to a complicated disease hardly cured for besides the sin to which a man is drawn there is 1 A neglect of a mans own good 2 There is a base estimation of Gods great kindness in offering the means of our good and consequently God himself is despised in the means yea there is an unthankful rejecting of grace offered And what is further to bee done but to leave such a one as remediless 4 Well knows Satan that God hath denounced and executed greater plagues upon these sins than other where means were not present He punished Adultery in the Law with death not simple fornication because one had means to avoyd the sin the other wanted it So for Theft Prov. 6.30 If a Thief steal to satisfie his soul because he is hungry men despise him not a restitution may be made he must not dye comparing the sin with adultery in which no restitution must bee made they must dye the death Capernaum which was lifted up to heaven in respect of the means of Salvation neglecting those stairs cast her self lower into hell than 7 yrus and Sidon which never had the like things done in them Nay God whose nature is to bee merciful in this case takes pleasure and delights himself in severity Prov. 1.22 Yee have despised all my counsel and set my correction at nought therefore will I laugh in your destruction This doctrin is of great use through the whole life Vse 1. If where more means be to hinder sin there sin is aggravated how heavie be the sins of our age who in the means are lifted up above all the ages of one thousand five hundred years before us How may the Lord complain of us as Hos 8.10 I have written to them the great things of my Law but they have counted it a vain thing The means that we have doe set our sins in a farre higher degree than were the sins of our fathers Theirs were in the night ours in the day theirs were ignorances in comparison ours are presumptions of knowledge and set purpose theirs were errors and sins ours are rebellions and obstinacy they could scarce doe any other we will not their ignorance invincible ours affected And as our means be greater so our judgement and account shall be straighter for to whom God gives more of them hee requires more Luke 12.48 Vse 2. Content we not our selves that we have stairs or means as many who say they come to Church hear the Word receive the Sacrament have some measure of knowledge and be able to speak of religion seeing the presence of the means brings Satan more fiercely upon thee and threatneth thy greater danger if thou growest not in soundness of Christianity by them Consider whether the Scripture be not true saying 1 Not the hearers of the Word but the doers thereof shall be justified 2 Knowers of their Masters will and not doers of it shall be beaten with more stripes 3 Many seem to be partakers of grace who are perverters of it and turn it into wantonness who are of old rolled or billed unto condemnation 4 Many in the day of Judgement shall say and alleadge for themselves Wee have eat and drunk in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streets to whom the judge shall say I tell you I know not whence you are depart from mee yee workers of iniquity The Jewes had the Ministery of John of Christ and his Disciples the Gospel of the Kingdom preached which was as Jacobs Ladder to rise up by the stairs and staves of it unto heaven but for all this because they walked not worthy of these means Christ tells them plainly to their faces that Publicans and Harlots should goe into Heaven before them And the same shall be said of every formal Christian contenting himself with an outward shew of goodness and not answerable to the means he hath without any inward or constant change by them Vse 3. Let us beware of Satans wyle neither to neglect means nor yet to sin against them I In spiritual things the means of salvation are stairs to Heaven 1 If thou beest not a member of the Church and abidest in the ship thou canst not be saved Acts 27.31 2 If being over-run with the disease of sin thou waitest not at the Pool wherein and when the Spirit moveth and stirreth the waters thou canst not be cured Joh. 5.4 Refuse the Word and Sacraments thou perishest 3 If God have shewed thee oh man what is good and what he requireth of thee surely to doe justly to love mercy to humble thy self and walk with thy God if thou cast thy self off these stairs into injustice unmercifulness pride and profaneness by this fall thou doest break the neck of thy soul So when the Lord affords many gracious means within a man and without without the exhortations and precepts of his Word and the warnings of his correcting hand then 1 Suffer the word of exhortation gladly let the word rule thee sin not against the word by which thou art to be judged 2 Let the rod open the ear that was sealed and correction bee thy instruction it is a note of blessedness to bee chastened and taught in Gods Law The Lord is glad to adde this means to let in the former and if men still fall back more and more the Lord casts such persons off So when he inwardly useth either checks of Conscience or else the motions of his Spirit sin not against them for 1 The voyce of thy Conscience must thou hear one day therefore suffer it not to goe on
they doe whence have they being so simple and illiterate persons their skill but from the Devil or Diabolical tradition And who made the Devil thy Physician who if he should minister nothing but Natural things thou mightest not accept them from him 3 This remedy is worse and more desperate than the disease because Gods curse followeth it who in his Law hath commanded that whosoever goe a whoring after such should be stoned with stones and if any turn after such he will set his face against them to cut them off Levit. 20.6 And according to this threatning he hath executed visible Judgements against it even against Kings themselves who think themselves most free to doe their pleasure as 1 Chronicles 10.13 14. Saul dyed for his transgression that hee committed against the Lord even against the word of the Lord which hee kept not and in that he sought and asked counsel of a familiar spirit therefore the Lord slew him and turned the Kingdome to David Asa never came oft his bed for this sin 2 King 1.16 and more not only Kings but whole Nations were cast out before his people for this sin and not only they but even his own people were cast among the Nations when they followed these waies of theirs Isa 2.6 Better w●●t therefore to dye of a disease in the hand than be recovered by the hand of ●●e Devil 4 Mark how the Devil hath circumvented such a party 1 He hath robbed him of his faith in God because he maketh haste 2 Of his fealty and subjection to God because he either denieth Gods government or the equity of it 3 He hath got in him what he desired to win from Christ but could not namely to take up another means of safety than God had appointed 4 He having thus set up himself for such a mans God hee maketh him commit execrable Idolatry in ascribing to the Devil himself that which is proper to God and Jesus Christ First a power of healing which the Devil hath not further than God permitteth him to the just blinding of the sinner Secondly a faith and perswasion in that power that it shall be available to him which is nothing else but a secret confederacy and league with the Devil without which nothing can be done This the Lord implyeth in the bounding of his Laws as Lev. 19.31 Ye shall not seek c. for I am your Lord as if he had said you ought to depend upon me and not upon the enemy of Mankind Levit. 20.6 Yee shall not goe a whoring but be holy as if he had said have nothing to doe with such an impure spirit if you would bee an holy people Why God permitteth a power of curing to them of whom we may not seek cure Quest But if God would not have them to help why doth hee give them such power of curing of fore-telling things to come and revealing hidden things Ans 1. The power of curing is from Satan God justly permitting him to the further deluding of unbeleevers 2 Neither doth the Wizzard fore-tell things to come but the Devil by them such things as he by the quickness of his spiritual nature seeth present in the causes or which God permitteth himself to be the worker of and casie it is for him to discover the Thief which himself tempted to steal 3 The Lord permitteth all this not that we should trust him or use him but to try whether we will depart from our God the case here is the same with that of the false Prophet who must not bee beleeved when hee fore-telleth things that come to pass Why then may some say doth God suffer them to fore-tell such things The text answereth The Lord thy God tempteth thee whether thou wilt cleave unto him or no Deut. 13.3 Let all such persons as have sought to them consider betime how they have broken Covenant with God betaken themselves to Satans help broken prison to their greater punishment and made stones bread let these bewayl the sin and renounce it never was Saul in so fearful a case as when he run unto the Witch by his own confession God was departed from him Let no man lessen this sin or dare to defend such limbs of the Devil under titles of good wise or cunning persons seeing these cursed blessers draw Towns and Countries after them into their own damnation Let none think it a slight matter to counsel others to this sin and remember that by the Law of God they ought to dye that seek to thrust people from their God and drive them to the Devil a farre greater sin is this than that which the Lord maketh capital Fourthly here we have also strong consolation The comfort of the Church is that Christ is stronger than all that Christ is stronger than the Devil 1 Joh. 4.4 stronger is he that is in us than he that is in the world look how strong the Father is so strong is the Son Joh. 10.29 and therefore his strength is as farre above Satans as the Creators is above the Creatures Hence we are sure none can take us out of his hands not the World Be of good comfort I have overcome the world not the Devil The Prince of this world is cast out not sin not death both which are cast into the Lake not temptation nor persecution for by Christ we are more than conquerours All these may molest us but cannot hurt us they may make warre upon us but we may pluck up our hearts seeing we fight against conquered enemies and are through his strength that hath loved us sure of victory before wee strike a blow Let not us forget the consolation in that although our enemies may nible at our heels yet the seed of the Woman hath broken their heads for us Vers 39. And we are witnesses of all things which he did in the Land of Judea and in Jerusalem whom they slew hanging him on a tree THe Apostle having witnessed of such facts of Christ as testified him the great Prophet of his Church affirmeth in these words of himself and the rest of the Apostles that they were witnesses not only of the things formerly u●●●ed but of all things else not only which Christ did in Judea and Jerusalem but also which hee suffered among them and so descendeth to lay down his Priestly Office in this verse and his Kingly Office in the next That the Apostles were such witnesses of all things which Christ did and suffered in Judea and Jerusalem will appear to him that considereth that it was one of Christs first actions in his Offices after his Baptism to call his Disciples who presently left all and followed him to the end that they might be oculate witnesses of his mighty works of his life of his death and resurrection and that they may be ear-witnesses of all the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth to which purpose he took them after a sort into his Family that by their
