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A08055 Mans actiue obedience, or The power of godlines especially in the commandement of the gospell, which requireth faith in euerie Christian: or A treatise of faith, worthily called precious faith, as being in it selfe a most rare iewell of ioy, and peerelesse pearle, that excelleth in worth the highest price. Wherein is plainly declared what faith in Christ is what properly is the obiect of it, what is the speciall operation of faith, by which it may bee discerned; and the worke about which it is principally imployed, the subiect wherein it is placed; what things are needfull to the making it up, what to the being, and what to the wel-being of it; with the differences that are betweene true beleeuers and fained in all of them, and the vses thereof. By Master William Negus, lately minister of Gods word at Lee in Essex.; Mans active obedience. Negus, William, 1559?-1616.; Negus, Jonathan, d. 1633. 1619 (1619) STC 18420; ESTC S113618 278,658 364

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mischiefe of pride surely as pride spoileth vertue so vice spoileth pride againe And as out of the ashes of other sinnes pride is said to spring vp so out of the flourishing againe of other sinnes all that pride is plucked downe againe And this may bee thought to bee one cause why the Lord seeth it meete not wholly to free his seruants from many infirmities and much corruption of nature which is found still remaining in them namely that as he would not cast out all the enemies of his people out of that good land to which he had brought them lest the wild beastes for want of their helpe should preuaile against them so doth the Lord suffer that strength of corruption to remaine in his children that they may be aided thereby against all the assailings of pride which is such a wild beast as otherwise could not well bee with-stood but were likely otherwise to deuoure all vertue that it could find in them and by so doing come finally to ouerthrow them Satan therefore that is so busie with Gods children to bee euer tempting them to sinne and to one sinne after another doth therein but worke against himselfe and doth but lay a traine to blow vp the castles of pride wherein himselfe should most strongly and safely abide And while he neuer leaueth till he haue drawne the childe of God at the last to commit some great and hainous sinne which proueth to be as a wakening sinne vnto him who before was slumbring in securitie and maketh him to start vp and arise out of his sleepe and considering his waies in his heart to humble himselfe at once and to repent for that and for all his sinnes beside Now Satan in this doing doth but pull as we vse to say an old house vpon his head for he pulleth downe and ouerthroweth thereby the whole frame of all the other sinnes which hee had built vp and got to be planted in that mans heart before and so by his restlesse tentations he destroyeth and crosseth his owne worke the Lord making him in despight of his teeth to worke against himselfe who though he doe what he can yet will the Lord euer be found to ouershoote Satan euen in his own bowe In all which respects the Lord through his infinite wisedome goodnesse and mercy so ordering euery thing as he maketh the very sinnes of his seruants committed by them not a little to turne to the good of themselues by causing them therby the better to know their owne frailtie and what strength of corruption is still abiding in them that so they may be drawne to a greater humiliation and more earnest repenting not alone for their last sinnes but for such sinnes also as before either were not knowne or neuer at al soundly repented on and withal to haue a far greater care bred in them how to carry themselues more warily for afterwards euermore with feare and trembling working on their owne saluation And when besides Gods seruants shall see the workes of Satan thus distolued in them that what he intended for their ouerthrow doth now serue for their furtherance and to their making for euer the diuels poyson being so altered and changed by the ouer-ruling hand as it becommeth medicine Satan tempting and drawing them to sinne and the Lord by that sinne pulling them out of more sinne so curing sinne by sinne And lastly and chiefly when they at the length doth see how the Lord doth out of the sinnes committed by them how odious and abominable soeuer they haue been which they haue done make way for his owne greater glory and the more magnifying of the riches of those his mercies whereby both the same their sinnes are pardoned vnto them and they themselues in like manner cleared and purged from the venemous infection and strong corruption of them what should let but that which being euer humbled in themselues with godly sorrow for their sinnes and going out of themselues yet the true seruants of God their sinnes notwithstanding may reioyce in the Lord and alwaies reioyce in him for the excellency of all this worke thus wrought by him Q. Though there may be some cause of a Christians reioycing in the Lords blessed worke whereby he bringeth good out of the euill of such sinnes as he hath committed when once such good effects are seene to be brought out yet while this sinne is still abiding without being put to any such vse as you haue before spoken I demaund what cause there can bee shewed or any way found to bee of a Christians reioycing in the Lords worke which hee is in hand with towards him at the very time of his sinning or still abiding in his sinne A. That I may not be mistaken herein I am so farre from either saying or thinking that any seruant of God falling into sinne may any way reioyce in himselfe in respect of the sinne that either he hath once fallen into or still is seene to continue and abide in as confidently I doe affirme he can neuer be sufficiently cast downe nor grieued enough with godly sorrowing for the same and therefore according to the counsell giuen by the Apostle Iames 4. 