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A35189 The young mans monitor, or, A modest offer toward the pious, and vertuous composure of life from youth to riper years by Samuel Crossman. Crossman, Samuel, 1624?-1684.; Crossman, Samuel, 1624?-1684. Young mans meditation. 1664 (1664) Wing C7276; ESTC R24109 112,999 295

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The Young Mans Monitor OR A modest Offer toward the Pious and Vertuous Composure of Life FROM Youth to Riper Years By Samuel Crossman B.D. Wherewithal shall a Yo●ng man cle●nse his way By taking heed th●reto according to thy Word Psal. 11 99. Verecundo Adolescence quid amabilius Pera Gratum est quod patriae civem populoque dedisti Si facis ut Patriae sit idoneus c. Iuvenal Lo●do● Printed by I.H. and are to be sold by S. Thompson at the Bishops head in St. Pauls Church-yard and T. Parkhurst at the three Crowns at the lower end of Cheapside near the Conduit 1664. The Epistle to the Reader More particularly to Parents Courteous Reader YOu are here presented with these ensuing Pages intended for the endearing of God and the bringing up a good report upon Piety and Vertue in the hearts and hearing of Young Persons if by any means the Generation now rising up might become what we are all so justly desirous they should be a real blessing to the next Age. Wisely taken off from the Follies and Vices of Youth timely and truly perswaded to the love of all goodness and in conclusion as Origen to his Father the dear joy of Parents the happy revival of their fading life the praise and beauty of the Land The Paper such as it is was first sent as a more private Letter to the Children and Servants of some Friends for their encouragement and direction in the good waies of God though since thus far enlarged as you now receive it The truth is the season under which it was drawn up both then and now was unto flesh and bloud sadning enough and too disadvantagious to the competent rendring a work of this nature as the words of the wise had need be acceptable and set in some good order for the gaining of the shie affections of Youth to any good resentment or acceptance of their own welfare But what God in his high wisdom appoints we must not sinistrously charge with harshness or folly What he is pleased inwardly to sweeten we may not ungratefully call bitter nor unadvisedly open our lips with uncomely complaints thereof It is of his free and dear mercies must we all say and that chearfully too that we are not consumed Reader you are not neither shall you here be challenged into the fields of Contention Nature indeed is very forward as the Disciple in the Gospel to draw its Sword but we scarce any of us well know though we are all too favourable interpreters of our selves what spirits we are of So easie is it to mistake carnal passion for that which is far higher and more divine a truly gracious composure in Religion We might all too truly confess with the Father We can easily arm on almost all sides under those golden names of God and his Church and yet as readily turn the Cannons mouths in conclusion against them both It may justly become the sore lamentation which we may all mournfully take up for these last daies That Peace the sweetest of mercies the sum and scaling up of all other blessings as the Iewes so chearfully delight to call it is through our great unworthiness judicially taken away from amongst the Sons of men Love the rich and precious perfume of life the peculiar character of the true Disciple the pathetical recommendation of a dying Saviour how is it as the beauty of Israel fallen in the streets Nobleness and Sweetness of spirit are put away as strangers that have no form nor comliness in them A common good the great and just concernment of all how oh how is it unknown unregarded of most It may lie like him in the Gospel wounded upon the rode and yet scarce any that turns aside to comfort it or to shew any friendly kindness to it A Catiline saies the Sa●yrist a troubler of mankind grows as the weed almost every where But a Brutus a worthy Patriot that bears the welfare of others the true prosperity of his native Land upon his heart and sets his eyes perpetually thereon for good such an one is a rare Iewel worthy of all honour and embraces wherever he is found Such enobled Spirits saies the great Orator in his affectionate language they are the dear off-spring the delight and care of God A divine race it is from the Heavens they come down to us and to the Heavens again when ever they take their leaves of us shall they triumphantly return But oh that our heads were Fountains and our eyes Rivers of tears For amongst all the children that Nature hath brought forth they are few that take her by the hand and wisely lead her Amongst the numerous Family that are registred unto Religion few that are willing to be true to God or kind to each other Therefore must the pious mourn and the lover of his Country go with the Prophet into his secret places and weep bitterly crying out with that holy man Who would not be willing with the price of his very life to redress and heal that endless strife and variance so unkindly sprung up amongst us These are as the Poet sadly sung the wars that can never be crowned with any triumph The amazing prospect our hearts must even tremble at the very uttering of it where Bibles against Bibles are the known Ensigns on both sides As if Religion had sounded a Martial Alarum calling her Children like those Young men before Abner and Joab to arise and slay each other Thus with the foolish Bees instead of gathering true honey we quarrel and sling each other Till death comes in and parts all by throwing its dust upon our cold herse And then shall these combats will we nill we break up and be no more In the mean time this Spirit we must all confess it is not of God The banner of Christ is a banner of love And our best Character will be meekness and Gentleness as becomes us in the Lord. It were no betraying of the Sacred Principles of Religion for all the true Professors of it to conclude as Alexander well answered one that importuned him to sharpness Rigour may please you but mildness and sweetness will best become me They are indeed daies of great agitation wherein we live Great thoughts of heart on the right hand and on the left And there is doubtless much of the truth of God in Concernment upon the Stage which in its time shall safely rest as the Arke upon a quiet Mountain We may adventure it as David against the greatest Giants in fighting the Lords Battels With its own bare arm as the Ancients are wont proverbially to say shall it win it self the victory But there is withal too much of the wrath and frowardness of man as dross immixed with this Gold both Pro and Con. So that the gracious heart could almoct conclude It is safer being a sorrowful mourner for both then a
lamentations over him He that converses but the least with their W●itings will soon understand what sorry titles of honour what mean and sad descriptions they bestowed upon their own nature and its present condition in the World The pattern of frailty the spoile of time the sport of fortune the very picture of sickleness silthiness from the birth too too much a least all his life no better than a feast for worms in death This was the Language they generally gave of Man and they thought they miscalled him not Poor men they were eye witnesses indeed of the sickness they saw things were ill but they scarce understood the rise and cause of the disease They could only cry out in the generall as one of them bitterly did Woe woe is me and yet what is it that I cry out so mournfully of Oh! it is the manifold miseries we lie exposed unto Dear Youths you must be perswaded to sit down and apply the Story The case is naturally yours the case is too truly every mans Oh! smite upon your breasts in a due sense of these things and say with David I Lord I am the man It is I who have thus sinned against heaven and am no more worthy to be called thy Son Fourthly This being your wound where shall we now find any balm or healing for it We are not likely you see to stay long here on earth ●nd without pardon of sin we can never expect to come at heaven The love the dear love of God through sin is already lost the life of grace extinguished a debt and guilt the saddest the greatest that ever were con●racted the comforts of this present life decayed the strength and sting of death exceedingly encreased We may now too truly name our selves Magor-Missabib fear and terrour round about Yet be not too much dismaied there is hope in Israel concerning our case And I may and must though not without much trembling invite you this day to Iesus Christ. Oh! hunger and thirst after him and his righteousness that in him your sins may be covered and your souls cloathed with the garments of salvation It is not Musick it is not Wine that a condemned person desires but a Pardon Go you and do likewise I told you even now a saddening story I may now bring you tidings of a more welcome one Oh! receive it as becomes you in the Lord. The Father of mercies hath from his Sanctuary looked down upon our low estate He saw we were sold for bond-men and for bond-women falling into the hands of Satan and misery for ever There was no eye to pity us Our own strength and righteousness departed from us The redemption of our souls likely to cease for ever In these great streights his bowels were moved to have compassion on us His own arm undeserved undesired brought salvation to us The work was great and he trusts no meaner Person than his own Son with it Him the Father sends and seals Him he gives to death and raises up to life and all for this sweet end that he might be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance and forgiveness of sins to such poor Creatures as You and I are Behold the love wherewith the Father hath loved us The Son accepts it As it was written in the Volume of Gods Book he is content to come If his Death will procure our Life he goes willingly to it He submitteth himself by imputation to be made sin who yet actually knew no sin that we worthless we might be made the righteousness of God in him In pursuance of this unsearchable and unutterable love it is that the Spirit of God so often knocks at our hearts That the Ambassadors of Christ are sent in such earnestness unto us to beseech us to be reconciled unto God That the Word of the Lord is left as his Agent alwaies Resident in our houses to treat with us that we might receive the pardon of sin and live This is that rich grace which the Prophets so long ago enquired after and prophesied of And this in the Lords name I humbly encourage and exhort you in Pardon of sin may verily be had only seek it a●ight Turn not the grace of God I charge you into wantonness Boast not you as if your condition were therefore out of danger because there are it may be some soveraign Antidotes in the shop or a rich Cordial in the glass The sick man may nevertheless languish and die if he makes not a real use of them Oh! go humbly to the Lord go by Prayer go by Faith go with a full purpose of heart that if the Lord shall please to speak peace you will no more return to folly Prostrate your selves spread your case before him tell him it is not Corn or Wine or Oyl that you come for but the light of his Countenance Tell him oh tell him it is the pardon of your sins and justification in the bloud of his Son that is to you the mercy of all mercies which you above all things stand in most need of and that if he would please to give you leave this is all your desire and humble boldness by the hand of faith to touch his golden Scepter to take hold of his tender mercies in Christ and live It may be he will say as in the Gospel Son arise Daughter arise be of good chear thy sins are forgiven thee I could even bitterly mourn that this sacred mercy this fundamental mercy is no more in all our thoughts Men may weary themselves in wide discourses to find out wherein their chief happiness consists and who is at length the happy man But alas the wise man needs not glory in his wisdom the rich man may forbear boasting in his riches We may once for all once for ever conclude with David It is he and none but he whose sins are pardoned whose iniquities in Christ are covered who is the truly blessed man before the Lord. Fifthly If God shall shew this great mercy in the fifth place be you careful to return the answer of a good conscience and give up your selves intirely and unf●inedly to the Lord in a truly gracious life Therefore indeed hath the dear grace of God appeared in the world to enoble our conversations above the principles or course of nature to an higher life the life of grace And if any shall ask more narrowly what Christianity means We may answer in the language of that holy man This is the sum of the Christians Religion to live free from sin and wickedness in the world It is manifestly the highest testimony and commendation that we poor creatures are ever able to give to Religion when we do not barely complement it Ephraim-like with goodly words but practically offer our selves such as we are to the service of it endeavouring to acquit our selves in the just performance of great and gracious things The