it for this being as Queen among the vertues goeth not alone but with all the train of vertues as hand-maids attending upon her The chief of them are these four 1 A true knowledge of the Word of God acknowledging it in part and in wh●le to bee the truth of God and that himself is straightly bound to believe and embrace the same and that hee hath a special part in the promise of grace and life by Christ in which grace he resteth himself daily growing up in the certainty and assurance of his salvation 2 A sound ●oy of the heart which the Apostle Peter calleth unspeakable and glorious breaking out into thankful praises in that the Lord hath begun 〈◊〉 ●iness by making Christ his Wisdome Righteousness Sanctification and 〈◊〉 ●tion The Poor Blind and Lame persons of whom wee read in the 〈◊〉 never leaped more joyfully when they had met with Christ and had 〈◊〉 ●s opened and their limbs restored by him than hee that hath met with him and received him into his heart to enlighten him to quicken him and to heal him of all his infirmities How gladly did Zacheus receive Christ with what joy of heart findeth any man the hidden pearl Mat. 13.44 how did the Eunuch converted go away rejoycing Act. 8. And all this is because they can value such a commodity as this is which they see God hath made their own for if they either knew it not or not to bee theirs they could not thus joy in it 3 Christian Hope is another hand-maid of Faith for so the Apostle teacheth Rom 5.2 Being justified by Faith wee have peace c. wee rejoyce under the hope of the glory of God For this is the special work of hope to wait for and rejoyce in the expectation of the glorious appearing of the Lord Jesu And hence is it that whereas unbeleevers are glewed to the earth and cannot think of Heaven but either with sorrow of a formal and false joy and what marveil is it that those who have no better should set their hearts upon the worse beleevers have preserved in them a willingness to leave this World and to bee with Christ which is best of all yea so sweet is their present tast of Christ through Faith and Hope that they are unquiet till they bee filled with the fruition of his fulness being often in his absence sick of love and pine away till they bee with him whom their soul loveth 4 An assured trust relying upon God beleeving hi● word of promise to raise and feed the heart of threatning to shake it and cast it down and submitting it se●f to the counsel and good pleasure of God because his faith hath let him see the truth the wisdome the equity and righteousnesse of all these Such a mans heart setteth nothing above God in prosperity it distrusteth not but hath God for his God in adversity it indeavoureth in all things to walk with God it is a sweet usher and disposer of the whole life so as it is most obedient to the word and most full of comfort and sweetness to it self The fourth mark or note or true Faith is taken from the infallible fruits IV. The infallible fruits of it four and effects of it which are many I will onely note four of the principal First it frameth and fitteth the own habitation it purifieth the heart Act. 15. it suffereth not unclean thoughts unlawful lusts or wandring motions to harbour there it guideth the affections of Love Hatred Joy Sorrow and the rest that a man love nothing more or so much as God and his Image hee hateth not mens persons but their sins and no mans sin so much as his own hee rejoyceth in nothing so much as in doing the will of God this is as his meat and drink hee sorroweth for nothing in the world so much as for offending so good and patient a God This pure heart also guideth the words with wisdome and maketh it his chief study how to preserve with faith good conscience in every thing Act. 24.16 Secondly Faith worketh by love Gal. 5.6 bo●h towards God and towards man towards him that begat and him that is begotten yea and him that is ye● not begotten This love of God expresseth it self 1 In much thankfulness unto him who hath loved us first Our love of God express●d in three things who hath given so much even his Son and all things with him pertaining to life and godliness who hath forgiven us so much and to whom many sins are forgiven they must love much who hath done so great things for us by becomming our portion our treasure and our chief good 2 In shame for our unkindness unto him both before and even since we knew this his love in Christ and have been acquainted with his waies taking up with shame in our faces sorrow into our hearts for the sins of our youth and of our age against the law the rule of righteousness but especially against the glorious Gospel which of all other are least of served 3 In desire of that blessed fellowship of his when and where wee may never sin against him any more accounting one day within his holy of holies better than a thousand besides and much more to bee ever with the Lord and to injoy the p●easures at his right hand for evermore to bee at home with him and sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob yea with Jesus Christ himself should make us groan in our souls and say with David Oh when shall I appear in this thy presence The Spirit saith Come and the Spouse saith Come Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly The love of men by which Faith worketh discovereth it self not onely in just dealing with them as wee would bee dealt by which many civil men indued onely with civil righteousnesse have excelled in nor onely in merciful distribution of outward comforts for the releeving of the bodies of our brethren yea and of our enemies which hardlier goeth down with the unconverted than the former but also in shewing most love unto their souls in helping forward their conversion and salvation For so soon as any man is converted hee will strengthen the brethren Faith wheresoever it liveth it loveth and love being an hand giving out moveth men converted to counsel exhort rebuke admonish comfort pray and wait when God will give unto others the grace of Repentance As soon as Andrew was called hee bringeth his brother Simon to Christ No sooner had Christ found Philip but Philip finding Nathaniel hee bringeth him to ●hrist The woman at the well no sooner heareth that Christ was the Messiah but shee bringeth all the City In finding this treasure the Christian cannot hide his joy neither can any mans joy bee so full unlesse hee with others rejoyce together For it is not here as in earthly things which the more they are communicated the more are they diminished and every mans share is the less but heavenly
sin and help themselves thereunto by these rules 1 Consider thy charge Levit. 19.16 Thou shalt not walk about with tales among thy people and consider that whispering and back-biting are the sins of men of a reprobate sense Rom. 1.29 2 Receive no false accusation receivers of stollen goods are accessary to the theft if there were no receivers there would bee no theeves if no hearers no informers Drive away the slaunderer with an angry countenance as the North-wind driveth away rain Prov. 25.23 have no pleasure in this sin of another man Rom. 1.32 3 Do thine own business look to the duties of thine own calling busie-bodies and pratlers are joyned together 1 Tim. 5.13 4 Take heed of envie malice never spoke well it is always suspicious ever traducing Embrace the love of thy neighbours person 5 Deal with another mans good name as thou wouldst have him deal with thine if it came in his way Consider thou mayest restore his goods but never his name once broken ever a scar A felon is more tollerable in a Common-wealth than a slanderer 6 In receiving reports excuse the person so far as thou canst Vide Pe●ald tom ● p. 561 de detractore● construe the speech or fact in the most favourable sense do as thou wouldest bee done to and if thou canst not advise the reporter to look to himself and tell him that in many things wee sin all 7 Curse not the deaf saith the Scripture now a man that is absent is a deaf man Object But I speak the truth Answ But not truly 1 Without ground thou art uncalled and unsworn thou doest it not by way of charitable admonition to the party himself or others 2 Not in a good manner without love pity sorrow nay thou rejoycest rather in thy tale 3 Not to any other end but to fill mens mouths with prattle and bring thy brother into contempt And why speakest thou no good of him as well as evil but art like a swine in a garden that leaves all the sweet flowers to dig or wallow in a dung-hill Five motives to lay aside calumniation and slandering Motives to lay aside and abhor calumniation and slandering 1 Charity is not suspitious but in doubtful cases thinks the best 1 Love thinketh not evil 1 Cor. 13.5 2 It covers a multitude of sinnes Prov. 10.12 and 3 It gives to every man his due in his goods and good name And therefore the tale-breeder tale-bearer and tale-beleever who do none of these but hammer tales and slaunders upon the anvil of envy and set them upon the wings of fame and report are uncharitable and unchristian persons the Devils fewellers and gun-powder for where no wood is there the fire goeth out so where there is no tale-bearer the strife ceaseth Prov. 26.20 2 Wee have a common Proverb A man museth as hee useth as himself useth to do so hee imagineth of another and therefore to judge lewdly of another upon bare suspition is commonly a note of a lewd person those that are so ready to tax men of Hypocrisy commonly are hypocrites themselves 3 It is a question among the school-men whether a man that hath impaired anothers good name bee bound to restore as hee that hath pilfered his goods and it is concluded by all the Doctors that hee is bound in Conscience because a good Name is better than all Riches saith Salomon And because it hath more enemies than our goods even this law of restitution and satisfaction should bee of force to keep them off us and if the law bind him that steals our goods to restore five-fold certainly hee that stealeth our name is bound to restore fifty-fold because it is so far above a mans substance and the blot is never wiped away If Serpents sting us or mad dogs or venemous beasts bite us there is some remedy but against the tongue of the slanderer there can none be found 4 It is one of the sins against the ninth Commandement to hear our Neighbour falsly accused and not to clear him if wee bee able Jonathan when hee saw Saul stirred up by tale-bearers against David spake boldly in his defence and said Why shall hee dye what evil hath he done And Nicodemus Ioh. 7.51 when hee saw the Scribes and Pharisees so set against Christ that they would have condemned him being absent and unheard stood up and said Doth our Law condemn any before it hear him and know what he hath done A good rule for us how to carry our selves towards all Christians 5 Wee must hold us to our rule to judge no man before the time 1 Cor. 4.5 and if no man then 1 Not our superiours people must not bolt out opprobrious words against their Pastors and Teachers sin is aggravated by the person against whom it is committed to tevile an ordinary man is odious but much more to revile the father of our souls or bodies Pastors or Parents 2 Not godly men and professors of the Gospel as to charge them with hypocrisy and traduce with violence that which would receive a charitable construction Heb. 6.9 3 Not such as in whom Gods graces shine more eminently than in others through pride or envy this is a high sinne and cost Christ his life yea to disgrace and obscure Gods gifts which ought to bee acknowledged with thankfulness is in the skirts of that unpardonable sin and had need bee stayed betimes for it is to hate goodnesse and if it did hate it because it is goodnesse it were farre more dangerous 3 Note Seeing Satan is such an Arch-accuser If there be so many accusers no marvail if godly men want no manner of accusation and that his special hatred is against goodness is it any marvail that the Children of God pass through many slanderous accusations If speech bee of the faithful Preachers of the Word neither Prophets nor Apostles shall avoid most dangerous slanders Amos shall bee accused by Amazia to preach against the King and that the whole land is not able to bear his words chap. 7. ver 9. Paul and Silas preaching nothing but Christ are brought before the Governours exclaimed upon as men troubling the City preaching Ordinances not lawful to bee received and teaching men to worship God contrary to the Law Act. 16.20 18.13 Let speech bee of professors of the Gospel how do men in their mindes accuse and judge that to bee done in vain-glory which is done in simplicity and for Gods glory and that to bee done in hypocrisy or for commodity or other sinister ends which God sees is done in sincerity Yea as if men did see their hearts and inside how do they speak it that such are not the men they make shew of or if grace evidently appear in the eminent notes of it they can so lessen so diminish and clip the beauty and glory of it as still they shall bee disgraced Our blessed Lord himself was accused and condemned for a malefactor yea and
the Jews his works hee did What a number of Devils are now in the World continual instruments of wickedness alluring and drawing men from God and goodness yea their Trade is to allure unto evil as those that draw men to strumpets and are bawds to that filthy sin so to Ale-houses and there provoke them to drink and to excess Those that draw men to ordinary gaming houses such as stir up mens spirits to revenge such as with-draw men from Gods house and good exercises such as disswade from Religion and strict courses such as commend onely loose and disordered mates for boon companions In all these the speech is true Homo homini daemon one man plaies the Devil with another All of them are plain devils incarnate tempters and as the devils company is to bee avoided so is theirs Use 5. That wee may bee most unlike unto Satan wee must bee continually provoking and moving one another to love and good works Heb. 10.24 and exhort and edify one another 1 Thess 5.11 Every Christian must by holy example and holy admonition bring one another forward in goodnesse if they bee weak to confirm them if slow to provoke and quicken them if astray to revoke and recall them Hereunto consider these motives 1 Shall Satans vassals exhort and perswade one another to evil Four motives to stir up one another to good as Satan doth to evil and bee more diligent to help one another to Hell than wee to set forward Gods work and help one another to heaven 2 Consider the bonds between us and our brethren 1 The bond of nature all are one mold and one flesh and the Law of nature binds us to pitty and releeve their bodily wants and much more their souls if wee can If their beast lay under a burden thou wert bound to help it up but thy brothers soul is under the burden of sin A good Samaritan will not pass by the wounded man like the Priest and Levite but will step near him and have compassion on him 2 The bond of the Spirit which yet ties us nearer for if wee must do good to all much more to the houshold of faith this bond makes Christians to be of one body and therefore as members of one body to procure the good and salvation one of another they are children of one father brethren in Christ who have one faith one hope one food one garment and one inheritance will one member refuse to impart his help his life his motion and gifts to another 3 Consider the excellent fruit that ensueth this godly care of provoking one another to good hee that converteth a sinner from going astray shall save a soul James 5.20 and the fruit of the righteous is as a tree of life and hee that winneth souls is wise Prov. 11.30 4 Consider these dull and backsliding times full of