9. 10. Iames I say he ought to be afflicted to mourne and to weepe letting his laughter be turned into mourning and his ioy into heauinesse humbling himselfe daily in the sight of the Lord till hauing obtained mercy from God for hauing repentance vnto life granted to him whereby hee may turne from his sinne and bring forth fruites worthy of amendment of life the Lord may then lift him vp in giuing him sound comfort and true ioy againe Howbeit in respect of another worke which the Lord himselfe is then in hand with euen when his seruant is sinning or after hee hath sinned found still abiding in that sinne he hath committed if that worke of God could be well seene into and rightly and wisely discerned I see nothing to the contrary but there might be found the like cause of reioycing therein as the sicke patient findeth cause to reioyce in the worke which he seeth his skilfull Physitian to be in hand with when he is tempering the potion mixing the ingredients preparing the medicine and then doth administer it vnto him and sets it a working the patient cannot all this time reioyce as hauing seene and felt what is the good effect of that medicine nor in perceiuing the cure to be fully wrought and finished vpon him but knowing that the Physitian who hath taken him in hand is both skilfull and faithfull hee reioyceth to see him to bee about the worke and so diligent therein as to be a preparing the medicine within his best vnderstanding hee knoweth of all others to bee most fit for his curing So when the Lord seeth no other meanes to be so fit for the recouering of some dull and dead-hearted seruant of his out of some sinne that he is fallen into and in which hee still lieth slumbring without any
leaue one sinne by the power of the ministery of the word then twenty by being beaten from them by constraint of outward trouble and affliction especially when the knowledge of Gods inexpressable loue vnto vs in Iesus Christ is manifested and brought to light by the Gospell preached so as thereout we are made to know how God hath so loued vs as he hath giuen his Sonne Christ Iesus vnto vs to be our Redeemer and so hath giuen vs to him to bee his redeemed yea that he hath giuen his owne selfe vnto vs to be our most louing Father reconciled vnto vs in Christ Iesus and giuen vs againe power by him to become his children with boldnesse to cry Abba father to him by the spirit of adoption which we haue receiued from him when the knowledge especially the sense and feeling of th●se thing● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hearts with sorrow and griefe for 〈…〉 committed that euer we should haue 〈…〉 gracious and a Father most kind 〈…〉 spoken when of a child-like affection 〈…〉 towards him with sorrowing deeply for hauing off●nded him and are found as The soule that is drenched with teares of true repentance receiueth such a tincture and die of grace that will neuer after out good natured children that haue soft and tender hearts to bee grieuing sobbing and sighing in euery corner for angering our Father so as our teares may bee perceiued not to be teares of fullennesse or stubbornnesse but of kindnesse and dutifulnesse towards him when looking vpon him whom we haue pierced with our sinne wee shall be found to mourne before him as one that mourneth for his onely some and shall be in bitternesse for him as one that Zach. 12. 10. is in bitternesse for his first borne And when on the otherside the Lord looking graciously backe vpon vs as he did vpon Peter that looke of his shall pierce our Luk. 22. 61. hearts in remembring all his kindnesses causing vs then with Peter to goe out and weepe bitterly When our sorrow groweth thus and is caused after this manner to arise and when the change of life following hereupon taketh also his beginning from the like ground which is that the appearing of the grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men is that that teacheth and moueth Tit. 2. 10. 11. yea after a sort compelleth vs to denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue godly righteously and soberly in our whole life time following then is such a sorrow a true godly sorrow indeed and such a conuersion and repentance following thereof vndoubtedly sound and vnfained which safely may be rested on and trusted vnto indeed I denie not but that Gods seruants both may and ought to haue sorrow and griefe of heart when Gods chastisements are vpon them and when they are wounded and smitten by his hand but that must not bee the principall cause of their sorrowing nor that which should cause their sorrow most to abound not the punishment but the fault is most to be respected of such and ought principally to be lamented and bewailed by them I doe also acknowledge that the terrour of Gods Law denouncing plagues and punishments and threatnings of vengeance to all that are transgressors thereof may so strike and astonish for a time the hearts of Gods humbled and deiected seruants as there can bee felt of them no other then a seruile and slauish feare of death and condemnation trembling before the fiercenesse of Gods wrath whose angry countenance they behold frowning vpon them and his hand lifted vp bending the blow at them which they feare will strike them dead at his feet Then is their sorrowing little differing from that worldly sorrow that causeth death they sorrowing because they can see no way of escaping but of necessity as they thinke they must haue their portion with the diuell and the damned in eternall hell fier But this kind of sorrowing and fearing is not that which they doe euer abide in nor no longer then the Lord seeth it most expedien for them for their better humbling and then it is taken away againe with that