it Which made the Prophet cry out so earnestly to some insolent and over-daring spirits in his time Now therefore be ye not mockers lest your bonds be made strong He that hath not so much Reverence as to spare Religion from reproaching that not Humanity as to forbear godly persons from deriding them let him yet have so much Wisdom so much Pity as to spare himself It was the setled and unalterable description which David long ago gave of a godly man a man likely to dwell in the Tabernacle of the Lord In whose eyes a vile person is contemned but he honoureth them that fear the Lord. The Image of God should be exceeding lovely his grace highly honourable wherever we find it though but in the meanest of his people What we discern of weakness not yet removed not yet healed may be pitied but must not be scorned Where Religion is wantonly scoffed at without doors in others It is to be feared and more than feared it is neglected enough and wretchedly trodden under foot at home 2. Not one given to foolish gaming Oh! no It is not for him that comes into the world a Child of wrath born in sin it is not for him whose very Condition and Religion if he seriously bethinks himself of either call aloud unto him for tears and dayly repentance It is not for him who hath no more but these few and frail daies wherein to provide for that solemn thing Eternity or else lie down with everlasting burnings It is not for such an one to become a vain gamester He hath other things matters of greater weight and moment which will call for his time and utmost care he is scarce at leisure to trifle with unmanly games Ingenuous divertions where they are wisely chosen harmlesly and seldom used timely and willingly parted with might possibly be winked at Both body and mind may sometimes modestly beg their remedy And let them have it so they take it but as a remedy and make it not worse than the disease Generous actions Religion is not so Stoical as to condemn them They are commanded they shall be commended Whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just whatsoever things are lovely if there be any vertue if there be any praise we have free leave and are invited to address our selves unto them And happy is that young man whose hopeful disposition presseth early as David into the Camp and even longeth to employ it self in such noble undertakings He that passeth by shall bless him in the name of the Lord and say Go on and prosper But effeminate games can claim no kindred neither can they expect that they should ever be recorded in Letters of Gold or mentioned in the Congregation of the Lord like Mordecay's good services unto honour No no They are as Alexander wittily said in Plutarch neither true Iest nor good Earnest Neither fair Play nor sober Work But of a far sadder nature when such serious things as Estates and the welfare of whole Families are unnaturally thrown away upon idle and foolish Dice They are too commonly seeming sports real vexations Actaeons hounds kept for pleasure but in a short space devour their M●ster the deflouring of the mind the gratifying of Satan the unhinging of the whole man from things of nobler worth toward God or toward our Country Experience hath too often stood with tears in her eyes and even wept in the sight of all men over these things complaining what you account the pastime of particular persons I must lament as the danger of thousands as that sore evil which unworthily softens and corrupts the Spirit of Nations into degeneracy and sloath opening the gates to any enemies inviting and letting in the Trojan horse of all calamity Thus with the Roman Emperour we greedily take the Cup because it is pleasant but it proves poyson and in conclusion our death These things please not so much one way but they wound as much another Whosoever seems here to win all are sure to go away great losers The Gamester alwaies rashly stakes and too commonly plaies away his dear immortal soul in his games 3. Not a Sabbath breaker Oh no He that dares be so bold on the Lords day will not stick to be f●● worse upon another Where a Sabbath of so few hours becomes wearisome to us on Earth Good Lord what would that man do with an everlasting Sabbath in Heaven It becomes the true Disciple to awake and arise early that morning To awake as the Apostle saies out of sin unto righteousness and to put himselfe in remembrance that this is the day of his Saviours Resurrection the flower of time a Princess amongst all other daies the day for his solemn avouching of his Religion in the sight of God Angels and Men that this is the day wherein the Lord hath appointed to speak with him and hear from him wherein to give him ● meeting about the great affairs of his Soul He dares not neglect so blessed an opportunity he knows not whether he shall ever live till another Sabbath comes about He saies within himself as in the Primitive times I am a Christian and dare not omit the due observing of this day Oh the sad ruins of thousands for the controversie of violated Sabbaths● Persons Families Countries have died under it For Gods sake even for Gods sake let the terrour of the Lord in the remembrance of such sad Judgements perswade you And charge your selves afresh every Sabbath morning with what solemness you possibly can not to speak your own words not to think your own thoughts but thoughts meet for a Sabbath and settle your selves heartily to sanctifie this day of the Lord. Where the religious care of these choice Seasons dies it is too too commonly and sadly seen little goodness little loveliness little of the true fear of God there lives 4. Not one given to vain speech Oh! no The sober Young Man finds a field large enough to walk in to refresh himself and others with harmless discourse he desires not to break the hedge or run over to speak with sin He understand those words which are but Cyphers as to sense may be Figures of too great number as to sin He hears there may be and often are whole slouds of words in bulk where there are scarce the least drops of good reason or wisdom to be found in them And it makes him still the more cautious that he opens not his lips at any time foolishly He judges speech should be a Lecture of wisdome to the hearers The matter alwaies weighty the manner of expression ingenuous and comely without which he concludes with the great Philosopher Speech about vain things when all is done will be but vain and worthless He chooseth to have his discourse rather of things than of persons Sometimes of Vertue and the amiableness of that Sometimes of the great Works and Providence of
God and the rare glory that is visible and transparent in them At other times of History and the pleasing Records so serviceable to the enlarging and setling of wisdom that are found therein But above all he delights to fix most upon his own duty and the Lords mercies in Christ that he may be a frequent remembrancer to himself in them He hath heard that his speech it is his peculiar Excellency above the beasts of the field and he dares not imbase it to things so unbecoming so far below him He is modestly silent while the Ancient are before him waiting for their words as for the dew And when at any time he hath just occasion to speak his Motto and Maxime is Not how much but how well His words are alwaies free from Assentation he flatters no man Free from Moroseness he causelesly offendeth no man Free from Affectation he brings them not forth for vain glory but for use The care that he bestows upon his speech is plainly this That it may be truly accented with Discretion uttered with Modesty seasoned with Grace continually shedding and sending forth a sweet odour wherever he becomes He easily perswades himself That Tongue would scarce be fit to praise God in heaven which hath been used to filthy and light words here on earth 5. Not one that is ever found in a lie Oh! no Truth is alwaies lovely falshood odious Where the tongue is false to the heart the heart is surely false to it selfe false to God The Lord accepts it as a letter in that sacred name whereby he is pleased to be known to the Sons of men That he is A God of Truth And a Lie whatever excuses and pretensions it may have as it is never wanting that way yet we know its kindred and whence it comes It is the base born of Satan He is a Lyar and the Father of it Oh! that we may all take heed how we nurse his brats in our bosomes The way of lying It is a short-lived cheat where the deceit when all is done will quickly put forth its blushing face and to our shame appear The Liar say the Learned among the Jews he may vapour a while but he hath no legs whereon to travel long It is a very low kind of policy when to save our selves we stab the truth When to gain á little repute which yet is never solidly got by lying we hazard our very souls When we are so desirous of some shelter for sin that rather than fail we make up an hedge for it as the Prophet saies of briars and thorns set up against the Lord. In this case the Lyar too truly fulfils the old Proverb And shews himself by his pleading not guilty fearful of men but by his inward falseness a wretched contemner of the all-seeing the heart-searching God In lower things the Clock is prized by its true going The Money is valued when it is no Counterfeit And that Young Man shall be accounted a branch of hope indeed whose tongue is as choice Silver and his words words of ingenuity and truth The fault that is yet but one he will not make it two by denial He may have many weaknesses but still takes care that he may be believed in what he speaketh and therefore resolves the whole world shall not justly charge him with a lye 6. Not one that takes the name of God in vain Oh! no he knows God over-hears and will not hold him guiltless that dares do it He is thankful that he may have leave to use it in Prayer he delights to meet with it in reading the Scriptures but he loves it too well to abuse it irreverently in his lips It was a good Counsel once well given by a Royal Parent to his Son Let the name of God be more sparingly in your mouth but more abundantly in your heart The Jews of old accounted the name Iehovah so sacred that they durst not utter it The High Priest alone and that in the Temple only but once in the year at their solemn Feast while he blessed the people might have leave to mention it For others it was death And I have read of a poor begging Jew in these later and modern times that had a great Alms offered him on these terms but to pronounce that Word who yet refused it They wound up the string too high and became superstitious The Christian abates that but continues truly reverent and willingly fears this glorious and fearful name The Lord his God Dear Children be you admonished in this weighty matter and I hope you will take great heed that you offend not with your tongue He that must needs at almost every word cry oh Lord doth not so much say oh Lord help but rather oh Lord come and punish my sin 7. Not one that profanes that sacred name of God by wretched swearing by horrid Oaths Oh! no an Oath was never allowed but in ponderous and weighty Cases And the holy Language still tells us by the Conjugation wherein the word is only used we should be rather passive than active No further acquainted with an Oath than when we are solemnly called upon by Authority not to be denied There is a curse from God a flying Rowl which how unwelcome soever shall yet enter into the house of the swearer and shall remain there though sore against his will till it hath recovered the glory of Gods name which he had wronged There is but little gained by sin men do but provoke the Lord to their own confusion The nations which knew not God were yet a Law to themselves and a great example to all Posterity in the condemning of this odious sin With the Scythians the Swearers punishment was loss of his Estate With the Persians servitude and bondage With the Grecians the cutting off their ears as those that had infected the ears of others With the Romans it was throwing down from a steep high Rock Thus have they born their testimony before us that we might receive instruction from a foolish people and learn in them our own duty Me thinks Dear Children you should be every one saying to your selves I see now indeed the Lord hath severely charged me as once the Emperour Augustus to the Praetors of Rome that his name should not be vilely trodden under foot or abused by wretched Oaths in my lips He that will not so much as forbear these for Gods sake bears but very little respect to God or his commands Other sins have their several excuses such as they are though but sorry ones This is that hath nothing to say for it self No cause for it no sweetness no pleasure no profit in it no credit no advantage by it neither believed nor trusted one grain the more for it Others are weary of it the Offender himself hath not the face to plead for it Of all men the Swearer sins upon
a temperate use But he is still as cautious on the other hand that he run not himself upon any exorbitant excess or Dives-like deliciousness of life to consume fair estate which might be his dear Childrens comfort when he is gone upon his present foolish lusts He looks first at what he needs and saies that is but little and may suffice him more were useless and would ensnare him He looks next at what he hath and saies it is that measure which a higher wisdom than his own hath laid out for him and it becomes him that his mind inwardly and expences outwardly be both willingly sured thereunto The riotous sails by a far other Compass Poor man It is a title of generousness an umbrage of honour that he affects and it is a cloud of disgrace and general slighting that in the end he reaps He hastens with the Prodigal to a luxurious life and still with the Prodigal he hastens as fast to disappointments to husks to hunger and want He may be progressive for a while but no man can ever be truly successeful in waies of evil We may write him down as in the Prophet A man that shall not prosper in any of his waies 1. His Estate left him by the care and affection of his dear Friends which he ought for their likes to preserve as a Jewel and memorial of their Parental love by this usage is soon forced away and takes its leave of him Neither doth that go altogether alone 2. His Credit which was sometimes as so much current Coin of great value His respect which formerly waited so fresh and so acceptably upon him the Golden Sun being gone these pleasant rayes of course withdraw themselves and shine no longer 3. His costly pleasures which were so lately his too too improper pastimes these also come no more to make merry with him The guest grows low and these dishes are set no longer for his Mess or within his reach Hardly so much as any memorial left of them save only a bitter taste upon the poor Conscience scarce ever it may be to be washt down One only undesirable associate left to bear him company that same luxurious disposition which brought him to all this will still hang about him to continue his reproach and to make him yet more miserable 4. The greatest sufferer is yet behind The next thing that is trodden down under his luxurious excess is nature it self and his own conversation Good Lord what dishonest and dishonourable courses are they enforced to comply withall for the gratifying of a voluptuous mind Righteousness it self shall now be ravished rather than reduce his extravagancies or any thing of his former riotousness should be abated The Historians observation is too readily drunk down as his Maxime The estate is exhausted by ambition and must be recruited though by the greatest wickedness He is now ready to do his devotions in the cut-throat Chappel Pausanias tells us of in Acrocorinth dedicated to Necessity and Violence I le becomes henceforth a man of rapine and wretchedness His feet as the Apostle informs us are swift to shed blood Destruction and misery are too truly found in all his waies By this time he may spare himself the labour of making a Will or choosing Executors the male administration of his own life prevents them both and he lives the rest of his daies an eclipsed man in great obscurity He is at length sensible in what great ingratitude to the providence of God in what great unnaturalness to his own Family he hath sued a dishonourable fine and cut off the intail and inheritance from his poor Children leaving them nothing to inherit but their Fathers shame He sees likewise his Esteem withering before his face as the Figtree at the root And being now no more what sometimes he was he hath no longer any desire to be at all He is ashamed of himself weary of life and yet poor man no way fit for death Such in conclusion is the spend-thrifts race no way desirable for any man 〈◊〉 after him Oh! that all would be truly wise and forbear bringing upon themselves what they are so loth withall sorrows and