deadnesse and coldnesse wherein wee see a general decay of zeal love delight in the Word sin bold and impudent and piety almost ashamed of her self and name Ah wee have great cause to quicken one another as Travellors will call forward the weary and faint and encourage them both to speed and perseverance and as souldiers will animate and incourage one another against the common enemy so must wee in our spiritual fight against sin and Satan The tempter is so much the more busy because his time is short and wee must bee the more diligent because the time is so dead Came to him Here may a question bee moved How Satan came to Christ being a spirit Satan cometh to a man two waies I Answer Satan commeth two waies 1 Inwardly and more spiritually and that either by suggestion troubling the heart and understanding and thus hee put into Judas his heart to betray his Lord John 13.2 or else by vision worketh upon the phantasy 2 Outwardly and corporally either by some instrument as to Christ by the Scribes Sadduces Herodians and Peter or else by himself in some assumed bodily shape Now after what manner was Christ tempted I answer Howsoever some good men think Christs temptation was onely in motion inwardly and not externally and visibly yet I think it was chiefly externally and in a bodily shape assumed Their Reasons for their opinion are two 1 Because in the words following the Devil shewed Christ all the Kingdomes of the world in a moment which to do in a corporal manner were impossible and therefore it was but in motion and cogitation But that is but to insist in the question and when God shall bring us to that place wee shall see that even this was done really and not only in imagination 2 Reason out of Heb. 4.19 where it is said that Christ was tempted in all things like us now say they our temptations bee inward by cogitations and suggestions and therefore so was his But this is much weaker than the former for if hee were in all things tempted like unto us it is plain hee was externally tempted as wee bee Adam by Sathan in the external shape of a Serpent Saul by Satan in Samuels shape and it is the general confession of witches that their spirits appear in an external shape of cats mice c. Our reasons which probably conclude the contrary for it is no fundamental point necessarily and stiffely to bee held because the Scripture is not plain in it are these Christs temptation external and in a bodily shape assumed for four reasons 1 As Satan in his combate overcame the first Adam in a bodily shape And external temptation so it is likely hee came against the second Adam in some bodily shape And that hee thus externally assaulted him by outward objects is probable by these things in the text 1 Hee spake often to Christ and Christ truely spake and answered 2 Hee said command these stones not stones in general but either offering holding or pointing at them being real stones as Mr. Calvin saith 3 He wills Christ to fall down before him and worship him even by bodily and outward gesture and citeth Scripture for his second temptation 4 He took him and led him to the pinacle of the Temple by local motion neither was the second temptation in the wilderness as the former was but in the holy City Jerusalem and on the pinacle of the Temple as after wee shall see 5 Christ bids him depart 6 How could hee hurt himself by his fall if it were onely in vision 2 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth imply a corporal access by which these temptations differed from the former wherewith hee was exercised in the forty daies of his fast for they were lighter skirmishes and lesser onsets by suggestion sent out like scouts but now hee comes in person with all his strength and thus he now came and not before 3 Some good Divines make difference between Christs temptations and his members which giveth good light in this question that whereas our temptations are chiefly inward
proceedeth out of the mouth of God it is rather a death than a life his bread becomes poyson and as Rats-bane in his bowels because he hath it without a promise and without blessing Obj. I see no such thing Ans Many poysons are long a working but the end of such is death and the more slowly they work the more slily and certainly they kill And if the Lord doe not invert the order he hath set in nature by cursing the particular creatures be sure he hath in his justice reserved a curse for the unjust person and he shall not avoyd it This doctrin specially applied laies hold upon sundry sorts of men who live contrary to the word They are these I. Such as live out of lawful callings which are one part of the word of God that we should get our living in the sweat of our browes and so long as we are in our way we have his word we shall bee provided for And the word proceeding out of the mouth of God is that he that will not labour must not eat because he eats not his own and such as will not live after this word by Gods word they ought not to live because they are idle and unprofitable burdens of the earth who 1 abuse Gods providence who ties the ends and means together 2 infringe that good order which God hath established for the avoiding of confusion in Church or Common-wealth namely that every man should serve God in the service of man in some warrantable and profitable civil calling 3 As hee is no better than an Infidel that depends only on means seeing man lives by every word of God so he that in a lawful course of life provides not for his family is worse than an infidel Of this sort are our knots of companions of drinking and gaming company and wandring rouges and beggers I knit them together because they are all of a strain and either are Beggers or shall be These commonly come not to Church to hear their duties and therefore they must bee taught by correction and discipline of those that are the executioners of justice II. Such as think they live well enough and yet it is by deceiving others by stealing oppression extortion lying swearing and falshood in buying and selling and why say they may not a man help and shift for himself But consider 1 What a poor help it is when a man will use unlawful means and to shift out of one evil by another Hee doth as the Prophet speaks avoid a Lyon and a Bear meets him Pilate would keep his place by unlawful means the delivering of Christ to bee crucified but besides that hee brought innocent blood upon himself hee lost his place and flew himself 2 Consider That if Gods Word of blessing go not with the means his word of curse doth and so the Prophet Zachary saith that the curse entereth into the house of the swearer and of the theef chap. 5. v. 4. and this curse shall remain in the midst of his house and consume the very timber and stones This curse often scatters ill-gotten goods as fast as they were ever hastily gathered if not in his own daies yet in some unthrifty heir after him 3 Consider how God crosseth the vain conceit of unjust persons they think all that is any way gotten to bee gain and profit but the word is Prov. 10.2 that treasures of wickednesse profit nothing they cannot help a man from the hand of God nay when the evil day comes they are gone and leave a man alone to grapple with death and judgement and turn a man naked to the sentence of condemnation for his wicked getting and holding of them III. Another sort of men who live not by the Word of God Vel minimu● fructus ex pecunia pe●cip● non potest sine Dei offensione proximi inju● 2. Calv. Epist 226. but against it are Usurers who pull themselves out of all lawful callings and set up a trade for the publike evil and their own private good which were there nothing else against it proves it not to bee of Gods devising for every calling of Gods devising is helpful to men in general but the Spirit of God hath given this a name from biting and hurting But wee have the Scripture most expresly against it whether it bee manifest as is a contract for gain as for ten pound to pay eleven at the years end or covert whereby men find devices which they call mysteries to defeat the laws and seem to contract and either not to lend or not for gain The word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God saith Exod. 22. v. 25. If thou lend money to my people with thee thou shalt not be an Usurer thou shalt not oppress him Mark how usury and oppression is all one And Deut. 23.19 Thou shalt not lend upon usury to thy brother the usury of money meat or any thing that may bee lent But the Usurer that will live by his money and not by Gods word saith Yea but of the Gentiles they might though not of a brother To which I say that now the partition wall is taken away and neither Jew nor Gentile remains all are our brethren in Christ and therefore of no man must usury bee expected unless thou beest worse than a Jew Let the Usurer answer this if he can Again those Gentiles were of those nations of the Canaanites Ab hoc usuram e●ig● quem non sit crimen occultic Amb. which they were commanded to destroy and usury was as teeth given them and allowed by God to eat them up withall Seest thou a man whom thou mayest lawfully kill take use of him but not of thy brother Object I will not take usury of the poor but of the rich Answ But the text is Thou shalt not take usury of thy brother bee he poor or rich though the rich bee better able to suffer wrong yet thou art not by any word enabled to offer it The word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God saith Psal 15.5 Hee that giveth not his mony to usury shall dwell in the Lords Tabernacle and rest on his holy hill and Ezek. 18.17 Hee that hath not received usury and increase c. wherein it is plain without all tricks that either to give out or take in usury excludes out of heaven Object Hee means to oppresse a man with usury Answ Every usury is oppression and every Usurer fears not God Levit. 25.36 Thou shalt not take usury but fear the Lord. Object But that Law was judicial not moral Answ That is false for our Saviour renewed in it the Gospel Luke 6.35 Lend freely looking for nothing again Therefore it is moral Besides that usury is condemned amongst the great transgressions of the Moral law Ezek. 18.13 Object Wee may do as we would bee dealt by and it is charity so to lend as another may benefit himself Answ No man in need would borrow but freely
evening solemnly on our knees making confessions of sins and requests to God together with thanksgiving Psalm 55.17 Evening and morning and at noon will I pray and make a noise Daniel three times a day prayed and praised God in his house as hee was wont chap. 6. v. 10. The excellent use of which is the opening of the door of Gods treasury to the family by which it is inriched with the best blessings of God Besides the Lord shall hereby have some honour that is due to his mercy upon the family 5 In edifying the family with Psalms and melody to the Lord as it is Col. 3.16 In these daily duties doth the sanctification of a family consist Whereunto wee may bee perswaded by these motives 1 In that they are the practises of men fearing God such as Joshua and his house Cornelius and his houshold 2 In that by these exercises the family shall not only be sanctified but also blessed as Obed Edom and his house for the presence of the Ark. 3 What madness is it to reject and banish Gods word and worship out of doors and yet think God is there Nay where found grace comes there is the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication in every family apart Zach. 12.14 and where the worship of God is not set up in families there is nothing but a conspiracy of Atheists and a wicked brood bringing Gods judgements on themselves and the business passing through their hands Use 3. Jerusalem is called holy being once sanctified to the Lords use which teacheth us that wee should reverently both conceive and speak of all such things as are set apart to the Lords use 1 Some persons are consecrate to the Lord as the Tribe of Levi of whom the commandement was Thou shalt not forsake the Levite all thy daies And the Prophets Touch not mine annointed and do my Prophets no harm So in the New-Testament The Minister that rules well is worthy of double honour Yea if the widows which were set apart to inferiour offices about the poor must be honoured 1 Tim. 5.3 much more the Minister that standeth in Gods place and stead Heb. 13.17 Obey them that have the oversight of you Thus Cornelius reverenced Peter and the Eunuch Philip. Nay not onely the Minister but every beleever is separate to God and sanctified to carry the Covenant and hath the annointing of the Spirit which the Lord acknowledgeth on them and speaketh reverently and lovingly of them calling them his holy ones yea the apple of his eye They see not this who can persecute and revile them for hypocrites and count them as the Apostles whose doctrin they profess the scum of the world 2 Some places are for their use to bee accounted holy because God is there present in his worship as the places of our meetings not that any inherent holiness is annexed to the place or cleaveth to it out of the action of Gods worship but while God is present in his Worship wee must account it holy ground and the house of God When God appeared in Bethel to Jacob hee said How fearful is this place surely it is no other than the house of God Wee must therefore put off our shooes with Moses that is our base and vile our sinful and sensual affections yea our lawful if earthly thoughts when wee come to this holy place Look wee bring no thoughts with us unbeseeming the place where God is separated from other common places to holy uses Look that in this place wee use no gesture or behaviour unbeseeming a man that hath business with God being present