spirit of bondage that made them so to feare and their worldly sorrow becommeth changed into godly sorrow that causeth in them repentance vnto life and their slauish and seruile feare into a sonne-like and a child-like feare causing them to feare the Lord not so much because of his wrath as for that there is mercy with him with which fearing there is ioyned boldnesse and the spirit of adoption giuen them which causeth them to feare after that painfull manner no more Legall contrition then is not any part or cause of repentance in Gods children but onely an occasion thereof and that by the meere mercy of God for it selfe is the sting of the Law and the very entrance into the pit of hell The Law and the Gospell although in some sort they teach one thing yet they perswade not by the same arguments The Gospell perswadeth by the death of Christ who hath loued vs and giuen himselfe for vs that we might be saued by him this the Law neuer knew nor yet taketh knowledge of but it perswadeth with terrour and feare of iudgement but the Gospell hath a more sweeter voice and in a more amiable manner calleth vs to repentance and amendment of life and our Sauiour Christ commeth with blessing vs to turne vs from our iniquities Our godly sorrowing then for sinne which causeth repentance in vs and a turning from our sinnes it Ier. 32. 39. 40. 2. Cor. 7. 1. is a gracious effect of the Gospell and a part of the new Couenant which the Lord promised to make with vs in the latter dayes Thus the sorrow of true conuerts differeth cleerly from the sorrow of hypocrites in that which causeth either CHAP. XXXI How the sorrow of true beleeuers and hypocrites differeth in that which is caused by either THey differ also no lesse in that which is caused by either And to name the chiefe and principall difference at the first the one causeth death and the other causeth life and that is a difference broad enough for euery one plainly to discerne The worldly sorrow of hypocrites causeth death two manner of waies either by making men too secure or by filling them too full of dreadfull horrour and hellish feare either by making them to presume too much and so they come to perish that way or by making them to despaire too much and so they come to be ouerwhelmed and drowned in perdition that way When hypocrites are brought by the feare of Gods iudgments or by the feeling of them to be much troubled and vexed with griefe and sorrow in their hearts and to expresse their inward heauinesse by an outward great humbling of themselues after the manner that Ahab was seene to be before the Lord they grow so conceited in themselues for that they haue done do so flatter themselues with a vaine hope that that which was feared shall
suffice not let him answere Christs interrogatorie When the Sonne of man commeth shall he find faith on the earth If no faith surely as little repentance Shall then Gods Seedes men withdraw their hand because much hath been sowne alreadie when as so little comes vp Nay verily so many as truly beleeue on the name 1. Iohn 5. 13. of the Son of God wil acknowledge they stil neede Saint John should write vnto them that they may beleeue on the name of the Sonne of God as for the world that abides in vnbeleefe the truth of God where it shines most clearely shall haue that effect which Christ foretold the Spirit of Truth the blessed Comforter should haue at his comming euen to conuince it of sin because Iohn 16. 19. they beleeued not on him Neither I hope will the manner of handling vsed by the Authour and the kind of phrase farre from affectation or the entising words of mans wisdome I hope I say this will not offend any who are content their faith should stand not in the wisdome of men but in the power of God But I returne to you most worthie Knight to you principally I offer this Treatise this field if so I may call it wherein the Pearle of faith is discouered It is not for me to teach you how you are to account thereof your wisdome cannot but approue that high estimation the Merchant in the Gospel had of the Pearle This onely I wish that as you abound in outward treasures so you may be rich in the faith and consequently heire of the kingdome which God hath promised to them that loue him And certainely if that bee true that faith workes by loue then are you not without witnesse being well reported of for your loue to the truth and such as walke in the truth Onely goe on honoured Sir to deserue well and heare well of the Church of God If thus you shall bee content with those 24 Elders Apoc. 4. to cast your earthly dignitie at the feet of the Lambe improouing all to his behoofe to the aduancing his glorie and countenancing Religion If with that worthy King Dauid in way of thankfulnes to the Lord who hath done so great things for you you shall reflect your goodnesse vpon his Saints those excellent on earth this shall lift you vp in true honour and reputation among men in this world and be found to your immortal praise and glory in the day of the Lord Iesus yea vpon you shall come the blessing of those who blesse all such in the name of the Lord as are friends to Sion and seeke the peace of Ierusalem To this I from my heart say Amen and the Lord out of Sion blesse your Worship and grant you to see the good of Ierusalem all the daies of your life So for euer stands bound to pray and in what he may to be seruiceable to your Worship IONATHAN NEOVS THE PREFACE TO THE Christian Reader TO preuent that preiudice whereby the regard and benefit of many good bookes is much hindred we haue thought good to premit somewhat touching the Author the treatise it selfe and the reasons why it is committed to the presse First for the Author he may well be reckoned amongst the Worthies of Gods Israel who while he liued was as another a Act. 18. 