streights in their latter end Dear Children Affect not you too tender an education It will but enfreble Nature from vertuous Actions and you know not what hardship God may expose any of you unto yet ere you die Affect not too costly an education he and he only is fit to enjoy much that knows how to live with little Deal by the Estates which God in his providence shall please to give you as Cicero once ingeniously and prudently advised Let them not be so close lockt up but that Wisdom and Liberality may have the Key and at any time come freely to them neither let them lie so loose and open that Prodigality should at her pleasure abuse and waste them 10. Not one lastly that idlely or sloathfully wastes his precious time Oh! no He looks upon his time as his choicest treasure a price put into his hands by the Lord for sacred ends a price greater than all his Friends here can ever leave him and therefore studies above all things how to make the most of it Time is usually a commodity exceeding variously prized in the world Some scarce know what to do with it it is to them a waste and wearisome thing The Lord Fatherly gives a space for repentance and yet it cannot enter into our minds that this is that day of grace Others again find every minute of great worth they could put the most refuse and spare hours to a good use to Prayer Reading Meditation or some great imployment Heaven-ward What their Earthly Calling can spare their Heavenly hath full occasion for So that between both we have as much as we can well attend to though we had as in the Fable Argus hundred Eyes and Briareus hundred Hands Oh! that we were wise to gather up these filings of Gold and to redeem our time as becometh us in the Lord. It was indeed an ingenuous and yet a sad sigh which one once fetcht when he told his Friend It was not for the loss of an Estate it was not for the loss of Relations it was not for the loss of Honours or any such things that he wept but for that dear thing Time which had been too quick for him and was now slipt by but not improved Time fruitlessely passed will easily make an aking heart The ingenuous Young Man listens and hears all this he laies it up amongst his Treasures saying privately to himself Take heed oh my soul that thou provest not a foolish Phrygian beginning then to become wise when it will be too late It is recorded of Iulius Caesar to his great honour That in all his affairs he was never known to omit any opportunity nor to refuse any pains by which means he became so great I will not say Be
ye ambitious of his Honour but I must say Be ye imitat●rs of his Industry Accounting with yourselves as the Father piously of old that labour is the honourable Schoole of Vertue wherein your proficiency would soon appear to all Such an one Solomon at a great distance foresees what advancement he would soon come to Seest thou a man diligent in his business he shall stand before Kings he shall not stand before mean persons These things are and most justly may be the Young Mans Lecture they walk with him they talk with him Wherever he goes he is still pondering of them He considers his outward man and observes godly diligence inherits a blessing while negligence goes cloathed in rags He considers his inward man and fears if time be carelesly lost here Eternity of happiness will very hardly be found hereafter He that labours not painfully in hi● Calling both Spiritual and Civil here on Earth his heart is not right in the sight of God his own Conscience will tell him he hath no lot nor par● in that rest which remains for the people of God in He●ven CHAP. VII Affirmative Characters what the vertuous Young Man is and ought to be YOu have now received some Negative Characters and description of the Young Person that is worthy of commendation and love indeed That we might plainly understand what he is not what he ought not to be And oh that you likewise may cordially hate the work of them that thus turn aside and for your parts unfainedly meditate a better course of life We will now look to the right hand Affirmatively and consider what the vertuous Young Person is and ought to be in whole heart are the waies of God We might almost make our bo●st here and say in some measure as in the Psalms Grace is poured into his lips and he is much fairer than the common Race of the Children of men He is one whose mind is richly inlayed like the Kings Daughter all glorious within curiously wrought by the hand of the Spirit There may you find the Prophets Vision Ierusalem pourtraied upon a tyle Much of the very glory of Heaven it self drawn upon his tender soul His heart is as a living Temple for the Holy Ghost His thoughts and affections as perfumed Odours aspiring and ascending continually as pillars of Incense heaven-ward He cometh forth out of the purple morning of his youth as the Bridegroom out of his Chamber as the Sun out of the dawning East and rejoyceth to run the Godly Race More particularly 1. He is one that chooseth the fear of the Lord with his whole heart For he knoweth it is to God he stands or it is to God he falls Others are vain others are profane but so dares not he because of the fear of the Lord. He believes the Scripture and accounts it no burden no sadning but a Jewel well worth his carefullest preserving and laying up The fear of the Lord is his treasure Wherever this is wanting he reckons that place an habitation of Dragons undesirable unsafe for any man to live in And Abraham said Surely the fear of God is not in this place and they will stay me He hath heard all true wisdome wherever it is may be found out and known by this This is its first and great principle The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom This is to him as the due ballast to the Ship which makes the Vessel indeed loome somewhat deeper but keeps it from tossing too lightly upon the uncertain waters It composeth his whole Conversation to great sobriety and stedfastness There is a sleighty sort of profession too frequently up and down the world in these last daies without much mixture of this weighty grace in it But he easily concludes that mans Religion will soon prove as salt that hath lost its savour and quickly go out into some stinch Oh! what shipwrack of faith and all good conscience must needs follow there where the heart stands in no awe of God The Father long ago gave over that man as an hopeless Patient He will soon be out of his way in point of conversation that sets light by the true fear of God in point of affection It is a sad note but it is a true one That man that will not fear God willingly shall be made though little to his comfort to do it by force What most would seem to refuse none shall be able to exclude That dread of God which they flee from shall pursue them and overtake them between the straits God will be we never so loath be feared of all But woe be to that man who having refused filial fe●re as a grace is constrained to lie under the scourgings of a judicial trembling as his torment for ever and ever The Lord preserve you from it But now it is still a note as comfortable on the other hand to every true Child of God that accepts his gracious fear chearfully the Lord will himself become their shelter and City of refuge that their hearts may quietly return to their rest and need no more be amazed at any terrour outwardly God would not have his dear people fear the fears of others Only let us sanctifie the Lord of Hosts i● our hearts and he shall be for a Sanctuary unto us The case is truly weighty on both sides The serious Young Person takes it up goes with it into the Sanctuary and there weighs it before the Lord and at length comes forth cordially contented that the just fear of God should be to him as to the Patriarks of old the great Badge and Cognizance of his Religion 2. He is one to whom the Lord Iesus Christ is exceeding precious He loves his Father he loves his Mother but still saies Jesus Christ alone he and none but he can be my Saviour He could herein even break forth into an holy triumph and begin with the Father to sing the Songs of the Lamb The Saviour is born oh glorifie the Lord. He hath appeared on Earth be ye henceforth lift up ye everlasting Gates The Bridegroom is shortly returning again oh light your Lamps and go out to meet him Sing to the Lord in the joy of this salvation Oh! let all the earth praise the Lord. The Iron though senseless willingly moves toward the Loadstone and is loth to part any more from it Christ is his Load-stone and his heart is even constrained and drawn out with great affection after him If the presence of the Sun be that which alone makes day to the dark world The enjoyment of Christ is more to him the light of life that makes a day of grace the chief of his comforts his heaven his all He could say wi●h pious Suenes in the midst of the greatest discouragements I will follow my Saviour in liberty and bondage in prosperity and adversity in life and death Whilest the smallest thread of life
remains in my heart or the least measure of warm breath shall sit upon my trembling lips Him will I love and combate for him against the gates of hell All in Christ is excee●ing dear to him His Offices his Ordinances his Person He pleaseth himself to be often piously thinking what Christ hath done for him but above all in the thoughts of what glory he shall shortly have with him Such a Saviour he cannot but dearly love the desire of his soul is toward him and having heard by the hearing of the ear a report so sweet and so comfortable concerning him he henceforth even longeth till he may come where he may see him In the mean time he waits with patience and saies with Peter though trembling yet truly Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee 3. He is one that greatly reverenceth and desireth much enjoyment of the Spirit of God What others either carelesly know not or carnally speak evil of he hath set his heart much upon He sees the Spirit of this world and what that is a foolish low worthless and froward thing It is to him as Saul in his fury and he desires it should sway no Scepter in his bosome The Spirit of God he understands it is far nobler a Spirit of power and yet so of power as it is withal a Spirit of much sweetness and love A Spirit indeed of many excellencies rarely contempered together A Spirit of power of love and of a sound mind which makes him still cry as David Lord uphold me with thy free Spirit Which is as the pleasant Emphasis of the radical word imports Thy Princely generous ingenuous and noble Spirit A Spirit of Divine Conduct a Spirit of Soveraign Command So fit to guide so able in the greatest straights to order to govern and lead the whole man The Spirit of God may be unworthily blasphemed by some and falsely pretended to by others but it carries its own testimony with it bright rayes of divine luster and beauty will quickly appear quickly shine forth and shew themselves wherever it truly comes He understands as indeed the poor Heathen likewise did in the affairs of this life there is nothing of worth to be performed without the common gifts of it No man said the great Orator ever became eminent without some peculiar breathings of a divine spirit upon him And in the concernments of grace he sees yet more plainly it is by this good Spirit of God that we poor earthen Vessels are prepared to receive any heavenly treasures This is as Zerubhabel without which the work of the Temple goes not on No praying no hearing no duty no service no true professing of Christ without this Spirit No man can say in language acceptable to God that Iesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost This is that blessed Guide which should lead him into all truth the Comforter he so much longs for which should relieve his soul the Spirit of Witness which is to seal him up to safety and keep him alwaies ready to the great day of Redemption He humbly purposeth through grace never to grieve never to quench this Spirit He esteems it as the Sun to the Day as the Soul to the Body and begs of God that he may all his daies live in it and in all his waies be led by it 4. He is one that desires and labours to acquit himself Christianly toward his Conscience This is that Theam so slightly talked of almost every where He is willing to sit down and study it more seriously before the Lord. He takes notice it is set as Gods Vicegerent for the government of all his waies and under him to be his greatest comforter or tormentor which may not be despised neither can it with all our frowardness be deposed This is that faithful Register that against the wills of many so carefully transcribes and preserves forth-coming upon indeleble Characters whatever is put into its hands whether good or evil He is loth it should slumber in his bosome as those Idols in the Psalmist which have eyes and see not ears and hear not neither do they understand And he is as cautious that it be not causelesly frighted or superstitiously put in fear where no fear is That usually proves as the Historian easily saw a deifying indeed of our own Idols but an open neglect of the true God and in conclusion a carnal treading down all good Religion He therefore takes great heed that his conscience be not over-ruled and brought in bondage by Customes Times Interests Examples or whatever is not of God He brings it frequently to God and his word he dares not perplex it with perverse disputings or endless intricacies but leaves this one great charge instead of many with it Know thou oh my conscience The voice of the shepheard but trouble not thy self whatever strangers shall buz in thine ear or say unto thee Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve Thus to treat our Conscience were honourable indeed It might put some period to our wearisom strifes and would certainly become the praise of profession and our great rejoycing before the Lord. Conscience though it riots not yet it feasteth and being duly respected is truly pleasant ever chearful And happy is that Young Man who reflecting upon his former waies can in his riper years truly read those great words of the Apostle and say Herein have I exercised my self to have alwaies a Conscience void of offence toward God and toward man 5. He is one that loves and delights indeed in his Bible It is to him the Oracle of God and he is willing it should be the man of his Counsel It is no offence to him that he finds it as the Father in its phrase so familiar and open he finds it nevertheless in its success exceeding powerful filled every where with the deep mysteries of God And he accounts it a sin of a very high nature for any to neglect or esteem lightly of it He could heartily write upon it as once that noble Lady the night before she suffered in the first Leaf of 〈◊〉 Testament she gave her Sister I have here sent you good Sister a book which although it be not outwardly trimmed with Gold and Pearls yet inwardly is more worth than all precious stones It is the Book dear Sister of the Law of the Lord. It is his Testament and last Will which he bequeathed unto us poor wretches which shall lead you unto the path of eternal joy He sees the great instability the tossings and unfruitfulness of men in Religion and fears it ariseth from their being too great strangers to the Word of God And therefore endeavours for his part wisely and graciously to prevent the growing of such evils upon himself and believes a pious and constant converse with the Scriptures