To sit talking or sleeping or laughing or gazing sutes not with this place And further if God please to account the very places holy for the use and presence of God in this use what shall wee think of them that conceive so basely of them as they would love a Parish better in which is no Church Others prophane them with base practices and unconscionably suffer them to fall or decay and will bee at no charge to make or keep them handsome sweet and beautiful Styes were fit for such swine As their affection is so is their devotion 3 The holy Ordinances of God must not bee touched but with holy respect and reverence of which it is said It is not safe to play with holy things 1 The word must bee received read heard spoken as the holy word of God To make jests of Scripture is a wicked practice God looks graciously on him that trembles at his word Isa 66.2 as good Josiah whose heart melted hearing the words of the Law So the names and attributes of God are never to bee used in frivolous admirations but every knee must bow unto him Phil. 2.10 Neither ought wee to laugh at Gods judgements on others 2 An Oath is one of the holy Ordinances of God and to swear in common talk vainly is not to shew reverence to this holy Ordinance Swear not at all that is uncalled Mat. 5.34 35. neither being called but in truth justice and judgement for an Oath is appointed to decide controversies which other means cannot How few consider whether the matter bee worth an Oath or whether they bee called to it or whether it might not have been better passed by Yea or Nay or by a bare asseveration A wicked man is described by being a Swearer Eccl. 9.3 but a godly man not only not swears from which a man by education or civility may abstain but also fears an oath in what company soever hee is or what occasion soever hee hath 3 A Lot is another special Ordinance of God to decide a controversy from heaven by God himself when all means on earth fail Therefore Lots must not be used without great reverence and prayer because the disposition of them commeth immediately from the Lord Pro. 16.33 and not but in great matters not for recreation for it is said to cause contentious to cease among the mighty Prov. 18.18 neither do wee read that it was ever used but in very great things as the dividing of the land of Canaan the election of High Priests and Kings and the surrogation of Matthias into the place of Judas Hence it follows if dice and cards bee Lots as I think they bee that all play by them is unlawful 4 Some times are sanctified above other as the Sabbath day all which must bee passed holily with much reverence and respect both remembring it before it come yea rejoycing in the approach of it and when it is come to sanctify it 1 In our hearts for external observation of the Sabbath without inward holiness and affection to the duties of Gods service is hypocrisy 2 We must not meddle with any part of the duties of our ordinary calling for that is no holy thing 3 Much less travel to Markets or Fairs but every man must stay in his own place Exod. 16.29 Neb. 13.15 to 19. 4 Least of all must wee set any part of it apart
searched whether the things spoken were so We take no coin without due tryal Quest How shall I try the spirit that brings a sentence of Scripture Answ 1 By diligent study and reading of Scripture diligently searching out the truth for the determination of every truth must bee by scripture Dubiu●● and though scripture seem to bee opposed to scripture wee must not with Papists draw determination of matters from scripture so saith the Apostle in Eph. 4.14 Let us not bee carried about as children with every wind of doctrin how should wee do other but follow the truth in love Examine the places circumstances antecedents and consequents confer with other scriptures to all which it must agree 2 Follow and frequent the Ministery as not content with the knowledge of the scriptures without the true understanding of them Non in legendo sed in intelligerdo Hieron for they consist not in the bare letters but in the pithy sense said the Father And this true understanding wil help us to lay it to the Analogy of faith wherunto it must bee agreeable and will make our senses exercised in the word 3 Adde hereunto prayer which procureth the spirit to lead us into all necessary truth David never ceased to Pray to bee taught as we may see through the whole 119. Psalm 4 Consider the end and scope of the scripture alledged If it lead thee into an action condemned by the law of nature or against other direct scriptures or principles of religion it is of the Devil the father of Lies for Gods Spirit never alledgeth scripture but to lead us into the knowledge and practice of some truth This is Moses his rule Deut. 13.1 If a false Prophet rise up see what hee aimeth at if it bee to draw thee from the Lord his worship or word take heed of him so if Satan by any instrument of his shall bring the word and pretend great zeal if the end bee to draw thee to superstition Idolatry or Popery beware of him his scope discovers him If a doctrin or scripture be alledged to nourish any fleshly delight or to hold men in sin though the words bee Gods the allegation is the Devils as At what time soever a sinner repenteth c. and the Theef was saved at the last hour and therefore if thou canst say two or three good words at thy death all shall bee well here is the Devil saying It is written for all scripture truely cited by Gods Spirit aims at mortification and the furtherance of Repentance If a Scripture bee alledged and urged to threaten and discourage such as fear God and shew forwardness in good waies or to animate the sinner promising him peace and life it is Satans allegation for if Gods Spirit alledge scripture that word is good and comfortable to him that walks uprightly and the threats of the law are fit provision for impenitent persons Vse 2. This teacheth us not to content our selves to know the Scripture and bee able to speak of it or to alledge it for the Devil knows the word and can alledge it readily yea hee is expert in it Many men deceive themselves in their estate and think themselves sure of salvation if they can get a lirtle knowledge of the scripture above others as though Satan could not alledge it or as though the wicked could not preach it as Judas did or ungodly men profess it who take the word into their mouth and hate to bee reformed Psal 50.16 17. Use 3. But let us take heed wee come not behind the Devil himself while wee thus highly conceit our selves for 1 Are there not a number of ignorant men almost as ignorant as if the scriptures had never been written and shall not the Devil condemn these who hath gained so much knowledge in the word which containeth not one word of comfort for him but judgement that makes him tremble Yet these whom they would make wise to salvation and to whom they offer the joyes and comfort of life eternal are utterly ignorant of them 2 Many read the Scripture but as Satan not to inform or reform themselves nor to make themselves better but both themselves and others far worse as not only Hereticks and learned Papists who bend all their knowledge to suppress and hide the truth but all such as by the scripture se●k to maintain their own errors and sins which they will not part with And these are no better than the Devil 3 Others will read Scripture and hear and know it but without all special application and grace in the heart wherein they should differ from the Devil and wicked men who know the word but affect it not do it not nay cannot abide the special application of it to do them good and this doth nothing but increase sin and judgement sin Jam. 4.17 to him that knoweth to do well and doth it not it is sin a great sin without excuse or cloak Joh. 15.22 judgement for such shall bee beaten with many stripes 4 Others brag of their knowledge they read the Bible at least Davids Psalmes and they know as much as any Preacher can tell them But stay the Devil reads the Psalter as well as thou and can quote Davids Psalms more readily than thou hee can read the Bible hee knows as much yea more than any Preacher can tell him what sayest thou more of thy self than the Devil can do of himself and more truely And what hast thou gained by all this challenge but thine own conviction of great sin without excuse but not without witnesse Is not thine own mouth thy judge who professeth so much knowledge and so little grace love practice To sin wilfully and presumptuously against the light is an extraordinary conformity with Satan Rules of reading and hearing the word religiously 1 Consider the excellency of the Word above all pretious things and how dangerous it is to take Gods name in vain which is then when the word is frustrate of his right end 2 They are called holy Scriptures not only in regard of that holy truth contained in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but because they are instruments by which the Elect are sanctified and made holy John 17.17 and therefore are never to bee used without holy affection nor without indeavour to grow up in holiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3 They are the Word of faith therefore wee must mingle the Word with faith and lay up the precepts and promises thereof to beleeve it 4 The Scriptures being the rule of life wee must submit our whole man to the obedience and practice of it with all sincerity and constancy Hereby we shall go beyond the knowledge of the Word in Devils and ungodly men NOw for the place it self wee must consider it two waies 1 As abused by Satan in his allegation 2 As wee find it holily set down by the Spirit of God In Satans abuse of this Scripture wee may see many particulars 1 Hee wrongs
made far more glorious natures than our selves our keepers To keep thee This custody of the Angels standeth 1 In observing and watching their persons souls bodies and estates and therefore are called watchmen Dan. 4.10 And I saw a watchman and an holy one come down from Heaven 2 In propulsing and averting evil so here There shall no evill come near thee for hee will give his Angels charge over thee 3 In defending them in good as Elizeus and his servant being compassed with enemies 4 In comforting them in trouble as Hagar Gen. 21.17 and Jacob Gen. 32.1 2. and Christ in this place In all thy waies Namely in such courses as God hath appointed and in all these in all times and in all places in all estates and conditions In the way into the world in birth and infancy the good Angels keep Gods little children Matth. 18.10 In the way thorow the world they keep us as the Israelites in the Wilderness Exod. 33.2 In the way out of the World their charge is to keep us as wee may see in Lazarus who when hee dyed the Angels carried his soul into Abrahams bosome In all our waies by day and by night they keep us so long as wee are in our callings They shall bear thee in their hands This is a borrowed speech for Angels have no hands nor bodies sometimes they assume bodies in their ministery to others but these bodies are not theirs neither were they naturally and hypostatically united unto them but for the time created and assumed but from what beginning they were taken or into what end after the ministery they were resolved it is idle to inquire Here hands are ascribed to them as elsewhere wings both improperly one shews the speediness of their motion the other their fitness and tenderness in our keeping For their charge is not onely to foresee danger and admonish us but they must bee actual helpers to bear us up from ground when wee are ready to fall and get knocks as a tender mother or nurse if they see the little child falling will haste and catch it before the head comes to the ground That thou dash not thy foot against a stone That is that thou hurt not thy foot against any rub or occasion Angels are nurses wee are as infants in spiritual matters on every occasion ready to fall into sin and by it into all dangers spiritual and temporal Now the Angels keep us not onely from hurt by others but from bringing hurt on our selves even the least they keep us from hurting our Head yea our Foot Object But how do the Angels perform their charge when some of Gods children not onely stumble but fall spiritually and bodily and take great harm Answ The reason is because no man keeps his way so diligently and uprightly as hee ought If wee did never fail God would never fail us no more would his holy Angels nay such is their love as they would not have us to take the least hurt in the world while wee walk faithfully in the waies and commandements of God Doct. The Angels of God are the tender keepers of Gods children in Gods waies that no hurt can beside them Gen. 32.5 When Jacob was in great fear of his brother Esau the Angel of God met him to comfort and defend him When Sodome was to bee destroyed the Angels came to Lot to forewarn and haste him out of that wicked City Psal 34.7 The Angel of the Lord pitcheth his tents round about them that fear the Lord and delivereth them 1 Because of Jesus Christ our Head Reasons to whom they are subject as to their Lord and Head who hath reconciled things in Heaven and Earth Angels and Men Col. 1.20 In our selves and our own vileness wee could not bee indured by these blessed spirits but now Christ becomes our head and for him they tend us as his members 2 Their love to us is another ground of their custody of us manifested in that they are compared to Nurses neither can they but love those whom they see God loveth now they see God loving us so dearly that hee spares not his own Son but gives him to the death for us and therefore they dearly love us and our good they desire our salvation and promote it they rejoyce that our