24. Apollos an eloquent man and mightie in the Scriptures instructed in the way of the Lord and feruent in the spirit and spake and taught diligently the things of the Lord a man of indefatigable paines both in his priuate studies and exercises and also in the publique worke of his Ministerie to the great benefit of the Church of God ouer which the holy Ghost had made him an ouer-seer and finally he was a iudicious and pious Diuine well seene and practised especially in these points of faith and repentance wherof he hath here written So that the qualitie of the Author doth deseruedly commend the treatise as also the nature of the treatise may wel commend the Author with whom in the birth thereof it fared as with b Gen. 35. 11. Rachel who died in trauell whereupon though this abortiue orphan may in regard of the parent thereof well brooke the name c The sonne of my sorrow Benoni yet for our due esteeme vse thereof it may fitly by vs be called d The sonne of my right hand Beniamin The reasons mouing this our Author to write any thing for publique vse as one of vs hath obserued them from his owne mouth was first for that he being restrained from benefiting the Church by the ordinarie course of his ministerie hee was both willing and desirous to be seruiceable and helpfull to the same in what he might by this way and meane Secondly he seeing the people generally both pestered with many needlesse idle vaine pamphlets and multitudes of fabulous historicall discourses and also much encombred with manifold polemicall diuinitie tractats of curious and litigious points tending rather to contention and diuision then to godly edifying and that many good and necessarie bookes were more framed to giue satisfaction to the learned then to edifie the simple therefore that he might in a subseruient manner endeuour to supplie the preteritions of the latter sort of bookes and to helpe to iussle the former rotten rapsodies out of place he thought it expedient that treatises of such necessarie matter concerning the eternall saluation of all handled in so plaine a manner that the meanest may vnderstand should also be obtruded vpon the readers at the least if it were but to interrupt and hinder somewhat the reading of such bookes as be either hurtfull or vnprofitable Thirdly that he might leaue in speciall to that people and * Lee. congregation to whom he was a carefull Minister a particular remembrancer to bring to their minds some chiefe points of his former doctrine taught amongst them which upon their second meditations thereof they might the more affect and regard and also to bequeath some note of his good affection to his louing friends and well deseruing acquaintance this treatise did he entend and fit for them often to peruse and well to respect as the last farewell and loue-token of their deare friend Secondly for the treatise it selfe though it be imperfect both for the extent in parts and measure thereof and also for the manner and forme of the same so that now it commeth farre short of that perfection which was intended and would haue been performed by the Author if God had not taken him away before that he could finish or reuise it yet seeing for substance and matter it is touching iustifying faith and sound repentance without which none can be saued neither doth any perish but by defect and error in these two therefore is this discourse thereof most worthie the diligent perusall and consideration of all who may therein finde a new discouerie of the manifold slights of the diuell and deceits of the
presence of holy grace for such a true desire of grace in the want of grace is grace it selfe and there is the euidence of the life of grace manifestly to be seene Now that life of grace cannot otherwise be had but as from faith and by meanes thereof it be receiued which drawing life from Christ and taking it from him doth replenish the whole soule therewith and quickneth euery grace with the same that is found therein So that such a liuely feeling of the want of faith and complaining of that want with desire of hauing that want supplied doe no other in truth but argue the presence of liuely faith howsoeuer it be not felt Faith as well may be present in the soule though it be not felt and though hauing it we be not for a time priuie Feeling to our so hauing of it as Christ himselfe may be present with a true Christian when yet being strongly set vpon by some sore tentation hee may thinke himselfe for the time wholly to be giuen ouer and to be quite forsaken Christ once receiued by a beleeuing Christian to dwell in his heart by faith may be and doubtlesse according to his promise will be with his to the end of the world still Matth. 28. remaining and abiding with euery such a beleeuing christian dwelling in that heart which once receiued him though so closely keeping himselfe hidden that the same Christian may for a time seeke him as much sorrowing for not finding of him as euer did Mary his mother sorrowfully Luke 2. 4. 8. seeke him when he was missing and hunt as much after him with as longing a desire to light vpon him as euer did the Spouse when she was most sicke of loue Cantic 5. 