you Factious they are it may be lo●h you should be Superstitious but still they would have you Pious See then Sweet Youths I how little of real discouragement lies before you Your nearest Friends are ready to say unto you as once Cyrus to the trembling and willing Iews Go up and the Lord your God be with you Be ye then I pray you toward God Children of great willingness toward your Parents blameless and without rebuke drawing the love of all unto you in the Families wherin you dwell CHAP. XI The Conclusion of the whole by way of Exhortation ANd now what hinders but that all this might be willingly imbraced faithfully practised the life of grace cordially espoused and your Souls for ever saved Your Friends they desire it Your own everlasting welfare is bound up in it And God himself from Heaven calls unto you for it What answer can you now tender but as Christ in the Psalms Loe I come to do thy will oh God! Concluding with the Father He were justly worthy to be cut off by death that should refuse on such sweet terms to close with a gracious life Oh! require not the Lord and your own Souls so unkindly Give not your years to vanity nor your precious time to that which will not comfort in the end Sins in Youth will most certainly become sorrows in Age. It is usually said Youth laies in and Age lives upon it The one sows the other reaps Oh! sow that now which may be worth the reaping afterwards How loth would you be to have your own life now become your death hereafter To have the foolish sins of your Youth to stand between you and your everlasting real happiness Your present vain pleasures made your arraignment your condemnation your utter undoing in the day of Judgement This would prove like the Roman Souldiers Grapes short pleasures sorry pleasures joyless pleasures dearly bought and dearly paid for Thus might you feather the Arrow that wounds you from your own wing and in the end sit down with that sad number who all the year long sigh over this doleful note For a few short pleasures have we purchased to our selves innumerable and everlasting torments Well however I pray know you cannot be so slighty so careless now but you shall be as solemn and perplexed then Sin cannot please so much in the commission but it will torment far more when it comes to be suffered for and the Sinner to be brought forth to execution Go Christless before the Lord and there shall be no Parent there able or willing to countenance you no excuse there to be made for you no hope no comfort left in your own consciences to relieve you Oh! treasure not up to your selves wrath against that day that dreadful day of wrath How tremendous and heart-piercing are the Examples which God hath set as so many flaming swords before you that you might take timely warning and not rush upon your own destruction Ishmael scoffs at Religion and is cast out of his Fathers house and the house of God for ever Absalom proves rebellious against his Parents and shortens his own life untimely by it The Children mock the Prophet and die under the fierce anger of the Lord while they are doing of it I tell you Sirs God will be avenged of Children as well as Elder people of poor of rich of any if they shall dare to sin against him Let not the Devil deceive you oh slatter not your selves These things hath God written for the particular admonition of young people and will expect that you should bear them in mind Oh! lay such memorials upon your hearts and receive instruction from them But if after all any of you should be secretly unwilling and all this counsel from the Lord should be a burden and weariness unto you you must then once more go with me to the door of the Tabernacle that I may there reason further with you before the Lord. And truly I must now even heartily chide with you Oh Sirs do but consider what you do How unreareasonable how unrighteous it is How unanswerable how unsafe it is like to prove Will you have Bibles and will you not believe them Will you be called Christians and will you live like Heathens Have you immortal souls shining with such bright raies of the sacred Image of God upon them and will you needs wilfully damn them Hath God given you religious Parents tender of you as of the apple of their own eye and will you not be counselled by them Are you resolved to be a shame to your Friends in Life and a terrour to your selves in Death Can it possibly enter into your minds to think that ever any good will come of sinful courses Or that ever you should have cause to repent your selves of any thing heartily done in obedience to the Commands of God for the good of your Souls Hath God solemnly sworn The soul that sinneth be he who he will that soul shall die and can you suppose he will break his word for you Can you so much as imagine that the most holy God who is a God of pure eyes and hateth iniquity can you any way encourage your selves to hope that he will open Heaven Gates at the last day to the impenitent to the ungodly who scorn their duty who slight their mercy Do you expect a new day of Grace when this is gone that you make such waste of your present time Do you think everlasting burnings are so easily undergone that you make such slow haste to flee from the wrath that is to come Is it not enough that you were born in iniquity but you will stubbournly die in your sins also Nay then Ichabod Ichabod your glory and our hopes are both departed Sons of Belial against all the sweet counsels of God to the contrary will you needs wretchedly make your selves Children as the word too sadly imports that have broken the yoke becoming henceforth altogether unprofitable both to your selves and others never likely to emerge or rise more to any glory Then may Satan justly enough take up his taunt and triumph as the Father represents it He a Servant of thine No Lord It is my work that he all the day does it is my sinful motions he chiefly delights in There can be no plea made for him He is whatever he may vainly think of himself not thine but mine Yea then your Parents though loth such words should ever come from them will be enforced to cry out How have we brought forth to the grave and our breasts given suck to the Destroyer Then may Davids mourning be heard again in their Tents Oh Absalom my Son my Son how art thou fallen and dying as the sinful dieth in the crimson guilt the bloudy gore of all thy sins At these sad rates are the righteous counsels of the Lord rejected and set at nought But ere we thus part I
sh●ke your selves fr●m the dust and vanities of Youth Bring a blessing with you into your Generation the Wo●ld in these l●st declining Times greatly needs it Carry a blessing hence with you when ere you die your selves shall reap the sweet and everlasting comfort of it Your work is great your day is sh●●t the Master impor●●●te and your promise is alreadie passed To recoile now were as the Father well said to keep back part of the price and even to lie to the Holy Ghost To make our selves guiltie of the greatest perjury before the Lord. Oh ● hasten and put on the garments of your Elder Brother Gird up the loyns of your mind and run your Race Hasten and linger not lest night overtake you and you sit for ever mourning under the region and shadow of death See that ye covet earnestlie the best things Set your hearts unmoveablie upon heaven and ●ll the glorie of it Say humblie to the Lord as Luther You neither can nor dare take these so●●y earthly things for your portion Strive as Ionathan to climbe up the Rock Love and Fear the Lord. Honour and obey your Parents Be careful and redeem your own time Design as becomes you● an ingenuous ●ife on Earth Design above all a glo●ious life in he●ven and God your God shall be with you I might now leave your Parents ●nd ne●r●●t Friends to ple●d this righteous c●use of the Lord yet further with you You cannot be strangers to all their affectionate and dayly prayers on your behalf their ardent and even restless desires of your welfare You are to them their dear Ascanius's on whom their hearts so much are set in whom as Iacob in Benjamin their life is almost bound up and their Parental cares night and day longing and waiting scarce desirous of any greater joy than this To see their Children walking wisely in the truth as we have all received a Commandment from the Father Me thinks both I and you cannot but hear them spe●king to you in the very language of their hearts as once Cicero so Father-like to his Son Know my Child thou art already exceeding dear unto me but shalt yet become far dearer if thou shalt hearken to wise Counsel and thine own welfare What words can I further use I charge you by all the sparks of filial good nature that are yet alive in any of your bosoms oh quench not these affections Oh! frustrate not these so righteous expectations of your indulgent Parents Let me oh let me perswade you and rely upon you that you will not be wanting to your selves whatever in you lieth to greaten their dearest love and affection toward you In which hopes I take my leave and part at present with you Oh! let me rejoyce in the day of Christ that this Letter hath not been in vain unto you Let no man ●●spise your Youth though young in years be ye as the Iews were wont proverbially to say as the Aged in all gravity and wisdom of carriage Fare ye well The Lord himself make you branches of righteousness bringing forth every one of you fruits unto holiness that God the Lord may be glorified Amen Amen My Son be wise and make my heart glad that I may answer him that r●proache●h me Pro. 27.11 FINIS THE Young Mans MEDITATION OR Some few Sacred POEMS UPON Select Subjects and Scriptures By Samuel Crossman B.D. No● modo divina contemplantur sed Cantica Hymnos ad Deum Sacratioribus omnis generis mel●orum carminum rhythmis g●a●iter con●●run●t Philo de Religios in Aegypt apud Eus●b A Verse may find h●m whom a Sermon fl●es And turn del●ght into a Sacrifice Mr. Herberts Temple Lo●don Pr●nted by I. H. and are to be sold by S. T●ompson at the Bishops head in St. Pauls Church-yard and T. Parkhurst at the three Crow●s at the lower end of Cheapside near the Conduit 1664. The Gift If thou knowest the gift of God c. Joh. 4.10 1. THis is the Gift thy Gift oh Lord The token of thy dearest love The orient jewel of thy word Sent down my thankfulness to prove 2. Great is his gift in all mens eyes Who gives himself his Friend to save My Lord does more for Foes he dies This Gift no parallel may have 3. Great is the Gift the Giver great Both justly to a wonder rise Thou giv'st thy Lamb to thine for meat And for their Sins a Sacrifice 4. But Lord whil'st thou thus giv'st to thine Others arose to vie with thee The World and Satan did combine And they would needs a giving be 5. Satan sins pleasures offered And almost forc'd them upon me But while they bloom'd they withered And Lord thy Gift my choice shall be 6. Then did the World its gayes present And still alluring cri'd see see Here 's that may rather give content But Lord thy Gift my choice shall be 7. These cannot give they 'd s●eal away From me my He●v'n my heart from thee What e'r they offer I 'll say nay Still Lord thy Gift my choice shall be All flesh is grass and all the goodliness thereof as the flower of the field The grass withereth the flower s●deth but the Word of our God shall stand for ever Isa. 40.6 8. 1. VVElcom sweet words is 't is most meet We will you in our bosomes hide Sweet words for present but most sweet Because for ever you abide 2. All flesh is as the fading grass The voice from Heav'n to Earth thus cri'd The whole Worlds glory away doth pass But Lord thy words they still abide 3. Man speaks but all his words are wind They ebb and flow with time and tide Fit Emblems of his fickle mind But Lord thy words they still abide 4. Our selves sometimes stand promising Great things while we by thee are tri'd Our blossoms fall no fruit they bring But Lord thy words they still abide 5. Bless'd words Dear Lord no words like thine In darkness light through them is spi'd Till death and after death they shine Then Lord even then thy words abide 6. These words the Lamb's sweet writings be Of love and dowry to his Bride Here may his Saints their portions see Portions which ever shall abide 7. Welcome sweet words sweet words indeed Heaven's Agent here to Heav'n our Guide What e'r is needless these we need Lord let these words with us abide Upon the Fifth of November The Archers have sorely grieved him and shot at him and hated him But his Bow abode in strength Gen. 49.23 24. 1. THe day allows thy praises Lord Our grateful hearts to thee shall sing Our thankful lips they shall record Thine ancient loves Eternal King 2. Our Land shall boast the holy One My great preserver is become My Friend my Foes hath overthrown And made the pit they digg'd their ●oome 3. With Parthian bows the Archers came Romes poisonous oyl on the Arrows shone Thy Turtle was the Archers aime