salvation is wrought and are glad of our repentance by which wee lay hold on it 3 And specially this charge and commandement of God is the cause hereof so as now it is not out of curtesy or the goodness of their nature only that they do us good but by vertue of this charge and commandement of God whom they love as their chief good and to whom they are bound in absolute obedience by the eternal law of their nature so as although they are charged by God yet are they not forced or co-acted but out of their perfect love of God they watch over us for our good Vse 1. This doctrin affords a use of great consolation for when we consider our own weakness and impotency on one hand and the multitude power and policy of our enemies on the other when wee see a whole Army of sins besiedging us and a whole legion of dangers behinde them to oppresse and swallow us now this Doctrin touching Gods providence in the ministery of Angels will be able to support us when wee shall consider not only that Gods protection is as a wall of fire round about us but that he hath set and pirched his Angels round about us as a guard of whom we may say with Elisha for their multitude They are more that are with us Ordo gratiae praeponderat ordini naturae Th. Aqu. than they that are against us and for their power they are called the Angels of Gods power farre stronger than the wicked Angels and Powers that are against us And when wee shall consider that God hath given a charge and that not to one or two Angels but to the whole blessed company of them over every godly man how can wee but assure our selves that wee shall be defended and protected If a man were to pass by ship over a dangerous sea full of gulfs sands rocks and robbers if the King should give him letters of safe conduct it would much comfort him and help him through his voyage but if this King should send a great Navy to conduct him over yea and should not onely go in his own person but call out all his men of war to see him safely arrived this were so comfortable as hee could not wish more But thus doth the Lord with his children not onely himself going with them through the world but guarding them with his holy Angels who willingly afford their ministery because of their love to man but in respect of Gods word and charge much more willingly that of Gods Angels they become our Angels Matth. 18.10 What an unspeakeable comfort is it that when wee lose the watch over our selves many waies
rather than over-ruled by power it laies by all dialogue dispute murmuring and desire of dispensation 3 In the measure of doing it will indeavour in all the Commandements and all duties no man so wicked but hee can do many things as Herod but hee cannot yield to all 4 In continuance and conclusion of that hee doth it holdeth on in doing things purely for a good end for Gods glory and not by fits and starts but perseveres to the end and the crown of the work In all which a wicked man comes short for whatsoever is forced or feigned must bee heavily entered on and more heavily ended besides whatsoever is from such an one is joyned with reigning sin which hales and tugs him backward and toils him out before hee bee half way in any good work 3 How often doth the Lord reject the sacrifice of the wicked their oblations their fasts their prayers their temporary yea miraculous Faith their almes and charity yea their confessing and Preaching of Christ as in the last judgement all which had they been fruits of sound grace they had been acceptable But God looks not so much to the matter of the work as the person working the manner of working and the end of the action Vse 1. Well as Satan goes away when hee can stay no longer and so his obedience is forced so doth sin from most men when they can keep it no longer and so that which seemeth obedience in them it is no better than the Devils obedience in this place Vse 1. Many refrain many sins for fear of Hell and the curse of God they dare not hold their sin any longer whereas they are as much in love with it as before as Moses his Parents kept him so long as they durst before they exposed him to the waters so dearly love men the children of their own corruption What thank is it for a Robber or Felon to leave robbing and stealing for fear of hanging If there were no Law nor Magistrate hee would to his own calling again because hee is no changeling So what thank is it for a man to avoid sin because of damnation here is no fear of God but fear of evil no love of God but self-love And yet this is the restraint of most men whom Conscience no whit bridleth Why do men abstain from open wronging of men by Robbing Stealing Murthering they will say for Conscience But then the same Conscience would keep them from all secret deceit lying and cousenage and then the same conscience would keep them from all other sins also as swearing drinking dicing carding gaming pride wantonness and the rest A good conscience in one thing is a good conscience in all 2 The like is the obedience of many sinners that are still in league with their sins Many filthy unclean whoremongers and harlots have left their sin but it is because it hath lest them they have broken their strength and either age or diseases in their bodies hinder them oh now they will pretend Conscience But they can as filthily speak and as merrily remember their mad pranks as ever they acted them they want onely a body no minde will or affection to commit over the same things again Many Prodigals have left their sin because their wealth hath left them and poverty feeds upon them Many quarrellers and swaggerers have left off such furious courses why perhaps they have gotten some maim or mischief or perhaps they fear whether they can do so again safely or no and this is all the conscience that hath calmed and quieted them but what obedience is this Is that an obedience to God for a Dicer or Gamester to forbear play or rather as it is his theeving when he wants mony to stake 3 In Gods service what makes men come to Church to hear and Pray Every man saith Conscience Yea but good Conscience works powerfully upon the Will what then means the unwillingnesse of men and heavinesse who are so far from apprehending their week-occasions as if they ask their own hearts they must tell them that on the Sabbaths of God were it not for fear of law and shame of men both which are often forgotten they would not come at all Here is obedience much like the Devils because they are of the Devils teaching The like of many servants and Childrens obedience whose comming to Church to hear their duty is meerly forced by the compulsion of Masters and Parents and hath as little comfort in it as the Devils obedience 4 The like is to bee said of late Repentance at the time of death when the sinner hath held his sin so long as hee can then hee would bee rid of it Indeed his sin leaves him but not the curse of it but hee is so far from leaving it as were hee to live over his daies again hee would put as much life into his sin as ever before Late repentance is seldome true ever suspicious Why do many rich men never do good while they live but live as unprofitable and hurtful as swine till they come to the knife but then when death is binding them they will give somewhat to good uses to the Poor for a Sermon c. Why what moves them Conscience they say But it is an accusing Conscience crying out against their oppression usury wrong cruelty and deceit and now this wicked Conscience would stop its own mouth by offering to God some trifle of that hee hath robbed For were it a good conscience why doth hee not leave some part of his wealth for God before it wholly leave him Were it a free-will-offering why comes it so late why doth hee not good while hee hath time Gal. 6.10 Surely God likes a living Christian for any man will bee a Christian dying Neither is it thank-worthy to give that which a man cannot keep And commonly such gifts do more good to others than the giver himself Which is not spoken to hinder men from doing good at their deaths but to provoke them to do good before that time And yet better late than never Let us examine all our obedience by this ground and bee sure that it differ from the obedience of Devils and wicked men And that by these rules 1 God loves truth in the inward parts and refuseth all that obedience which follows not sanctification of the Spirit duties without must flow from graces within Examine now thy inward change wee are his new creatures created to good works joyn that in thy actions which the Devil divorced the inner man with the outward the subjection of the soul with the obedience of the body 2 Examine thy love in thy obedience that because the love of God constrains thee thou doest what hee commands and whether thou preferrest the Commandement of God which is ever-joyned with his glory above all the World and thy obedience above thy profit credit case pleasure mens favour or dis-favour whether thou canst obey God against all these This was
points we are to speak something seeing the former is the principal and included in this latter and these latter were but servants unto the former It is true that the Jews were more affected with his Miracles than with his Doctrin insomuch as they were often wholly carried after him for the bread and belly sake Which seemeth to bee the reason why the Apostle Peter speaketh more plainly of these as being better observed and more sparingly of his Doctrin which was not so great a rayser of his fame as these were but it must not bee so with us who look for Salvation by his most holy Doctrin but cannot by his Miracles And first for his Doctrin the calling of our blessed Saviour being to seek and save that which was lost Christ went about doing good in dispersing every where most holy doctrin to reduce the lost sheep of the house of Israel unto the fold to finde the lost groat to call sinners unto Repentance how all his life was thus taken up were too long in every particular to manifest To omit his private life which was nothing but an increasing in wisdome and favour with God and man After his solemn and publike inauguration hee shewed himself a perfect mirrour of goodness both in the more general parts of his prophetical office as also in the more special practices of it For the former how faithful was hee in all the house of his Father not as Moses who was but a Servant but as the Son who from the bosome of his Father brought and delivered a most perfect Word of Truth yea who was not only the bearer of it but the very Author of all Truth And therefore according to his Power and Commission reformed the Law corrupted with false glosses of the Pharisees and established it preached the Gospel and dispersed it by himself his Apostles and other Teachers after them raised by himself and fitted with gifts thereunto for the gathering of the Saints Eph. 4. instituted and ministred the Sacraments of the New Testament after the abolishing of the Old framed and prescribed a perfect form of prayer unto which all ours must bee squared delivered as Moses a pattern of the Temple and all things therein namely an absolute form of external government for the perpetual use of the Church for the well ordering and cutting off dis-orders in it And for the later how careful was hee to take all occasions to instruct particular persons in the will of his Father nay not onely to take but even seek them that so hee might make offer of the greatest good that ever men in this world could meet withall If his Disciples onely speak of bread hee telleth them hee hath other bread that they know not of If a poor woman meet him while shee goeth to draw a bucket of water hee preacheth unto her of the water of the well of life If hee look upon the Sun hee takes occasion thence to instruct those who were about him that he is the light of the world and that whosoever follow him walk not in darkness If he see but a little child hee thence taketh occasion to instruct his followers in the Doctrin of humility innocency and meeknesse Matth. 18.3 If hee do but hear of his Mother and Brethren hee taketh occasion to shew his spiritual kindred and acquaintance Mat. 12.50 And in both these how Meekly gently humbly yea and compassionately did he carry himself towards those that were any way teachable howsoever in publike and against gain-sayers hee taught with Majesty and as one having authority Besides this how boldly and diligently went hee about Preaching the will of his Father in the midst of dangers discouragements and reproaches which were raised against him not onely when they lay in wait to catch him in his speech but even to attach his person to mischief him How often did the Jews take up stones to stone him Joh. 16. 10. How did the people assault him to throw him down head-long from the top of an hill Luke 4.29 how many other deadly dangers escaped hee and yet in the midst of death could not bee discouraged nor overcome of their malice but overcame their evil with goodness Unto which most holy course of Doctrin if wee adde his most innocent life in which was no spot or error it addeth also grace and glory to his Doctrin Never went any before him or can do after him doing good as hee did for hee never did otherwise no word or deed ever proceeded from him but was answerable to the Laws perfection so as the Church may well sing out his beauty from top to toe which is every way matchless and incomparable U e of Chr●st ●●●acle● three●●ld Cant. 5.10 Secondly Christ went about doing good by many miraculous actions all of them directly tending to the good of man The especiall uses of them all were three First to confirm the truth of his Divine person Joh. 10.24 Tell us plainly if thou beest the Christ to which Jesus answered The works which I do hear witnesse of mee and again If I do not the works of my Father beleeve mee not and Joh. 2.11 This beginning of Miracles did Jesus in Cana● of Galilee and shewed forth his glory Secondly to confirm the truth of his office thus the Jews could sometimes confess that hee was a Teacher sent of God Matth. 21.16 and Nicodemus affirmed Joh. 3.2 that no man could do such things unless God were with him and Joh. 6.14 Then the men when they had seen the miracle said This is of a truth the Prophet that should come into the World Thirdly to confirm the truth of his Doctrin and consequently our Faith in the same Joh. 11.14 Lazarus is dead and I am glad that I was not there for your sakes that yee may beleeve and chap. 14.11 Beleeve mee at least for the works sake Object But the Prophets and Apostles also wrought miracles and therefore they cannot argue him more extraordinary either for his person or office than they were Ans Yes because there was great difference between his Miracles Difference between the miracles of Christ and of the Prophets and Apostles and those that were wrought by Prophets and Apostles For howsoever all of them conspired in the main end of them which was to confirm the same Doctrin together with the Divine person and office of Jesus Christ as also in the substance of them all of them in both being such works as transcend the power reach and law of all nature created yet differ they much 1 In the manner of working Christ wrought his Miracles by his own power and strength Luke 6.19 The whole multitude sought to touch him for vertue went out of him and hee healed them all But they wrought by Christs power and acknowledging themselves but Instruments disclaim all power in themselves that all the glory might bee Christs whose also the works done in and by them are Act. 3.12