8. long for and looke after her welbeloued and yet with her for a good time neuer find nor light vpon him when all the while he is though very secretly yet most certainly remaining with them and abiding in them For the Lord knoweth how to bee present with his children and yet they themselues shall not be aware of his so being as Iacob spake of Gods presence with him at Bethel God saith he was here and I was not aware The Lord can tell saith one of the ancient Fathers how to be wholly euery August epist 3. ad Volusianum where and yet contained in no one place he knoweth how to come to one by not leauing that place from whence hee so came he knoweth how to goe away againe and not to leaue him from whom he is so gone And againe speaking of the marueilous manner of Christ his being borne of a woman she being yet a virgine and so of his comming into the house the doores yet being shut saith further If a reason of this could be found it should not be wonderfull if an example of the like it should not be singular We must know saith he and beleeue God can doe some things which wee can neuer finde out the manner and the way by which they are so done And in such things the greatest reason of the doing of them is the only power and might of him by whom they are done There are two waies after which the Lord may be said to be with his children while they remaine in this world one which may bee perceiued and well may bee felt another which is secret and cannot bee knowne but by the euent and effect as they by proofe finde themselues to haue been sustained and vpheld in all their greatest troubles though they know not how and could not then perceiue by whom but it was the Lord that sustained them with the one hand while hee was putting them downe with the other After such a manner may faith be knowne to bee present in the heart when yet it cannot sensibly bee felt namely as it may be followed discouered and found out by the working It is well worth the obseruing that it is promised in the Gospell that whosoeuer beleeueth shall Iohn 4. 16. neuer perish but haue life euerlasting Now it is to bee marked that it is not said Who so hath the comfort of beleeuing and the feeling of his faith and so knoweth vn●oubtedly that he hath true faith he and he onely is the ●an that shall be saued but he that indeede beleeueth that is he whom God who onely knoweth the hearts of all and knoweth them better then wee know them our selues knoweth that hee doth truly though neuer so weakely beleeue and who hath faith in Gods account though it be not so in his owne though he haue not the feeling of his faith nor the comfort of his owne beleeuing nor can no more apprehend how the Lord can in any fauour be present with him then could Gideon conceiue how that could be so which the Angell spake vnto Iudg. 6. 12. 13. him telling him that the Lord was with him they being in the meane while oppressed by the hands of the Midianites yet that man is vndoubtedly in the state of saluation such a one can neuer perish in the end For there may be as blessed a beleeuing without some kind of seeing and feeling as was Thomas his beleeuing blessed when once he had seene his Sauiour present with his eyes and sensibly had felt him and laid hold vpon him with his hand witnesse that which our Sauiour Christ answered vnto Thomas vpon that occasion Thou hast seene and Ioh. 20. 29. hast beleeued blessed are they haue not seene and yet haue beleeued And thus much for the interpretation of that my speech I was in hand with for shewing how the assurance of a true beleeuing Christian is more in the assurance of the thing beleeued then in the person that doth beleeue and so much for answere inaway of some satisfaction to your request who desired to heare some thing spoken touching that point of a Christians not feeling the comfort he hath had and of his not feeling that hee hath faith at all nor any comfort of his present true beleeuing CHAP. XIIII Further differences betweene hypocrites and sound beleeuers in their assurance to be saued and first in the whole building thereof as also of the builders themselues NOw to prosecute my former speech and to shew some further differences that are discernable betweene the assurance of hypocrites and mis-beleeuers and such as soundly and truly doe beleeue As therefore there hath been shewed a manifest difference to bee in the foundation and ground worke of either of their assurances so is there as cleere a difference to be discerned in the whole frame and manner of the building and working vp of such assurance the workmanship being as Difference in building assurance differing as are the workmen that do build theron euen the master workmen themselues chiefe builders who hauing drawn the plot giue all the direction how things are to be caried who are as clean opposite in their doings each to other one working one way
of the deepest sorrowes the highest springs of the liueliest and most lasting comforts doe oftentimes fall out to bee found and fetched forth These springs are not opened till there be Sorrow brings ioy digging so deepe into the hollow ground of the heart which aboue all things is most deceitfull as there may be comming at the length to the rockie hardnesse that is there to be met with and that rocke it selfe bee so farre digged thorough till there may be felt such a tendernesse and softnesse of the heart and such a brokennesse of spirit as the heart at length may become wholly contrite Psal 22. 14. and so molten in the bowels with godly sorrowing that it be as water powred out and being thus broken contrite and sorrowfull it so be made fit to be presented as a most acceptable and well pleasing sacrifice vnto God Now when the heart of a poore penitent is thus deepely pierced wounded and beaten downe euen to the very bottome and lowest depth of a thorough-sorrowing and holy desparing that he lie complaining and crying out of the bottome of those deepes for helpe vnto God setting out his throat and crying with Dauid Out of the deepe haue I Psal 130. 1. 2. called vnto thee O Lord Lord heare my voice And with Ionah being in the Whales bellie cry out from thence as out of the bellie of hell then will not the Lord despise nor Psal 22. 24. abhorre the low estate of such as are so deceiued he will not hide his face from them but when they crie he will surely heare them for though hee inhabite eternitie and dwelleth on high yet will he listen and looke to him that is Isa 57. 