fiery party in either I confess I think there is no sober Christian but is ready in a mixture between joy and grief to say as that great man great for Piety great for Learning a little before his death to his bosome Friend I have known through the grace of God what it is to have the Word of God for the sure and trusty rule of Salvation unto me and what it is to follow the v●in dreams and pleasures of men The Concerns of Religion are exceeding great and ponderous God and Man will expect God and Man will allow that all be cordial and upright in them Only the pleasure of our Father still is that we graciously temper and carry Moses his meekness with Moses his zeal Deporting our selves in the profession of his name as the Sun in the Spring which so shines as not to scorch Retaining all due candor as men while we further profess to honour and serve holiness and peace in a higher capacity as Christians And oh that we might see those Magnalia Dei those great things of God and of Religion the very ornamen●s and beauties of holiness revived and espoused amongst us Repentance from dead works to serve the living God Faith unfained Faith without Complements thinking so well of God as to repose our selves and dearest Concerns chearfully upon him his power and faithfulness in Christ. An holy care to lead a right godly course of life placing Religion where of right it justly and only centers not in formal or contentious words but in a willing and faithful practice Putting off what none indeed can be very willing to keep on the old man with all the odious lusts thereof Walking as the ransomed of the Lord in newness of spirit newness of life Pressing heartily after the mark Rejoycing day by day in all the sweet hopes that are set before us till the seed time shall reach the harvest and the sheaf of glory be reapt and seen with joy in the Believers bosome This oh this was the Religion so many righteous men have wished so well unto and longed so much to see such Gospel such gracious daies of the Son of Man Thus might we also honourably answer as Nehemiah we are doing a great work the work of God and of our Souls and have neither desire nor leave to come down suffering that to cease while we wear out our precious time and gain no more than what may well be wept out again the distempering of our weak and tender minds into high Feavers and passions by the angry strife of Tongues God Almighty grant we may at length reach the Apostles great charge and follow the truth in love Tender of the truth that it be not changed into a lye Cordial toward love that it sustain no wrong while we seem in the pursuit of truth Remembring with our selves as the Father how unnatural and even Prodigious it would be to have the Wolfs savage heart found in the Lambs bosome Oh! thou the God of so great forbearance and tenderness towards us all give unto us also of that sweet spirit of thine bowels of mercies kindness and humbleness of mind each toward other Pity thy weak and froward Children Rowle away our reproach and let our eyes yet see that dear and sacred thing the Iewel of Nature the Honour of Religion the Promise of God the great Desire of all gracious hearts Peace thy Peace upon this thine Israel Reader I had purposed some further instructions here to the Elder To have intreated you respectfully as Fathers That you might as David walk with a perfect heart where indeed the integrity of the heart is most tried in the midst of your house And with Abraham bring up your children how mean soever outwardly yet each one as the Child of a Prince for God and the praise of his Name For your Country and the welfare thereof to minister before both in the lovely services of righteousness all their daies But a weighty providence from the Lord intervening takes off my hand for the present Let it be accepted oh Lord that it was in mine heart to have served thee therein This only shall I abruptly now say you have given in your Pledges to Posterity and are leaving your Children as Absaloms Pillar in the Valley to preserve your names when you are gone Oh! let your care be such concerning them your carriage so Exemplary before them that your selves may become true Benefactors and your Children a real Treasure to the next Age rendring your names thereby as sweet odours to all So might you welcome your death with pleasant smiles when ere it comes Assuring your dearest Friends as that pious Emperour upon his death-bed so chearfully said to his I am now willing indeed to die since I shall leave a living Monument a Child of mine to hold up the Lamp in my stead to serve unto Vertue when I am gone So might it be further acknowledged by others at your Funeral when your dust shall lye silent before them as was said of Theodosius to his just and deserved honour A great man a good man is this day taken from us He is gone but not wholly He hath left part of himself his hopeful Children here behind him In them may we see the fair Fruits of a pious Education in them we freely acknowledge much of the Fathers worth and goodness still surviving By them as Abel though dead he yet liveth and dayly renews a vertuous example before us The Lord thus blesse the arising Generation amongst us vouchsafing this sweet and pleasing mercy as his choice favour till it become the joy and beauty of our dear and native Land The Lord thus shine with his Lamp upon your Tabernacles and your Childrens Children unto many Generations after you In the affectionate desires whereof I rest Your Friend and Servant in the just obligements of Nature and Grace Samuel Crossman Errata Reader YOu are much desired candidly to excuse and with your Pen to correct the many Errata's which in the Authors absence have unawares sl●pt through the Press Amongst divers others these at first sight appeared in a Cursory view of some few Pages Page 4. in the quot read Persius p. 21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 55. line 5. r. astliction 9.80 l. 19. r. regret ● 142. quo ● ovis twice p. 147 quot r. humilitas p. 155. quo ● co●vexaque p. 184. quo● r. candidissim e. p. 193. l. 15. r. con ●●s p. 219. l. 8. r. ingenious p. 221. l. 25. r. thread p. 17. l. 19. in the Poems for circl'st r ceil'st You will easily find several other mistakes of the like nature As also mispointings and mispellings Especially in the Marginal Notes Wherein the Hebrew initial Letters are often set for final and Accents some omitted others misplaced in the Greek But these Errata's are far the least and little danger in them if we carefully prevent
that great and common one so incident both to Writer and Reader A practical neglect after all of any good counsel how usefully soe●er given how affectionately soever for present received To the Children and Servants of my dear Neighbours at c. My Christian love with desires of your real welfare in this life and that which is to come Ingenuous Youths UPon whom the eyes of all are justly set observing your present carriage and further waiting what your following years will prove Even a Child though but a child is known by his doings whether his work be pure and whether it be right So early doth nature put forth its inclinations and discover it self May your youth be as the Spring for loveliness your riper years as the Summer for real fruitfulness CHAPTER I. The Introduction or previous Entrance into the ensuing Discourse YOu are now entring a troublesom sinful world and are therein to be pitied You are now upon your great preparations for E●ernity and therein had need be seriously counselled and advised Me thinks I see you just setting forth in your great journey your long journey whence you shall not return a journey which will prove either Heaven or Hell to every one of you in the end How much depends upon this moment it may be you scarce believe you little consider for the present though afterwards your selves shall plainly see this Life hath been but a restless Voyage the World a tempestuous Sea your Bodies the frail Vessels wherein you sail and Time the Charon the Boatman to wast you over these Waters and set you upon another shore delivering you up there as the Souldiers in the Acts presented Paul before your Judge the Supream Judge of all Flesh in order to your final and solemn Trial. It is on this great Errand of God and of your Souls that these present Lines are sent unto you You will I hope both willingly and seriously peruse them A wise Son heareth Instruction but the scorner causeth shame It is a kindness to shew the wandring Child the way to his Fathers house and truly I have greatly desired amongst many other cares justly incumbent upon me as I am able to further you heaven-ward and to prepare your hearts while you are yet young as a generation for the Lord. Your natures are too easily disposed to receive evil impressions Satan sees it and w●tches be times to forestall your tender minds therewithall It must be our care early to recommend and your duty readily to comply with better things that as the yielding ●ax you may now receive those impressions of God and goodness upon your spirits which may become some step toward your happy sealing up to the day of redemption Accept then I pray you of this plain Paper it is the best Token I have to send And Oh! that through the blessing of the Lord it may prove a good Token for you to receive It is sadly evident that many too many losing their tender their first years in conclusion lose their souls also And it is as undoubtedly certain that gracious Counsel however hardly thought of by most might be ●o the young man the best Guide of his Youth to preserve him from the paths of the Destroyer Consider what is laid before you and the Lord give you understanding in all things Our own true welfare we may freely grant is and justly ought to be the desire of all the right way to it i● known or understood of very few I● was the sad observation of the wise● of men The labour of the foolish wearieth him as well it may because he knoweth not how to go to the City Mercy is not miss'd because it is not sought but because men will not be perswaded to seek it where alone it may be found Most men spend their choice and precious daies in a vain shaddow and go down in the end thereof to everlasting sorrows You have the world now before you your own mercy or misery yet to choose and be you sure as you now choose so shall you speed hereafter Oh! be your own true friends and choose ye that which is good while it may be obtained and that good part shall never be taken from you You are now Flowers in their bloom Your Friends delight your Countries hope It lieth very much in your Sphere to be either a crown of rejoycing to them or to bring down their gray hairs with sorrow to the grave You are those first Fruits those green ears of corn which should be offered to the Lord. For his sake for your own sakes for your Parents ●nd Coun●●i●s sikes embrace your own mercies your own true good before your Sun be set and your hopes cut off for ever Others have been sometimes young as you now are and cannot be altogether strangers to the young mans heart the young mans thoughts and waies It is very likely your vain minds will be easily now taken with vain things But observe if they be not still secretly afraid meditating terrour and crying out I shall one day be called to a strict account for all this In this suspence it may be you may stick long not able to joy much in the waies of sin nor yet fully willing to leave them and seek the Lord. Sometimes faintly praying and yet inwardly shrinking back and still loth to receive indeed the grace that you seem to 1 pray for As the Father freely confessed the prayers of his youth had also been I said indeed with my lips Lord I give and yet in my heart I was too willing to give longer day and could have said Lord pray not yet I was even afraid lest thou shouldst hear me too soon and too soon heal and subdue my corruption for me Thus is the mind for a time like the wavering scales rising and falling going and coming ere it can settle with the true poize and weight If Satan in this conflict prevails your slavish fears will wretchedly degenerate and grow worse turning into an inward hatred of God and his good waies a disdainful loathing of Gods people a continual backwardness to your own duty Which God of his mercy prevent But if through grace you be enabled to overcome you will find your fears clearing up unto more kindliness and a willingness on your part to retain them still you will find gracious desires springing up by them Oh! that God would pardon my sin Lord give me Christ or else I dye From thence by tender steps which I have not time now to express will God lead you and will not forsake you or despise the d●y of your small things And oh that you may be thus led by the hand of the Lord till you both see and receive the blessed reward of the righteous the salvation of your souls Think not that your present condition your present pleasures will last long No no as Adonijahs feast these banquets will soon be
as that which quencheth the subordinate sweetness of life as that which overthrows what were otherwaies lovely in nature Nor yet on the other hand content your selves with bare nature without the true grace of God which is ten thousand times more worth and better indeed than life it self Be ye in Gods name frugal of all the just comforts of this life slight them not waste them not they are the dear gifts of God the God of all our mercies the portion that is given us outwardly under the Sun But if the Lord be willing to sanctifie these and bestow yet greater then them upon us let us not neglect let us not despise our own advantages but accept it with all humble thankfulness that our water may thus be turned into wine Now therefore that you may the more understandingly comport with these great Concerns and the better see what lies before you it will be very necessary for you what you can solidly to inform and satisfie your selves very particularly in these three things 1. The world into which you are now come and for a time to live what that is 2. The great ends for which you are thus set on shore and now sent hither what they are 3. The true way and means whereby these righteous and desirable ends might be at length happily attained He that once understands where he is what he hath indeed to do and how he may fairly and safely compass his work needs not stand idle in the Market-place he hath enough to take up both his hands and heart withall God grant that you may go ingenuously into your Lords Vineyard and willingly work the work for which you were sent into the world First Then be contented to sit down and consider what kind of world this is into which you are now come It may availe you in the sequel of your life to have throughly known it ere you be further involved in it It is a world that too much encumbers most but solidly contenteth none Our Stage indeed whereon to act but not our Bed whereon to rest The Ancients who observed and enquired very studiously after it have plainly told us what we shall ●lso find it A true Enemy in the disguised cloaths and habit of a Friend The Young man by mistake fondly calls it Naomi and saies it is ple●sant The Elder by de●r-bought experience finds it Marah and cries out oh it is bitter Such is this world as the Tents of Kedar which you are now for a season come to take up your quarters in It was once indeed a beautiful Palace the glory of God shining without any clouds in its full brightness upon it The furniture of it when God took the first Inventory thereof all exceeding good But now sin hath marred it like that girdle by the river Euphrates as a Vesture it is changed and its former beauty is departed from it Satan is now by the permission of God become the Prince and God of this world The furniture of it now joyless enough All that is in the world and that All both scant and sad enough is the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life The Favorites of it Gods Foes Whosoever will be the friend of this world maketh himself the enemy of God Sweet Children slatter not your selves with vain hopes this is not your resting place arise it will deceive you it will destroy you Here may we too truly soe the course of nature dayly set on fire The children of men whom God hath made all of one blood that we might unsainedly seek the good each of other almost every man breathing strife hunting his brother with a net lying in wait to revile to supplant and to destroy Here may we as sad spectators behold before our eyes the righteous ends of Creation almost every where perverted and the good Creatures of God vilely abused and made subject to bondage to serve the lusts the beastly lusts of sinful men Such I may once more inform you is the world that you are now as strangers and pilgrims come into If afterwards you meet with rough waters and m●nifold troubles scarce now it may be so much as