in Jerusalem and the severity of Gods judgement lyeth heavily upon them till this day in that both a mighty God and innocent man was with all extremity of rage and fury pursued even unto the death Fourthly note in these Jews The malice of the wicked against Christ and his members is never without matter to work upon what an imbred malice there is in wicked men against Christ and his Members for it is never without matter to work upon if it cannot accuse justly of evil it can unjustly condemn for doing good this Christ sheweth Joh. 10.32 Many good works have I done for which of them do yee stone mee They answer him no but they stone him for Blasphemy so something shall bee pretended as Blasphemy Treason Mutiny faction or some such thing and a form of Law shall bee followed nothing in the world is more easy than to finde out a Law to put Christ to death by for that is the conclusion of all wicked Laws Christ and his members must dye by them but whatsoever bee pretended against them it maketh much for the glory of God the patience of his Saints and the just overthrow of his enemies that whatsoever the godly suffer at the hands of the wicked it is for most part causles in themselves and consequently unjust in the other Let such as professe the Lord Jesus take notice hereof and content themselves if they finde return of evil for good it was their Lords case and the servant can look for no better entertainment than his Lord findeth Let us not bee weary of well-doing although it breed us hatred of the World as knowing that the same spirit of malice is gone out into the world and doth breath in numbers that follow the way of Cain who slew his brother because his works were good as all those titles of reproach cast upon Gods Children lowdly convince as that they are Church-gadders holy Brethren too nice and precise persons the which and the like tearms if a man sing but a Psalm in his Family hee cannot avoid well needs must Christians suffer let their care bee to suffer onely as Christians and for well-doing for it is no shame to suffer as a Christian 1 Pet. 3.17 and seeing it is the will of God that they must suffer it is better saith the Apostle to suffer for well-doing than as evil doers 1 Pet. 4.16 many receiving indignities from men will say if I had deserved such and such things it would never have grieved mee but Christians must be in a contrary note it would grieve mee if I had deserved such things as I suffer at the hands of men but I rejoyce in that I have not deserved them The third point is the manner and kinde of Christs death in these words and hanged him on a Tree Quest Why was Christ rather to dye on the Cross than by any other kinde of death Answ Some say that because mankind was foyled in the first Adam Why Christ was rather to dye on the Cross then by any other death by means of a Tree it was meet it should bee restored by the second Adam upon a tree which although it be but inconsequent yet this the Scripture affirmeth that Christ on the Cross as upon a glorious Chariot of Triumph rescued his Church foyled the Devil spoiled Principalities and Powers and made an absolute conquest against all the enemies of mans salvation Col. 2.14 and that it was meet hee should thus do by this manner of death wee want not stronger reasons out of the Scriptures As First This was the counsel of God Act. 2.23 for the Jews did nothing against him but by the determinate counsel and fore-knowledge of God which Counsel of God over-ruled the matter and brought it to this pass strangely for the High Priests had accused Christ with blasphemy had produced witnesses against him in that cause yea had his own confession that hee was the Son of God which they took for blasphemy yet for this could they not put him to this kinde of death seeing the blasphemer by the Law of God must bee stoned not crucified and so had Christ been if the power of death had been in the hands of the Jews as not long before it was but the providence of God over-ruleth the matter so as hee must bee brought before the Romane Governour and a new action of treasonable affecting the Kingdome bee laid against him whence it was that Pilate asked if hee were the King of the Jewe and hee answered yea upon which answer hee was condemned to the most cruel death that was in use among the Romanes for of those three kindes of death burning heading and crucifying this last was the most severe and shameful Christ reputed an arch-Traytor in his life and death to which the chief malefactors were sentenced and that Christ was executed as an Arch-traytor the inscription on the Cross containing the crime for which he was condemned plainly sheweth Jesus of Nazaret the King of the Jews that no man could look upon or read that writing but hee should presently conceive Christ a malefactor in the highest kind of treason and rebellion Secondly This kinde of death was anciently prefigured as also fore-prophesied it was prefigured by Isaac laid bound upon the wood and the other sacrifices which all were laid on the wood to bee consumed by fire by the lifting up of the shoulder of the peace offering Levit. 7.30 by the shaking of the breast of the same to and fro which as some say signifieth the spreading of our Saviours hands upon the Cross but especially by the lifting up of the brasen serpent in the wildernesse which as Christ saith shadowed his own lifting up upon the cross Joh. 3.14 Again this kind of death was also fore-prophesied Psal 22.16 they peirced or digged my hands and feet it was also foretold by himself Mat. 20.19 They shall deliver him to the Gentiles and they shall mock him and scourge him and crucify him and that it was necessary that this word of Christ should bee fulfilled see Joh. 18.32 Thirdly This kinde of death carried with it a more special infamy than any other as at this day wee count hanging a dogs death that is an infamous kinde of death because it was especially execrable by the Law which accursed every one which was hanged on a tree not that this death by any Law of nature or in it self was more accursed than burning or pressing nor by the Sword for then neither the Thief on the Cross could bee saved nor any of our fellons thus executed whereas the scripture in the one and our own experience in the other speak the contrary but it was onely accursed by the Ceremonial law of Moses so that every Malefactor of the Jews that was hanged was in the Ceremony accursed and was the type of Christ the substance of all Ceremonies who on the Cross was really and truely accursed sustaining the whole wrath
be sold by Elisha Wallis at the Golden Horse-shooe in the Old-Bayley 1659. TO THE Right Honourable and Learned Knight Sir ROBERT NANTON One of the Principal Secretaries unto His Excellent Majesty and of his Majesties Honourable Privy Counsel All the Blessings of this Life and a better SIR THat which Solomon teacheth in that one Aphorism often repeated wanted not apparent weight and moments of Reason saying Prov. 11.10 29.2 that In the prosperity of the Righteous the City rejoyceth For God being in Covenant with them for their sakes doth good to such as are joyned in the same Society with them for one Joseph all P●tiphars house was blessed and for one Paul all that were in the ship with him are saved yea good and vertuous men by their presence as Lot in Sodome by their Prayers as Moses in the breach and by their prudent Counsel as that poor wise man Eccl. 9.15 withstand the judgements of God and save the City for had there been found one good man all Jerusalem had been spared for his sake Again vertuous men advanced will confer all their honour and grace to the publick good they live not to themselves and theirs but take in the Church and Common-wealth as fellow-Commoners of all their goodness Mordecaies authority wrought publike deliverance to the whole Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Josephs advancement sustained the whole Land by opening the Garners in time of Famine The honour of one good man shall bee the grace of all good men his power the strength of many his greatness the raising of many as when one Mordecai is raised light and joy Ester 8.16 and gladness and Honour came to all the Jews Further good men honoured by God will honour God again and withstand his dishonour they will to their power provide that Gods worship bee erected that his Sabbaths be sanctified that true religion bee maintained that falshood and errors bee suppressed that publ●ke p●ace bee not disturbed that common justice bee not perverted est Gods favour bee discontinued Sine pli● cen●uplex murus rebus servandis parum est and his judgements let in Whence they are to bee esteemed the strongest Towers the thickest Walls the most impregnable Forts the surest Muniments and the stoutest Horsemen and Chariots of their Countrey yea the Wise man in one word saith much more Prov. 10.25 Justu● fundamentum mundi that the Righteous is a sure foundation upholding the whole World But why write I this or to your Honour surely as one who ever reverenced your worthy parts I could not but crave l●ave to express my self one of the City rejoycing and praising God in your honours prosperity and advancement and the rather because my self was an eye-witnesse how God led you through some of your younger years which were so studiously and commendably passed as this your later time fitly answereth that expectation which was then conceived of you You were then dear to our common Mother that famous Vniversity of Cambridge which for your Eloquence and grace of speech and perswasion appointed you her Orator for your wisdome and gravity in government chose you her Proctor for your soundnesse in all kinde of fruitful and commendable literature tendred you all her honours and degrees and for your sober studious and vertuous conversation worth ly held now her great Ornament And now as riper for greater imployments the same God whose priviledge it is to dispense promotions for bee pulleth down one and setteth up another hath moved his Majesty not only to set your seat among the honourable but to admit you as it were into his breast and betrust you with the secrets of this great state and Kingdome an Office not more Ancient than Honourable befitting only men of rarest wisdome fidelity and fitnesse to stand before so great so wise a King This was a most honourable Office among the most ancient Kings of Israel for King David had his two Principal Secretaries Serajah and Jonathan whom the Text commendeth for a man of Counsel and understanding 2 Sam. 8.17 1 Chro. 27.32 and King Solomon his Son had two other Elihoreph and Ahiah who were in chief place neer the King 1 King 4.3 We read also of Shebna principal Secretary to King Hezekiah 2 King 18.18 of whom Junius saith hee was secundus a rege Now your place being a service of such Honour under his Majesty cannot bee without an answerable weight and charge Your Honour easily conceiveth that the Lord chargeth you with a chief care of honouring him who hath honoured you that you stand charged to his Majesty with great trust and fidelity that the Church expecteth that by your authority you should promote her causes and stand in the maintenance of pure Religion that the Common-wealth claimeth her part in you for the preservation of peace within her walls and prosperity within her Palaces that the Vniversity looketh you should advance her just causes promote Learning and incourage her Students by helping them into the rooms of the ignorant and unlearned Ministers in a word Prov. 11.11 that the whole City hopeth to be exalted by the prosperity of the righteous And now if your Honours thankful heart shall call upon you and say Quid retribuam Domino Tota vita Christiani sanctum desiderium est Aug. in Joh. tract 4. you will easily fall into frequent thoughts and desires of discharging all this expectation This shall be happily done if you shall chuse about you the wisest Counsellors for the happy and prudent carriage of your great affairs imitating herein that peerless pattern of wisdome Solomon himself who notwithstanding his extraordinary measure of wisdome chose unto himself selectissimum senatum a bench of most wise and grave Counsellors whose Counsel Rhehoboam after despis●d The best Counsellor is that great Counsellor who is daily to bee consulted by fervent prayer The next is the word of God Isa 9 which as it giveth no less certain direction in difficult cases than the Oracle did unto Israel or than did the pillar of the cloud and of fire by day and night for their motion or station while they passed through the wilderness so the daily consulting with Gods statutes by reading and meditation as with so many learned Counsellors made holy David wiser than the Aged than the Learned than the Princes than his Adversaries Psa 119 98 99 100. Josh 1. ● And if Joshuah would prosper and have good successe in his high enterprizes he must keep him to the book of the Law and not depart from it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prov. 10.32 The fear of God is wisdome and the next wisdome to that is to converse and consult with such as do fear God whose lips speak just and good things whereby a man shall become both wiser and better This is the high way to attain and retain grace and reputation with God and good men for this is an inheritance