15. of a contrite spirit to receiue the spirit of the humble and to giue life and chearing to them that are contrite in heart Prayers sighes and teares going vp from such a distresse mercies and compassions from God must needs come downe to helpe all againe and the succours of the Lord are vsually in such cases so ready to be found as hee letteth those poore perplexed seruants of his to see them before their eyes and to touch and feele them as with their hands and that in such a manner as they are not alone comforted for the present but confirmed for euermore afterward to trust assuredly in him fall out whatsoeuer at any time may happen such sighing and weeping such calling and crying out vnto God for helpe in time of great need cannot but euer at the length obtaine a prosperous issue as may be seene in Dauid who by his long crying was at the length drawne out of that horrible pit Psal 40. 2. out of the myre and clay wherein before he did sticke so fast and as he else where saith had his heauinesse turned into Psal 30. 11. 12. ioy his mourning into dancing his sackcloth put off and hee himselfe girded with gladnesse for which cause his tongue gaue praise vnto God without ceasing and he vowed to giue thankes vnto him for euermore And by how much the more they haue hungred and thirsted for the consolations of God by so much the more doth the Lord fil them Psal 90. 14. 15. and satisfie them with his mercies and that right soone so as they are made to reioyce the more and to be glad all the daies of their life yea it is the Lords manner to comfort his according to the dayes that he hath afflicted them and according to the yeeres that they haue seene euill then is their mouth filled with laughter and their tongue with ioy as in Psal 126. 1. the turning againe of the captiuitie of Sion So that the ioyfullest body that euer was or is is a true penitent sinner who hauing first felt the load and burthen of his sinnes and been wounded in conscience for committing of them comming at the last to haue those stiffe and starke wounds of his suppled by the powring in of that oyle of gladnesse into his heart whereby hee is cheered and comforted againe in Christ Iesus assurance being giuen vnto him to haue full redemption in his blood euen the forgiuenesse of all his sinnes Oh then there is ioy vnspeakable and glorious in that heart which so sweetly refresh the soule of that mourning sinner as he is in a manner wholly swallowed vp therewith blessing now the time that euer he so mourned for his sinne before whose so mourning before hath brought him this great measure of comfort now and hath put such gladnesse into his heart as causeth him for very ioy both to laugh and sing Isa 65. 14. These are the sweetest ioyes that are thus fetched out of the most bitter sorrowes and these are the surest ioyes that will last longest whose ground hath been laid so deepe as to be raised thus out of the lowest bottomes of a most afflicted estate in a mind that hath been sore wounded and much pierced thorough with painfull sorrowes and most wofull griefes And thus at the length commeth that promise to be fulfilled which the Lord so long ago made to his people that had endured great affliction that Isa 61. 7. for all the sorrow and shame they had endured they should haue double comforts and for their confusion he would make them reioyce in their portion Yea so are Gods seruants comforted in their troubles as euer after they are made better able to comfort others which are in trouble by the 2. Cor. 1. 4. comfort wherewith they themselues are comforted of God CHAP. XXI The difference of their ioy in the third dimension or breadth of it and how it is straitened or extended in them THe third dimension wherein the ioy of these two sorts of beleeuers may bee perceiued much to differ is in respect of the large spread that the one hath reaching it selfe out euery way farre and wide and extending it selfe to such a latitude and breadth as no man can say Thus farre goe the bounds of it and no further and on the other side the narrow breadth stra●t lysts and short precincts within the compasse whereof the other is shut in hardly pent vp and so narrowly confined as beyond the same it can neuer be found to extend it selfe or reach out any further Hypocrites and mis-beleeuers who are no better then Hypocrites ioy is small or none meere reprobates and plaine wicked persons haue the lists of their ioy and bounds of their reioycing made so narrow and so neerely set together as if one should demand what allowance of bredth is there made vnto such to spread out their ioy vpon and to let their reioycing lawfully be extended by it may bee answered if there be respect had to the lawfulnesse of their ioy they haue not so much as the breadth of a foote of one inch or of one naile to plant and settle true ioy vpon If one would aske in what things may such men lawfully haue ioy and true reioycing
to reioyce alwaies for his goodnesse vnto them who by his gracious and wise prouidence doth so order and dispose of euery thing that doth happen as hee neuer faileth but doth cause all to work together to the good of them that truly doe loue him This is that which the Apostle willeth Phil. 4. 5. 6. and waranteth to euery good Christian that they doe reioyce in the Lord alwaies Now alwaies includeth as all times so all things and all cases that may happen for if there were any thing that might come to passe or any condition might befall a true Christian wherein there could not be found some cause of reioycing in the Lord for some one respect or other then might not a Christian reioyce alwaies but this the Apostle hath said hee may yea and ought also to doe or else he would not so directly haue spoken it and willed the doing of it and lest any should thinke hee had somewhat with the most and granted too large an allowance vnto Christians thus alwaies to reioyce to meete with that doubt and to make it cleare that there is warrant for them so to doe he saith it againe and speaketh it the second time doubling that speech as if he should say I willed you to reioyce in the Contra. 