expected or lookt for by you you must not marvel as if some strange thing befell you remember this only word it is the World a raging Sea which cannot rest whereon you sail If temptations hereafter on all sides endanger your souls you are also forewarned of it This is that wilderness where so many fiery Serpents will be stinging of us Trust not oh trust not to that which hath undone so many Though it appear as the plains of Sodom once to Lot like the garden of God for sensual pleasantness choose it not it must as Sodom be destroyed This no better is the world into which we may now sadly welcom you You may write upon these doors and safely conclude as the Hebrews piously do in their similiar Proverb One hours sweet refreshment in that world which is to come is far to be preferred before an whole life in this 2. But now secondly being come as God once said to Elijah so may I to you What makes you here What have you ●ere to do Enquire humbly at the Word of God weigh things as you are able in your own consciences and judge impartially what you think God sent you into the world for The end in any action though it be the last thing that is actually attained and reached unto yet must it be the first thing that is espoused and thought upon Before we let the Arrow go we had need take heed our eye be first upon the White You are as Servants going to Market upon your Masters business Dear Children be willing to take your Errand carefully and God Almighty grant that when you go home in the Evening of your Life to stand before your Master you may be able truly to say Father I have glorified thy name on earth I have truly though but weakly finished the work thou gavest me to do You came not hither to trisle away your precious hours in vain pastimes No no time is of it self withou● these too nimble and h●stens too fast from us You came not hither to tre●sure up further wrath against the day of wrath our danger is too great already You came not hither upon a sensual errand to make provision for the lusts of the flesh as if the Soul had nothing to do but to become as many would have it a Cook or Cup-bearer or some Kitchin-servant to the body You came not hither Gehazi like to run after the Chariot wheel of a foolish sickle world for change o● Raiment or peeces of Silver Take heed you embase not your selves to any of these things they are far below you as Men much more below you as Christians You came hither upon business of more consequence On that great Errand
wherein every creature so justly oweth it self to glorifie that God which gave you your life and brea●h You came hither as the sick man un●o change of air for recovery and cure You came hither to imploy an immortal soul in the study of Eternity and in a spirit of enlargement and nobleness to look after those future things which shortly shall come to pass In plainest terms You came hither to settle the great case of your Souls heaven-ward on such solid terms that neither the troubles of life nor the very stroke of death should ever hereafter be able to amaze you You came hither to seek the Lord and his face reconciliation and communion with him whom you must enjoy or dye and fall for ever Oh dear Youths these are the great ends of life if you can apply your tender minds too tender I fear to close far with such ponderous matters yet these and no less than these are the sacred ends of life and your just duty if you can receive it And who indeed can have the heart to refuse or wave the righteous pleasure of the Lord herein Is it worth the time to design so earnestly as most do such inferiour things as Honours Estates and Friends here And shall it not much more become us to rouze up our minds to nobler things things worth the thoughts worthy of the cares of an immortal Soul How we may most silially and fully serve the glory of our great Creator How we may most surely escape the snares of death And in the end inherit the long long'd for crown of life If others can find no better imployment than with Claudius Souldiers to gather Cockles or with the poysonous Spider to make sorry traps to catch silly worthless Flies in If they will needs as too too many daily do with the Serpent go upon their belly and lick the dust unworthily chaining down an heaven-born spirit to poor unsutable and earthly things Yet let them be no Presidents unto you Call you upon your souls as that holy man did to remember their Country and Kindred above God hath given you the wings of nobler desires heavenward oh clip not those golden wings but make your flight as th● Dove unto the Arke Walk you in Gods name in the way that is most excellent and covet you the best things Thirdly You have now understood both where you are and what you have to do It ●ests still thirdly that you carefully consider by what true means these great ends are to be at length attained and enjoyed The glory of God the glory of God it is most mens language few mens care The persecutor in Isaiah could say Let God be glorified when he for his part went about whatever he could by his bitterness against Gods people to dishonour him Heaven and happiness are easily pretended to but not so easily enjoyed Neglect and slightiness in the means of our salvation is the Epidemical disease here we commonly stumble and fall Most men could soon be perswaded to like of the end but they can fearce away with the means Well the c●se is however stated unalterably to our hands whether we like or like it not Our way of coming to the blessed favour of God and oh that our hearts may be solemn indeed in these solemn things our way I say again is that new and living way by Christ and the Covenant of free grace He is the way the truth and the life no man cometh to the Father but by him Our way unto any sweet communion with the Lord or consequently glory in the end for our own dear souls is by the real renewing of our inner man and sound conversion toward God For what communion thinks any man is light likely to have with darkness Or what fellowship if we will needs remain in our sins can Christ have with Belial We are now come to the great knot that sore difficulty wherein your present thoughts should be so justly taken up whereupon the Crisis and decision of your future state so certainly will depend Oh! that the Lord may please to bring you under the bond of his Covenant and make you partakers of this great this blessed and honourable change from nature to grace from the power of Satan to the Kingdom of God Knowledge and education may make an external Professor But it is only Regeneration that makes a true Christian. Conversion we may all with blushing confess with many it is plainly despised with most it is secre●ly disregarded as a matter of great and deep thoughts of heart and so we set up the exteriour prof●ssion of the name of God without any serious travel in it But this will serve no mans turn it is a truth shall live when we are dead No Regeneration no Salvation Except a man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God This is that ingrafting of the wild branch into the good Olive that it may bring forth better fruit This is as the first Resurrection unto life which must forerun any ascension unto glory This is that fresh and lively drawing of the glorious Image of God upon those dark hearts which lay before as the Earth in its first Chaos void and without form or beauty Oh! that men would forbear their hard thoughts and censures of God and the sweet workings of his grace There may be many weaknesses even in gracious hearts according to the frailty of humane nature while they are under the hand of God in the transacting of this great and unusual work There may and will be sore throwes and pangs accompanying of it whereever it is truly wrought But still these things need not be matter of reviling matter of distaste or discouragement unto any What God himself sowes is here sown in weakness And as for the thing it self this new birth this new life this renewing of the inward man must indispensably and certainly be if we desire any part or place in that new Ierusalem which is above This is the very posture of things before you these are those ancient Land-marks which none may remove What oh what manner of persons then ought you to be What continual and serious care are you obliged henceforth to take lest you should do the work of the Lord and your own souls slightly CHAP. III. Counsel and Advice propounded for the right Guidance and Improvement of the Young Mans present Condition to his Own and Others Solid Comfort YOu cannot now account as too many do gracious Counsel in the Lord either needless or burdensom No no it is as an excellent Oyle that needs break no mans head The needful and happy Clue to carry us through all our present Labyrinths The true Index of a sweet and hopeful disposicion So saies the Historian shall any man become surely eminent and prosperous if he be deliberate and willing to steer his course by the compass of Good Counsel It is the neglect of this that
casts so many sad shipwracks upon the shore Headiness rusheth on and is confident but never prospereth There are and will be those heart breaking grones in another world which may justly endear good Counsel to us while we have a day to live How have I will the poor damned one day say how have I hated instruction and my heart despised reproof Dear Youths stop not your ear as the deaf Adder to the instructions of wisdom let them be unto you as the weights to the Clock that set it into an orderly motion of going As the welcome friendly gales of wind which carry the ship that might otherwaies have lain becalmed the fairer the faster and straiter toward its desired haven It is a spur to quicken our pace a guide to direct our way which the wise in heart will esteem as the Poet of old A sacred thing of great safety and usefulness to all The Counsels and requests I have now more particularly to lay before you for the guidance of your youth are of a twofold nature 1. The first relating more immediately to Religion between God and your own souls 2. The other to your relative condition and converse which you are entring into here with men Though therein also Religion is still greatly concerned In both I shall endeavour all plainess and practicalness and not to cast in matters of doubt and division Such things are at any time more ready to humour the wrath of man than to work the righteousness of God The Temple is then best built when there is the least noise of knocking o● hammers heard about it It will be your part and that which God himself will look for at your hands not barely to read or to rest your selves in the verbal commendation of pious truths which nature is very desirous to sit down upon as they on this side Iordan and go no farther toward the Holy Land you are to compose your selves forthwith to enter upon the real practice of the good will of God concerning you And oh that the Lord who alone teacheth to profit would please to give these sorry Lines any place of abode in your hearts to your souls just furtherance and edification in the Lord. In the great Concernments of Religion as Man is far the noblest Creature in the world So is Religion still the highest enoblement that he is possibly capable of A right understanding in it a wise and cordial consistency with it that we may not in effect dishonour what we seem to respect by an undue professing of it these are mercies of an high nature and come only from the Father of lights The heart that is thus upright with God carries alwaies a great presence and blessing with it The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth and he will shew himself strong in behalf of those whose hearts are thus perfect toward him We may here safely sing with the Psalmist Blessed is every one be he never so mean otherwaies that feareth the Lord and thus walketh in his waies The Heathen though wandring in too much darkness have yet usually had so high a sense of this as ascribe all their welfare to their fidelity and care in their Religion Thus the great Orator even boasteth of his Romans that it was neither their Policy nor their Strength but their Piety which became the advancement of their Nation Lo here how they who had not the Law became yet a Law to themselves oh let us be provoked to a better emulation by them But I shall endeavour to be yet more particular with you that you may not on either hand as too many in these perillous daies are sadly sound to do miscarry in these tremendous matters of Religion First then Entertain from your youth up pious and reverent thoughts of God live in the constant acknowledgement of him in ●ll your waies let your hearts dwell in the religious sense of his Deity his Holiness and Omnisciency and they shall lay a divine weight upon both heart and life It is a fundamental principle which God himself stands much upon He that cometh to God must believe that God is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him In the Old Testament we read The fool and never any but the fool hath said in heart there is no God And in the New Testament the Apostle tels us of some that were without God in the world Not that God intends to let them so escape and pass away No no though they would have nothing ●o do with God God hath yet something to do with them but the Scripture thus records them for practical Atheists against God because they care not to know or interest themselves by true grace in him But as for you see that you set the Lord alwaies at your right hand lest at ●ny time you offend ag●inst him Live continually as in his sight for the truth is you and all your waies are naked and open before him Harbour not that thought in your mind venture not upon that action though never so seemingly secret in your life which you would be ashamed to own or avouch as yours before the Lord. Still meditate the Omnisciency and greatness of the presence in which we alwaies all of us are and how all our present waies will we ●ill we must one ●ay abide the touchstone of ● publick ●id at the Bar of God Choose him in your Youth and he shall be a God ●ll-sufficient unto you through your w●o●e life Yet rest not your selves too much on this general reverence toward God but modestly press after the most particular and filial knowledge of him You may freely 〈◊〉 as Moses without offence I beseech thee shew me thy glory He is that God in whom you live and have your being the God of all your mercies and good things with whom if ever you become happy you are to live to all Eternity You cannot sure you cannot but holily desire the utmost acquaintance before hand with him How earnestly how affectionately was this pious study recommended in the Primitive times Their Language me thinks might even enfl●me us I testifie saies Lactantius I proclaim it as far as ever I can make this voice of mine to be heard I declare to all the world that this is our great Maxime and Principle the true Knowledge and Worship of God it is the just sum of all Wisdom This this is that the Philosophers so anxiously sought af●er but poor men they groped in the dark and could never find it Dear Youths you are willing to learn and gain acquaintance with men Oh! be ye not strangers unto God I commend and leave it with you under this great assurance It would most certainly become life eternal to any of you thus to know the only true God and him whom he hath sent Iesus Christ. Secondly Let