That God is to bee loved above all and that for himself being the chief good This is the scope of the whole first Table the first and the great Commandement Mark 12.33 To love God with all the heart all the understanding all the soul and all the strength is more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices as the Scribe conf●ssed whereupon the Text infers hee answered 〈…〉 cordate discreetly wisely and that in Christs Judgement This is wisdome to give God the first place first thoughts first service chief praise and precedency for of him and through him Rom. 11.36 and from him are all things 2 An●ther chief point of spiritual wisdome in the things of God is 2 Purchase Christ above all gain to purchase Christ and Remission of sins above all things in the World The sound Christian is that wise Merchant that sells all to buy the Pearl that is Christ and his Righteousness that wise builder that lays Christ a sure foundation in his heart Hee is of the number of those Wise Virgins that will bee sure what ever they lack to furnish themselves of Oyl in their Lamps to meet their Bridegroom Wisdome will procure the best commodities and chief gain which is Christ both in life and death Phil. 1. ●1 Paul was a wise Merchant who esteemed all things as dross and dung in comparison of Christ So were the Disciples saying Master wee have left all and followed thee John 6.63 So were the Martyrs whom the world accounted simple fools in following Christ with the loss of life and all Happy is that soul and filled with sound and saving Wisdome that comes to Christ with this resolution Master thou hast the words of eternal life and whither shall I go 3. Let us prefer in our election and choise things of higher nature 3 Chuse best things first before things of inferiour for wisdome keeps a method by which it ever subordinateth lower things to higher This rule our Saviour prescribeth Matth. 6.33 First seek the Kingdome of God and his righteousness and then the things of this life First provide for heaven and then for earth By which rule of wisdome 1 All profits and pleasures must give place to piety for all is but pidling gain to godliness 2 By this rule of wisdome the special calling and trade of life must give place to the general calling which is the trade of Christianity 3 By this rule a Christian must chuse to bee rich in God and good works rather than in the world which because the Rich man in the Gospel neglected hee is called fool for his labour Luke 12.10 4 By this rule we must with David Psalm 4. more affect one glimpse of Gods favour and countenance than all Corn Wine and Oyl that is the most necessary and delightful profits in the World 5 By this rule wee must make more account of pardon of sins looked up in our breasts than of the whole treasury of a Kingdome in our chests 6 By this rule wee must esteem a grain of grace above a million of gold And 7 a poor godly man above a wicked Prince Eccles 4.13 Better is a wise Child than an old foolish King which will not be admonished 4 Fear God and keep his Commandements for this is the whole duty of man 4 Fear God keep his Commandements Eccles 12.13 This is to apply our hearts to Wisdome to set our hearts to keep Gods commandements and do them This is our Wisdome Deut. 4.5 Who is a wise man among you indued with knowledge Let him by good conversation shew his works in meekness of wisdome Jam. 5.13 A Wise man will attend the mouth of the King and will fear the danger of the Law So a wise Christian will walk in the Law of the Lord Psalm 119.1 and will bee sure to keep him to this rule and warrant contained in the word of God Gal. 6.16 And as a Wise man is careful to keep his Assurances and Evidences for the certainty of his Lands and earthly Livelihoods and is loath to forfeit any of them by failing in any of the conditions So it is the Wisdome of a godly man to keep the word safely in his heart which assureth him of his estate in heaven and which hee is loath to forfeit by failing in the conditions and clauses of it CHAP. VIII Containing Rules of Wisdome concerning the Inner man and first of the Mind Thoughts and Will BEing to entreat of the Rules of Wisdome concerning man and the things of man good order requireth that wee b●gin with such as concern first Ones self And secondly others They which concern a mans self respect either the inner man of the outward The inner man in five particulars 1 In his Mind 2 Thoughts 3 Will. 4 Conscience And 5 Affections Rules for the Minde 1 To inlighten it For the Minde these rules of wisdome are necessary to bee remembred 1 To furnish it with necessary profitable and humble knowledge The wise mans eyes are in his head Eccles 2.14 This is a wisdome to sobriety Rom. 12.13 where also the Apostle condemneth curiosity and conceitedness which wastes our time and brings infinite idle questions wherein men presume above that which is meet The Prophet David professed hee medled not with things too high for him Psalm 131.1 1 Cor. 2.2 And the Apostle Paul desired after his conversion to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified As for humbleness in knowledge Solomon saith The way of a Fool is right in his own eyes Prov. 1● 15 and A wise man in his own conceit is more hopeless than a Fool Prov. 26.12 16. Our rule therefore must bee to grow up in wisdome and as wee grow in knowledge so to grow in humility for the more sound knowledge a man attains the more shall hee see in himself to humble him 2 To deck 2 To deck and adorn the minde with humility holiness modesty shamefastness c. 1 Pet. 3.4 5. and Col. 3.12 As the Elect of God put o● tender mercy kindness humbleness and meekness but above all things put on love verse 14. Rules for the Thoughts The second sort of Rules concerns a mans Thoughts The general is in Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence for it is slippery and deceitful more than necessary to watch and suspect it and to set time apart to check and reclaim it But for the better keeping of thy thoughts in order think on these particulars 1 Give God the first thoughts 1 Give God thy fi●st thoughts that hee may hold the chief part in thy heart and this will sweetly rell●sh th● heart and by estranging it from worldly impediments fit it and keep it in preparedness for all good occasions Psa 108.1 2 3. David prepares his heart and will awake early to praise the Lord The way to walk safely and comfortably all the day is first to reform that which is
comes amiss to an idle person Besides discredit bad report and poverty come as an armed man upon such a one Prov. 6.11 3 To others 3 To others whether wee bee Masters or servants as knowing that in our Calling wee are to practise most Christian duties as love to our brethren patience truth fidelity uprightness as being ever under Gods eye 3 Be not busie in other mens Callings 3 Another point of Wisdome in our Callings is not to meddle with other mens business but follow our own close 1 Thes 4.11 Study to be quiet and to do your own business And every where the Apostle reproves busie bodies who going beyond their own bounds thrust their sickle into every mans harvest and being out of their own places and business intermeddle with that which no way concerns them And these are disturbers of peace and civil tranquillity kindling and blowing up contentions for lack of other work The same rule is for women also that they bee not gadders but house-keepers Tit. 2.5 4 In earthly business carry an Heavenly minde Phil. 3.20 4 In all earthly business study to carry an heavenly minde A Christian while hee converseth in earth must have his conversation in Heaven And know that in all the ways of this present life hee ought never to step out of the way to eternal life Neither shall a man bee a loser by this course seeing wee have an express promise that if wee seek Gods Kingdome first and principally these outward things should so far as they are needful for us without such carking care bee cast upon us 5 Intend most the most necessary duties of them 5 As all duties of the Calling must bee profitable in themselves and for the publike good so the most profitable must bee most intended and specially performed A Minister must read the Word but must apply himself more to Preaching as being more necessary A Magistrate must execute Justice upon transgressors of mens Laws but especially against open transgressors of Gods Law Masters of families must provide for the bodies and health of their family but especially for the good and salvation of their souls CHAP. XII Rules of Wisdome concerning a mans estate and first for adversity THe rules of Wisdome concerning a Christian mans estate are these One general Rule for all estates is to think the present estate best for thee First General Secondly Special The general rule for all estates is this Bee prepared for any estate contented in every estate and assure thy self the present estate whatsoever it is is best for thee though not ever in thy sense yet in Gods gracious and wise ordering of it This lesson the Apostle Paul had well learned Phil. 4.11 12. I can want and abound I can bee full and hungry I have learned in all estates to bee contented The special rules are either for prosperity or for adversity Rules for affliction Concerning adversity and afflictions these are the rules of Christian wisdome 1 Consider thou art not placed here in the world by God 1 God may as well be injoyed in Adversity as Prosperity to injoy the pleasures of the World but to injoy God which thou mayest do as well in affliction as in prosperity and to cleave to him in his service looking for nothing but afflictions as a Pilgrim going to thy Country the way whereunto lyeth through afflictions This ground not laid men count troubles a strange thing 1 Pet. 4.11 and start at the mention of them as the Apostles Joh. 11.8 when they heard Christ speaking of going into Jury where the Jews had lately sought to stone him And note it to bee a corruption of the heart to bee more grieved for thine own troubles than the troubles of the Church for private than publick evils 2 Lay up strength and comforts aforehand As first Humility 2 Lay up strength and comfort aforehand to over-master and tame the pride and rebellion of our hearts and to bring in contentedness to sweeten our troubles and our labour will be well spent for if wee can relish the hardest part of our life our whole life else will assuredly bee more sweet and joyful 2 Grow up in the knowledge of God which will make thee rise up in much comfort and will bring in comfort against that confused heaviness distrust and dangerous affections and passions which else in trouble might beat us down and off him 3 Get assurance of faith which will sweetly warm the heart in the sense of Gods love in Jesus Christ The fruit of which will bee first To inable us to trust our selves with God in any estate and bee assured the Lord is with us in fire and water in the midst of the Valley of the shadow of Death Secondly to depend on him for strength Psal 23.4 for howsoever Satan would make us beleeve our affliction is greater than it is or wee are for it yet wee shall assure our hearts that the Lord hath measured it out for our strength and not above Thridly 1 Cor. 10.13 to wait upon him for a good issue and seasonable deliverance who hath promised to turn it to the best This shall keep us from fainting distrust and despair Rom. 8.28 3 In all evils of punishment take occasion to set upon the evil of sin 3 In evils of punishment to set upon evil of sin and revenge upon that complain of it to God and men murmure and grudge at nothing else If affliction bee sharper than ordinary it is sure some sin or lust addes a sting unto it But this rule mortifies sin and unruly passions and will weaken the heart and make a man say with the Church Mic. 7.9 I will bear the wrath of the Lord because I have sinned 4 Make them no heavier than God maketh them by impatience 4 Make them no heavier th●n God hath made them frowardness and looseness of heart God sometimes layes on a little finger and the froward heart lays on the whole hand and loyns to make the burden heavier with faithless heaviness and distrust which is but an addition of new and worse troubles than the former How inconsiderately do many men load themselves with troubles too too light in themselves and on the shoulders of wise men who can make a vertue of necessity and step over a number of rubs which others stoop to remove and infinitely toil themselves How do many in smaller troubles as discourtesie of neighbours unruliness of children unfaithfulness of servants smaller losses and crosses in Family-matters give place to unquietness impatience and passion till their folly have by seeking to case their burden increased it from a dram to a talent And now how unmeet are they for the service of God How unprofitable in any Christian society How sowr and heavy in countenance disguised in speech Levius sit pationus Quicquid corrigere est nosas Horat. and impotent in their behaviour All which