116. 128 Lord alwaies in saying whereof I haue said nothing too much I know what I do● say I say nothing but what I haue warrant for I will therefore say it againe Reioyce in the Lord alwaies and againe I say reioyce But it is worthy the marking he doth not will vs to reioyce alwaies in all things that may happen for some things may either be done by vs or be done to vs which are not simply to be ioyed in but to be lamented in and much be wailed by vs for which things themselues alone being considered we are to be greatly sorry as being euill in themselues But because so wonderful is the Lord in counsel and so excellent in working as he knoweth how to bring good out of the greatest euil that can happen to be done for otherwise as wel hath one of the Fathers obserued the Lord would neuer let euill bee vnlesse he knew how to bring good out of euill therefore hee willeth vs whatsoeuer cause we may haue to be humbled in our selues for that which may befall vs or vnto any others yet to reioyce in the Lord alwaies in his mercie and goodnesse iustice and truth in the excellencie of his wisedome and the absolute perfection of his skill as who knoweth without all failing to make all things beautifull in due time for Eccles 3. 11. so perfect a workeman is he as it skilleth not what matter and stuffe he taketh into his hand to worke vpon reffuse and rubbish that none others can tell how to put to any vse he will improue to such a purpose and cause so well to serue his turne as the very perfection of beauty shall bee seene in that passing workmanship of his hands which he will make euident to be done by him and to be wrought vpon the same For perfect is the worke of the mightie God and all his waies are iudgement God is true and without Deut. 32. 4. wickednesse iust and righteous is he as Moses did sing in his Swannes song Now if any doe desire that as the Lord turneth all things to good so hee might get good also out of euery thing that so hee might alwaies reioyce in all things so made profitable vnto him the Apostle giueth him this direction following in the place before cited that in nothing being too mistrustfully carefull he doe make prayers vnto God alwaies and in all things for the same Innumerable be the things that in particular may and doe fall out in our life time which doe much and nearely concerne vs some which of themselues in their owne nature and at the first hand are very ioyfull and comfortable vnto vs sent from God as benefits and blessings to cheare comfort and doe vs good and so they are accounted of by vs and intertained with all gladnesse and reioycing on our parts returning backe againe heartie thanks and praises vnto God for the same In such things it is cleare enough a good Christian may and ought much to reioice but there are many other things happening which may seeme to be as much against vs and about such things is all the question and the greatest doubt made how in those things which first and in their owne nature are heauie things to be heard of to be seene with our eyes or felt by our owne experience which iustly doe bring matter of griefe and heauinesse to our hearts and as iustly may call for much humiliation at our hands a faithfull seruant of God may possibly gather or picke out any kind of true comfort or find how any cause of sound ioy and warrantable reioycing in any respect may be raised from the same that so this may stand true the ioy of a sound Christian is of so large an extent as it may be reached out to euery thing that doth happen and according to that the Apostle willeth that a good Christian may be warranted to reioyce alwaies in the Lord. CHAP. XXII Of the lets of true ioy and first of sinne And how the Lord raiseth thence maater of reioycing to beleeuers OF all the things that are of this nature and kinde the greatest doubt so farre as I conceiue may be made of these two in particular viz. either of such things as doe respect our dealing against God by sinning and disobeying of him or doe respect Gods dealing against vs by chaftising and not sparing of vs and that either by his withdrawing himselfe from vs in hiding his owne countenauce or by his comming neere vnto vs in iudgement to smite vs with his rod laying on heauy chastisements and bringing sore and great troubles vpon vs. For as for all else that doe befall vnto vs by any other meanes of men or diuels or any other the creatures if they were not armed and made strong against vs by our sinnes or were not sent and set on by Gods owne hand his warrant and allowance he being thereunto iustly prouoked by vs to set them vpon vs and to set them against vs wee need not weigh them a rush nor care at all what they al together could possibly do for the doing to vs any hurt or any way to hinder our steady comfort But euen in those things whereof the greatest doubt may be made if there can for the present no manner of cause be found why in any respect a true beleeuer may haue his ioy in the Lord euen then still abiding and some kinde of lawfull reioyeing in the Lord yet allowed vnto him it is not because there is wholly wanting all manner of ground from whence may be raised a true and warrantable kind of reioycing but because we cannot see it till our eyes be opened and the