your f●ar and profession of him and his name be alwaies guided by his pure Word It is your Chard and Compass your Pole and Star in Gods name sail by it Whatever other desirable enjoyments God hath given you this without an Hyperbole far excels them all we may safely conclude with the Ancients The whole World hath no Jewel like to this Read dayly meditate reverently in those holy Scriptures They are the Christians Treasury the field where the heavenly Pearl must be sought may be found There shall you meet with History none so sacred none so ancient Promises none so heavenly none so cordial Precepts none so righteous none so holy For what nation is there so great that hath Ordinances and Laws so righteous as all this Law which the Lord your God setteth before you Let these Scriptures be ever more your Songs in the house of your pilgrimage Men may fondly magnifie profane and Philosophical Writings as somewhat of inferiour usefulness many of them have and we both may and should freely and honourably acknowledge the common gifts of our Creator wherever we find them But still in all things that concern our conversation and souls comfort to the Law and to the Testimony as the standing and unalte●●ble manifestation which God hath been pleased to leave extant of his Will unto the ends of the World In your reading begin alwaies with Prayer humbly intreating the Lord that he would shew you the wonders of his Law In your hearing attend with the greatest reverence still remembring the Ordinance is high though the Instrument may be mean the Treasure heavenly though the Vessel be but earthy In your applying force not the Scripture from its native intendment and meaning to the humour of times the biass or interest of your own opinions or affections whatsoever Let all your converse therewith be in all chastity and pureness of mind take Gods Word as God gives it and resign your selves into a pious obedience to it Remember Timothy and be ye provoked to an holy emulation he had known the Scriptures from a Child it is they which under God are able to make you wise unto salvation Your knowledge in other things may be a● Brass your knowledge in these will be as Gold greater riches and of greater worth Happy is that man that is an Ezra a ready Scribe graciously versed and acquainted in the Law of his God It is too likely you may live to hear and see great contentions in the World about Religion Lo here is Christ and lo there but go not you forth after them be not led by the insinuations of men whereby they cunningly lie in waite on almost all hands to deceive I have often been ready to say within my self Lord give me a Religion according to thy holy Scriptures truly built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles or I have no great desire to any at all Here our foot standeth upon firm ground Here we may safely repose our wearied hearts Here we may confidently adventure the great concerns of our dear immortal souls Here have we the faith of God himself the true and faithful God solemnly plighted unto us that we shall not be ●eceived in our way that we shall not be disappointed in the end Oh! stir not from the horns of this Altar from this City of Refuge lest you die Be you I pray you guided by the good Word of God the Heavens and the For●h shall pass away and the boisterous wills of men shall come to nought but the Word of the Lord shall endure for ever Thirdly Next after this general fidelity to the Scriptures draw nearer home and let them more particularly inform you in the true knowledge of your selves This is that Terraincognita that unknown Land which so few make any discovery of Many are great Travellers ready Historians scarce any Age any Country or City but they are familiarly acquainted with it The S●●s and utmost Isles the very Desarts and remotest Mountains they can discourse particularly of them But still are too great strangers at home there is one Cabinet scarce yet ever unlocked one book scarce ever yet opened they are little read in their own hearts May be it is because the reckoning is long and we but little provided to clear is The Leaf where we should read is much blotted and we take little delight to look into these things But Dear Children say not you so Neglect will scarce pay that debt which grows of it self dayly greater or pacifie that Creditor who takes the contempt worse than the debt it self Know therefore and you cannot indeed but know that you even you have gone astray from the womb and are though but young people yet old sinners great sinners Gospel-sinners and that God expects true repentance true faith at your hands as well as any if you desire any part in the Kingdom of God The story is sad but true and we may relate it Man enters into the World at traitors gate born in sin and conceived in iniquity His body frail and mean as the dust a common Hospital for almost all diseases which successively one after another come and take up their quarters perforce there His mind as Nebuchadnezars degraded and cast down from its former excellency among the beasts of the field and there it now walks His understanding that bright and precious Lamp is gone out nor does he now lift up his eyes any longer to know the Lord. But sinks down in great stupidity of spirit as one regardless which way Eternity goes as one utterly alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in him His Conscience that noble watch and under God the very Life-guard of his soul stands no longer upon its watch Tower but lyeth as one that fainteth spreading its hands bleeding and dying at the Gates The inferiour servants the affections all in an uproar and confusion Iudas-like betraying their Master rending themselves from their just service and hasting to ingratiate and let out themselves to a foolish treacherous World He that might have been sometime saluted and that truly too Iedidiah the beloved of the Lord the Son of God and Heir of glory His bloud is now stained the entail justly cut off and he must be arraigned under that joyless title Loammi none of Gods but a child of wrath a stranger from the Covenant of promise Under the guilt of sin and he knows it not Under the power of sin and he feels it not Responsible to God for all he now does and yet regards it not Within a daies march for ought he knows of death and judgement and yet ●ies it not to heart His eyes hath he closed and he knows not the things of his own peace These things Sirs are no hidden secrets The Heathen though at a great distance yet they easily saw Mans misery and frequently made both affectionate and voluminous
Christian saies the Father then and then only shews himself worthy of his Christian name when he walks in his Conversation Christianly By this shall men know that we like our Religion indeed that we account the Lord faithful and his righteous waies worth our careful walking in The Gospel deserves it men expect it we should fulfil it All people are ready enough and will walk every one in the name of his God and let us also though upon better grounds walk in the name of the Lord our God for ever and ever But alas herein Christianity covers its face sits down with tears upon its cheeks and bewailes it self as one neglected too much neglected on all hands Me thinks I hear its groanes as in the Lamentations Is it nothing to you oh all you that pass by You that are called Christians and which is yet more you that have come forth as Protestants from the Corruptions of former Ages that ye might as Israel going out of the Land of Egypt the better serve the Lord when oh when shall wisdom be practically justified of these her children The profane man doth the Devils work with all his might he runs violently to the utmost excess of riot The worldly man his heart taketh not its rest in the night he is drudge enough and enough to the world for the recompence he is ever like to have from it These spare no pains but act like themselves too true to their principles such as they are where-ever they come But oh the professors of the everlasting Gospel how do they faint in the head of the Streets How cold and weak are they How sparing and slow to adorn the Doctrine of God and our Saviour With Ananias and Saphira we keep backpart of the price We offer the form but too often withhold the power Oh Sirs if we have judged Religion worth professing let us also judge it worth the practizing It may be our care and labour of love may one day be found as a sweet memorial before the Lord. Dear Youths You will meet with many it may be possing a Iehu's pace in the Opinions and Traditions of men for indeed a carnal forwardness in such things whether on the right hand or on the left costs us not much it is self-grown nature can afford it But oh Lord how rare a thing doth it still remain to find an Hezechiah that can testifie upon his death-bed in what uprightness he hath walked before the Lord all his life Israel may be as the sand by the Sea-shore for common profession but these will still be too near the Lords reckoning One of a City and two of a Tribe that is very few Wherefore I will even entreat you to revive that sweet Inscription which was once engraven upon Aarons breast-plate oh Copy it out fair in your lives and be ye Holiness to the Lord. Let this be your kindness to that sacred Name of God by which you are called not to leave it as too many do subject to everyones reproach by the carelesness of your carriage but by the cleanness and vertuousness of your deportment whatever you can to make it a praise in the Earth Sixthly When at any time your tender hearts shall be desirous to refresh and ease themselves from the sorrows of this life Evermore go to God and the sweet comforts of Religion This was the solemn counsel and farewel the Jews were wont to leave with their dearest Friends when most overwh●lmed with sadness We wish you as the best Cordial the comforts of heaven We might herein not without just indignation say as Elijah once did Is it because there is no God in Israel that men send to Baal-Zebub the God of Ekron Is it because the All-sufficient God is become as an empty Vine that there is such hurrying after the world and its fading comforts The provocation and indignity that is herein offered to the Lord is exceeding high it is in effect a denying of that God that is above Oh that men would not deal so dishonourably by Religion That whereunto we appeal for our future salvation in the name of God let us therewith consist for our present consolation It was from hence the Martyrs drew all their joyes They justly might and did thank the Lord for it that their Prisons were to them as Palaces their chains as so many bracelets of Gold It was Religion that feasted them in their dungeons that enabled them to write so cheerfully to their Friends as many of them did I am in the esteem of men in hell for outward misery But I am in my own sense as in heaven for all inward comfort in the Lord. And it is from hence that we also if we be not wanting to our selves may as well draw waters of joy for our souls out of the Wells of salvation Dear Children be perswaded whenever you have occasion in the day of your sadness to make use of Religion it may be you may find it your best comforter in the whole world Cheerfulness is indeed that Mannah which nature is so desirous as oft as may be to taste of and God is as freely willing that we should have it He hath provided that for us Ioy is sown for the righteous And he hath invited us to that Rejoyce in the Lord ye righteous and shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart You may soon find in the Lord all apposite and sutable comforts for every condition There is an estate for the poor strength for the weak a Father for the Fatherless pardon for the bleeding sinner healing for the broken in heart a better world for those that are graciously weary of this immortality and blessedness for all that choose and love it Heaven and happiness so transcendent so glorious that we may modestly say the heavens which we here behold are but as earth without form and beauty in comparison of that Heaven of heavens which God hath appointed for the everlasting rest the true home and habitation of his people Such a God and such comforts are enough when ever we are to walk through the valley of the shadow of death we need fear no evil these joyes of the Lord may be an everlasting strength unto us There can be no affliction so sad but you may arise and lead your captivity captive You may make the proudest of them as Adonibezek serve under your Table Or as Tamberlane did by his conquered foes make them draw at your Chariot wheels and serve to the encrease of your triumph Let the fiercest Lion come against you when it will you as Sampson may overcome it and may propose it as your Christian Riddle that out of the eater the most devouring affliction can you fetch meat Religion allows all its true followers to rejoyce in the very face of tribulations knowing that they how unlikely soever yet work for us a far more exceeding eternal weight of