testifie the frowardness of the heart wherein had there been a dram of Christian wisdome and moderation the passion had not swelled to the cause much less so far exceeded it 5 Make not haste from under any affliction Hee that beleeves makes not haste 5 Make not too much haste from under them Isa 18.16 But labour for a right use of it rather than the removal attain once a right use and doubt not of a good issue Gold is not presently pulled out of the fire so soon as it is cast in but must stay a while till it bee purged A Musician strains up a string and lets it not down lest the harmony and musick bee spoiled So the Lord deals with his children but never forgets mercy Isa 27.9 6 Observe both the trials and the fruits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor measure nay it is mercy so to measure them as they may bee purged by them 6 Observe and mark thy troubles and thy disposition in them First to grow up in wisdome and experience by them thus thy sufferings will become wholesome instructions Observe where thou wast most pinched and wherein thou tookest the greatest comfort Secondly to grow up in an infallible hope of Gods goodness and a good issue for time to come For this observe Gods seasonable hearing of thy prayers and the proofs of Gods help in most needful times which shall bee a strong means to keep thee from fainting 1 Sam. 17.37 fears and despairs for time to come So did David in the case of the Lion and Bear and through all the 23. Psalm Thus the Apostle from observations of times past gathers assurance for the time present and to come 2 Cor. 1.10 Who delivered us from so great death and doth deliver us and in whom wee trust that hee will yet hereafter deliver us Thirdly to bee able to comfort others with such comforts as our selves were upheld with in our troubles 2 Cor. 1.4 Which comforteth us in all our tribulation that wee may bee able to comfort them which are in affliction by the comfort wherewith our selves are comforted of God Thus to the godly ariseth light out of darkness sweet comes out of sowr and out of the eater meat CHAP. XIII Rules of Wisdome for Prosperity Rules for prosperity 1 Consider the danger of it IN prosperity take these directions 1 If riches increase set not thine heart upon them Psalm 62.10 For why shouldest thou considering the danger How easie it is to wax wanton How hard for a rich man to bee saved How few by outward things are drawn to the love of heavenly How many are insnared and choaked with them How flitting and uncertain they bee How certainly wee must leave them or they us and come to account for them 2 Be suspicious of thy self 2 In the carriage of thy prosperity bee suspitious of thy self thankful to God and return the glory of it to him of whom thou receivest it David while hee had liberty easily strayed Psalm 119.67 Thankfulness is Gods tribute Has aeterna fames consequitur dapes Hos aeterna sitis Sen. which being denied him hee re-enters on his own Deut. 28.47 Because thou servedst not the Lord with joyfulness and a good heart in the abundance of all things thou shalt serve thine enemies in hunger in thirst and in need of all things So do many Prodigals 3 Fear the cross before it come and provide for it 3 In thy calm provide for a storm The thing that I feared is come upon me Job 3.25 and hee waited for his change It was an addition to the great plague of Babylon Isa 46.11 that evil should come on her and shee not know the morning thereof Destruction shall come upon thee suddenly ere thou bee aware Luke 14.28 Therefore cast the costs of Religion and well-doing before hand 4 Never account thy self prosperous if it bee not well with Gods Church 4 Think not thy self prosperous if the Church of God be not Good Uriah would not rest as long as the Ark of the Lord was abroad and his Lord Joab in the field As a good childe being in health mourns and droops for the mothers sickness David thought it not fit to dwell in seiled houses and the Ark of God lie in tents For the neglect whereof 2 Sam. 7.2 the Jews are reproved Hag. 1.4 Nehemiah even before the King was of a sad countenance and sorrowful at heart when hee received evil tidings of Jerusalem Chap. 2. verse 2. Hester and Mordecai joyed not in the greatest advancements so long as the sentence against the Jews was unreversed And Moses might have lived well and at pleasure in Pharaohs Court Heb. 11.25 but hee chose rather to suffer affliction with Gods people than to injoy such pleasures 5 In thy prosperity consider the affliction and adversity of others 5 In thy prosperity cast eye on others afflictions The contrary hereof was the sin of the Princes of Israel living in prosperity Amos 6.6 They lye on beds of ivory and stretch themselves on beds drink wine in bowls and anoint themselves with oyle but none remembred the affliction of Joseph The like of Dives his inhumanity towards Lazarus Yea some time it shall bee wisdome to go into the house of mourning Eccl. 7.2 which will strike a deeper impression and to visit others in adversity and mark their speeches who imbrace these outward pleasures with greatest and sharpest appetite and thou shalt finde the affliction far more bitter and their sorrow in the loss so much the sharper as the love was eager in injoying their peace and perhaps they will tell thee they were never such gainers by all their prosperity as they were losers by it or gainers by that present affliction CHAP. XIV Rules to carry our speeches wisely as those that aim at the Apostolical rule of Christians circumspection 1. COncerning the ground of them Labour to get a good heart Rules for speeches 1 Let words issue from a good fountain Matth. 5.18 For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth will speak The heart of the wise guideth his mouth wisely Prov. 16.23 And if the heart indite a good matter the Tongue will be the Pen of a ready Writer Psal 45.1 Such as the heart is such will bee the speech And therefore hee that hath no care of his heart cannot bee a good and careful speaker The Apostle requires gracious speech Col. 4.6 but that must come from a gracious heart as Psalm 37.30 31. The mouth of the righteous will speak of wisdome and his tongue will talk of Judgement For the Law of his God is in his heart and his steps shall not slide And Prov. 31.26 Shee openeth her mouth with Wisdome and the Law of Grace is in her tongue On the contrary a graceless heart cannot speak well Prov. 10.20 21. The heart of the wicked is little worth the lips of the righteous do feed many
give but to the right owners or when out of desire of praise or out of superfluity when a man knows not else what to do with his wealth but some must have it If out of any of these respects all is lost 2 Concerning the right subject of works of m●rcy Do good unto all 2 The subject of mercy ● In general all Eccles 11.1 but especially to the houshold of faith Gal. 6.10 To all viz. the poor that are no● able to recompence us not looking for recompence of man but casting our bread upon the waters where th●re is no likelihood of ever reaping it again And to all even our enemies who stand in need of us and such as usually do and will recompence our good with evil Rom. 12.14 Matth. 5.44 And good reason For first all have our flesh Isa 58.7 For four Reasons from which wee must not hide our face 2 All have Gods image on them which wee must not refuse 3 Hereby wee shall b●e likest to God who doth good to all and to us being enemies and attain the most difficult practice of the Law 4 Wee shall hereby master the corruption of our own heart which lusteth after revenge and perhaps over-master the malice of our adversaries at least make them in●xcusable But esp●cially to the houshold of faith Because here is Gods image renewed ● In special the faithful here is one of the blood and kindred of Christ And if the good Samari●an was commended for mercy shewed to a stranger how much more will the Lord J●sus accept that which is done to one of those little ones that beleeve in him as done to himself Mat. 25.45 3 Concerning the matter of mercy 3 The matter of mercy 1 To the soul The greatest mercy wee can shew to any is toward their souls which stands in instructing the ignorant in counselling the weak in forgiving ●ffenders in admonishing or correcting him that erreth comforting distressed consciences and confirming them that are in good wayes This therefore must bee observed in all corporal mercy to ioyn spiritual labouring in all the other the good of this and especially to pray for such mercies from God for them as neithe● wee nor other men can minist r unto th●m And though that bee to bee done yet the other also must not be left undone but wee must bee merci●ul to the outward man of our brother in giving lending freely cloathing feeding visi●ing 2 To the body protecting from violence c. For this is mercy actual and accepta●l● fitted to that rule 1 Joh. 3.18 that wee shew mercy not in word and tongue but in deed and in truth This age aboundeth with mouth-mercy which is good cheap but a little handf●l were better than a great many such mouthfuls 4 The measure of it to our ability 4 Co●cerning them measure of our mercy Wee must bee merciful in the highest degr●e that wee can get our hearts unto and bee as like our heavenly Father in mercifulness as may bee This rule is 1 Cor. 1● 2 that every m●n lay up and distribute as God hath prospered him that is according to his ab●lity Gal ● 7 For hee that sows spar●ngly shall reap sparingly Doubtless men would not b●e so niggardly and sparing if they knew that what is mercifully bestowed Manus pauperis Chr●sti g z●phylacium is safest kept the bosomes bellies and mouthes of the poor is the best treasury to lay our goods in and if wee expected to reap after the measure of m●rcy at the last day wee would more liberally sow Hos 10.12 Yea a poor man may bee bountiful in a little which was the commendation of the poor widow for her two mites Luke 20. 5 The manner of shewing m●rcy 1 Seas nably 5 Concerning the manner of shewing mercy First It must bee don● seasonably and speedily when need is Prov. 3.28 Say not unto thy neighbour Go and come to morrow if now thou have it with thee For thou mayest bee cut off from the opportunity or that from thee b●sides tha● thou omittest a present du●y which is enjoyned Gal. 6.10 While wee have time let us do good And life is very uncertain Secondly It must bee done cheerfully God loves a cheerful giver 2 Cheerfully 2 C●r 9.7 N●t groaningly or grudgingly as if every penny were too much as many pinch-pennies who have pounds enough for any lust or pleasure do part with pence to the poor Saints as from their joynts or eyes 3 Wisely Thirdly I● must bee done wisely True mercy is dispensed by judgement It spares not where God will punish as Sauls cruel mercy A glass for Magistrates whose remisness can swallow any thing and punish nothing neither drunkenn●ss nor prophanation of the Sabbath nor swearing nor inordinate walking It is no mercy out of extream necessity to releeve strong Rogues wandring beggats and able idle persons but rath●r to punish and r●dress them nor to keep hospitality for Drunkards Gam●sters and riotous persons but a good man is merciful and measures his affairs by judgement 4 Constantly Gal. 6 9. Psalm 112.5 Fourthly Mercy must bee shewed constantly acc●rding to the precept Bee not weary of well-doing Let not the springs of our compassion bee ever dried up as wee would never have God weary of doing us good 5 Humbly Fifthly Wee must not rest or rejoyce in any work of mercy as meritorious but in the acceptance and covering of it saying when wee have done all we can Wee are unprofitable servants CHAP. XVIII Rules for Works and Actions of Justice In first The Ground Secondly Moderation IN all our civil conversation with men see that our external righteousness Rules for works of Justice flow from inward pi●●y G●d in the m●ral Law hath coupled the two Tables as the upholders one of another Thou shalt love the Lord thy God and thy neighbour as thy self Wee must love man in God and for God Christ 1 Concerning the ground aimed at bo●h in the work of our redemption that wee should serve him in righteousness as well as in holiness all our dayes Luke 1.75 Civil righteousness abstracted from piety is Pharisaical and unfruitful Give to Caesar Caesars and to God Gods 2 Concerning moderation of Justice Never stand so upon strict justice 2 Concerning moderati n of Justice but that sometimes for peace wee must depart from our right according to the prec●pt Phil 4. verse 5. Let your equal minde be known unto all men And the practice of our Saviour Christ Matth. 17.27 who needed not nor could have been compelled 〈◊〉 pay toll but to cut off occasion of offence and contention hee departs from his right● and p●yes it hee might have said it is my right● and I will stand upon it and will not los● my freedome And m●n think they say well if they d●mand but their right But our Lord for our example departed from his right and accounted