repenting for the same but to leaue him to himselfe that the falling into a greater sinne may by occasion of so great a fall be made to awake out of his slumber and be brought to a thorow and sound repentance for all his sinnes together while such a secure Christian thus sicke and diseased is committing of some great and hainous sinne the Lord who is his Physitian is in hand in the meane while with another worke of his owne namely to bee tempering of such a medicine as shall not faile to cure him the Lord taking the poyson of that sinne which he is a committing and making thereof a most soueraigne medicine it being the Lords manner as hath bin spoken before to cure sinne with sinne Now this worke which the Lord is in hand with euen at that time if it either can be seene by himselfe which is most hard so to be seene by any for the present time or can be shewed him by any other to be so a working hath matter in it sufficient to beare out a warrantable reioycing for that the Lord is a doing though otherwise there is most iust cause of deepe sorrowing and most bitter lamentation for that which already is done and is yet further a doing by his owneselfe in that thing CHAP. XXIII Of the second hinderance of ioy in Gods hiding his face and how that is made an occasion of reioycing vnto a true and sound beleeuer THe second maine point about which especially doubt may be made how a true beleeuer may alwaies haue ioy and reioyce in the Lord is in regard of Gods owne dealing towards vs and that either in regard When God hides his face of his withdrawing himselfe from vs by hiding his face or in regard of his comming neare vnto vs by smiting vs with his hand Touching the first it is true there is nothing more grieuous and fearfull then to bee forsaken of God and therefore God himselfe saith Woe vnto Hos 9. 12. you when I shall forsake you for if God bee our light our confidence and our comfort and if all our happinesse be in him then to be forsaken of God is to be depriued of all true comfort to be left to all misery and to be cast as into a whole sea and gulfe of desperate sorrow and into very hell it selfe the fauour of God being better then is life it Psal 63. 3. selfe A man were better bee out of his life then out of Gods fauour But it may be demanded with the Apostle doth or will God at any time cast off his people and it may Rom. 11. 1. be answered againe with the same Apostle God forbid God will not cast away his people And as the Psalmist saith he will not forsake his inheritance for so hath God Psal 94. 14. Heb. 13. 5. himselfe said I will neuer faile thee nor forsake thee True it is God somtimes for a moment in his anger doth hide his Isa 54. 8. face from his children and carryeth the matter of his good will towards them so closely as they can know of no fauour that he beareth them it not being betweene him and them as it was yesterday and yesterday when Psal 90. 13. he is found to be vnto them as a passenger and as a stranger that tarryeth but for a night then there is hanging about him and crying with Moses and the people Oh God returne be pacified towards thy seruants then there is entreating and praying with Dauid Goe not farre from me Psal 22. 11. Psal 119. 8. O God for trouble is hard at hand and forsake me not ouerlong Oh God Yea the Lord himselfe seemeth to rise vp against his children and then there is crying out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Thē Sion mournes and Psal 22. 1. complaines the Lord hath forsaken me my God hath forgotten Isa 49. 14. me But this hiding of Gods face is but a fatherly frowning for a time to awe his children the more and breed the better circumspection in them for afterwards when God doth forsake his children that forsaking is neither fully nor finally for euer He many times hauing forsaken them doth tarry long before he doth returne to them againe he holds off till he can hold off no longer that so he may make his children feare the more to fall out with him againe But it is a sauing feare that keepes vs in that state as we shall not need to feare anymore and it is a profitable vexation and anguish of the soule that bringeth rest thereunto for euer after Though the Lord may seeme somtimes to goe away and to hide his face yet he neuer taketh such a farwell of them as meaning Ioh. 16. 7. 22. no more to come at them But as our Sauiour Christ about the time of his departure comforted his Disciples by telling them it was expedient for them that hee did goe away assuring them that though he did goe away yet hee would see them againe and then they should haue the greater ioy yea their hearts should so reioyce as none should take their ioy from them So may it in some other respect be truly said in this case that it is somtimes expedient for Gods seruants that their heauenly Father doe hide his countenance from them withdraw his presence and goe away especially when that through their too great vnthankfulnesse and securitie they begin to play the wantons too much and it is found with them according to that which runnes in the prouerbe Too much familiarity breedeth contempt then it is time for the Lord to hide his countenance for the better awing of such then doth need require that such be made sorrie and left in heauinesse for howbeit this is euer but for a time I will goe away Hos 5. 15. saith the Lord and hide my selfe till they seeke me in their affliction they will seeke me diligently the Lord looketh for certaine to heare from such when they are in affliction but howsoeuer he doth go away yet may it truly be said to such as our Sauiour promised to his Disciples he will surely come to see them againe and their hearts shall reioyce with such ioy as none shall take from them when they shall once see his face and know his face againe and perceiue the rayes of the bright countenance of God to shine vpon their darke and cloudie hearts what light of comfort will not that bring to a poore distressed soule euen more ioy then corne and wine and oyle though neuer so encreased can possibly cause to be felt And this is that which the Lord promised his people that though for a moment in his anger hee Psal 89. 32. 33. hide his face yet with euerlasting mercy he would haue compassion upon them Yea when the Lord himselfe seemeth to be in greatest displeasure so as he doth visit the offences of his people with the rod and their sinnes