Conversation its just composure and all the blasts of adversity shall be no more able to do any prejudice than the clouds which are so far inferiour can do unto the Sun whose Orb and motion are both exceeding high above them First You will have great need of a rare Government over your selves a choice poize continually upon your own spirits keeping your affections as the Centurions Servants in all subjection meekly to go or come as the occasion and matter shall require This is that noble conquest which Solomon in the wisdom of God so highly commends Stronger is he that ruleth his own spirit than he that taketh a City This is that desirable Kingdom that the meanest Subject without the least disturbance of the Government under which he lives may happily attain Are you desirous saies the Philosopher of a Kingdom I can presently shew you one rule wisely over your own self A profuse and impotent letting out of the heart upon these inferiour things betraies us too surely to every emergent temptation and proves usually in a short time like Sampsons fond love our enthralment our shame and death A City broken down and without walls so sad a prospect the Holy Ghost tells us is that man that hath no rule over his own spirit Man is the noblest Creature in the whole World and his Government of highest moment To see him sit cloathed and in his right mind every thought every affection as so many wheels in their proper place at their true motion oh it is the honourablest sight amongst all the manifold works of God upon the face of the Earth Dear Children Beg and strive that this may be your happy lot Every one of you in your several times another Socrates that it may be said of you as of him whoever observes you That you are still walking in one and the same vertuous frame of mind one and the same cheerful complexion of countenance You will see some Heraclitus-like bitterly passionate almost to death for every light trivial cross Others again Democritus-like as wide on the other hand ever frothy ready to laugh at their own shaddow But you will still find it in the sequel of your life your honour as to men and your great comfort as to your selves to keep a juster reine over your affections We may say of our affections as we use to say of fire and water They are good Servants but bad Masters You may safely take it as your vade mecum along with you in reference to the things of this life Desire not any thing immoderately fear not any thing too anxiously Delight not in any thing too excessively Lament not any thing too ●itterly All these are but as so many several sorts of moral drunkenness We may be affectionate we must not be immoderate The enjoyment of our selves and the serenity of our minds is still more than all It is time it is high time for you to be previously considering with your selves it may be the Lord hath laid out for some of you a tempestuous voyage upon these Seas More indignities more repulses from the world More unkindnesses more revilings from men More chastenings under his own hand More sickness more poverty More of trials every way than you are yet aware of Are you strengthning your selves in your patience to possess your souls and in all sweet composure to bear them when they shall indeed come That you may say as Iob It is but the thing that I have prepared and looked for that is come upon me I will with patience accept it and will not charge God foolishly It may be on the other hand some of you the Lord may enlarge your border and bring you forth as Vessels unto some service and honour in your Generation Are you now timously instructing your selves in the vanity the dangers and continual restlesness of high enjoyments the manifold temptations that attend them the strict accounts that must be given of them that so you may pass as becomes the wise with a due modesty of spirit into them This Dear Children is that sobriety of mind that I have desired to set before you Oh that you may be able when it comes to your trial to consist with it and to know how to abound or want how to live in honour or obscurity entertaining with sweetness whatsoever condition the All-wise Disposer of all things shall order for you Secondly You will have as great need of the utmost Prudence for the dexterous disposal of all your affairs without doors that there be no Miscarriage in the practical part of your life abroad The natural Eye may direct the body but it is Prudence only that can inform and conduct the life The understanding of the Prudent we are told from the Lord himself it is that which directs his way This is that wise Pilot that best steers the Ship and preserves it from all the rocks of danger that lie in our way The Phisitian of life that preserves the Conversation in health and upon its feet Wisdome is the principal thing above all getting let us labour to get understanding Foolishness it is the Souls Apoplexy wherein all the noble faculties of the mind are cast into a dead sleep The Souls Dream wherein meephansies swim up and down but little true reason It is a Sampson whose eyes are out the scorn and derision of all It is the unskilful hand that mars that brings to dishonour every action every vessel that comes under the wheel It is the blind Traveller that continually stumbles wherever he goes and still knoweth not whereat It is the dead Fly that corrupts the whole boxe of Oyntment The least mixture of it immediately stains and overcasts many vertuous actions Take heed Dear Children that you become not such unsavory salt that such folly cause not you to go astray in the progress of your life Let Solomons Prayer in his Youth be your daily entreaty unto God Give thy Servant oh Lord an understanding heart that I may know how to go out and come in discerning between good and evil Life is a Theater full of action the Scenes thick and various a multitude of fresh occasions continually crowding in upon us our Time short the Opportunities of actions seldom seen till they be slipt by and gone These things will call for a world of wisdom to contrive and order all for the best Well in this great and difficult case let Prudence be the Sollicitour to attend and look after it As the handmaid of the mind that may go to the door when these occasions shall thus earnestly knock that may take their Errand distinctly give them their Answerfully treating every Occurrence of life fairly without precipitancy without delay It is the great honour of Prudence that it is as Ezechiels vision full of eyes able to look upon time past time present and time to come making all these
several winds to fill her sails to serve her in her voyage for the dispatch of her work 1. It will be the work and care of true Prudence to look back upon time past by way of reflection that the former Errata's and miscarriages of life may be henceforth corrected prevented and seen no more Who so is wise his own failings shall become his teachers and charge him that he return no more to folly 2. It will be the further task of Prudence to look circumspectly to the present It is all the time we have any certain hold of we may well be choice of it Prudence is herein very sollicitous 1. That nothing be now done in vain but for good and weighty ends Ends so righteous that they may be fairly vindicated So lovely that they may be worthy to be embraced So useful that they cannot be refused The wise man is able at any time to answer in all his actions as once David to his brethren There is just cause for what I have done 2. That nothing be done by uncomly means but such as may be truly righteous in their nature best serviceable to the end and honourable for us to make use of Alexander how desirable soever it might have been unto him would by no means unhandsomly steal a victory and the vertuous heart scorns and refuses to debase it self to do evil that good may come of it 3. That nothing be done rashly but upon well digested thoughts concocted by just deliberation The understanding as the living Spirit in the Prophets vision moves the wheels whither that is to go the wheels go and without that they stir not 4. That nothing be done boisterously but calmly not with much noise but rather with good effect Our minds may run much upon the thunder and earthquake but the Prophet tells us it was in the still small voice that the presence of God was rather found Soft words and hard arguments we usually say make the best ●isputation and we may as safely conclude meekly but surely is the honourablest character in almost any prosecution 5. That nothing be done unseasonably but as Apples of Gold in Pictures of Silver being humbly studious to approve our selves in this followers of God that our works might also for their measure have somewhat of beauty in their season 6. That nothing be done excentrically which lies not so properly within our sphaere but a studious adorning of our own Province a careful attending to that which is incumbent upon us The Creatures beneath us are not so senseless but they hearken to God in this and strictly confine themselves to their peculiar task It shall be our honour also before the Lord to preserve our selves from that arraignment Who required these things at your hands Duely to watch our own vineyard and to make our station a praise to all that shall behold it 7. And lastly That nothing be done negligently but with a due strength and industry Faint offers of action are but poor insignificant Ciphers with Prudence she allows them no place in her Ethicks She is very desirous fairly to finish whatever she undertakes And wishes that all would take it as their memorial sentence Whatsoever their band findeth to do that they would do it with all their strength since there is no work nor invention in the grave whither we shortly are going 3. The work of Prudence is not yet finished in the last place it openeth its eye also upon time to come Folly indeed scarce stirs much out of its own doors takes no great delight in going much forth But it is the proper nature of an enlarged mind to make as the Eagle toward Heaven to desire as it can to look over the wall and see toward Eternity To go out as Isaac into the fields and meet with its future condition by previous meditation Herein it is still the task and office of Prudence to stand in the watch-tower and found the Trumpet To foresee the evil and hide it self and as those that feared the Lord amongst Pharaohs servants to get out of the way of harm and danger against the hail and storm comes Thus doth it belong to Prudence to espy opportunity while it is yet at a distance and to get it self in a posture before-hand whether it be for avoiding of misery or for the attaining of mercy that it be not taken as the foolish Virgins slumbring and ar unawares These are the cares that Prudence takes in this wariness doth she proceed in all her waies So circumspect that she cannot be deceived by others and yet still so vertuous that she scorns to have any deceived by her Her whole carriage is full of beauty and her works shall soon praise her in the gates It is true such Wisdom is high and very few attain it but it is nevertheless our standing duty and could we reach it our conversations would be no longer like the ordinary rate of the ex tempore every-day carriage of the world without form or comliness but like Moses in the Mount shining with the very raies of the glory of God upon it Dear Youths be you willing to apply your hearts to all this wisdom and to endeavour henceforth to begin to walk thus wisely in a perfect way Light cannot more excell Darkness than Wisdom excelleth Folly The Lord grant whatever others do that Wisdom may be practically thus justified in you as her children This is the second thing so importantly needful for you a spirit of wisdom as eyes in the wilderness to guide you in all your way Thirdly You will have great need of much Humanity for your better converse with all persons that there may be no violating of the laws of Civil Society the dear and common Interest of Mankind We are none of us born to live Stoically in a Coll alone by our selves but in a more open air conversive with others useful to many loving and just to all Prudence without this degenerates into a vicious subtilty and crastiness Fortitude without this into a savage cruelty and violence Diligence without this may fill its barns with Dives but it hides its eyes from its own flesh and starves the poor Lazarus at the door And at length Nature it self without this becomes like Nebuchadnezzar fit to be driven from among men remaining a stupid barbarous thing its heart as the heart of a beast too brutish within it Civil and loving Society it is the great Exchange of Nature where we should all meet not for ostentation and complements but for real mutual accommodation It is Natures Table of Ordinary where the several Lodgers may come and take their diet with the greater refreshment together It is its County-feast where strangers become fairly acquainted and readily imbrace each other upon the welcome account of a common relation It is the universal Character intelligible with all It is the travelling Language which alone frees us
from being Barbarians to others and they to us This is its short Description An Ape●les if he were to draw it in its most lively complexion before us must present it as that neat Orator with its face serene and clear as the sky having no clouds to disgrace or obscure it It s carriage is every way answerable It behaves not it self unseemly It is not austere and froward but exceeding mild and very taking Not subject to the least exception but highly dear to all As to its deportment it is not nicely artificial or affected neither is it willing to be sordid or neglected It tempers its carriage as its cloaths such as it may best dispatch its business in for decency and for service It is burdensome to none by unseasonable visits by idle interruptions by wearisome detainments by fruitless discourses by importunate or unbecomming requests It hath not so learnt the Laws of converse These Solaecisms in conversation were not to offer good company but to commit a violent and forcible assault upon civill Society It cordially honours and affects a publike and common good Reckoning that its private Cabbin shares with the common condition of the Ship and that the best way to secure that is to help what we can in the preserving of the Vessel He that truly seeks the good of others doth therein ultimately a kindness also to himself It sometimes allows it self a little to study the dispositions of others Not as a Fluterer that it might see how to insinuate it self or humour them in evil Not as a P●rate to find where nature is weakest and might be easiest boarded by some crafty design but as the Physitian studies his Patient for the more dexterous and friendly application of it self It readily respects and values endowments and gifts in others It acknowledges them precious Jewels from the Father of Lights and heartily wishes much good and honour may they do to those on whom they are bestowed It buries also with as much modesty their weaknesses saying The Lord in Christ may have forgiven them I may and will humbly pray for them and if I have opportunity will endeavor in a spirit of meeknes to heal them but it would by no means become me unkindly to grate or take in them It hath a very happy disposition as to the easie forgetting of injuries And it is likewise as happy in the constant the ready and grateful remembrance of kindnesses It takes little delight in burdening its memory with the evils of others there is no such desirableness in them they are Errata's the sooner expunged the better It rather stores its mind with the candid thoughts of its own duty as the better and more becoming treasure It striveth cordially to overcome evil with good and abhors as much where it receiveth good to render evil It chearfully rejoyces with them that rejoyce feasting it self with the good of others as if they were so many dishes at its own table It condoles likewise as affectionately with the afflicted and freely puts it self in mourning at its own charge as being one nearly related of the same kindred and family of mankind Thus is it both able and ready to serve in any capacity to accommodate its self to every office for the repairing of the breaches too too open every where To the weak it makes it self weak to the strong it becomes strong it stoops and becomes all things still vertuously unto all that so by any means it might serve some To its Superiours it is respectful To its Equals it is loving To its Inferiours it is courteous To All it is truly candid Affable and temperate in speech Clean and modest in behaviour Pleasant and ingenuous in countenance And above all kindly affectionate and gentle in heart Thus doth it shew forth it self with a constellation of many vertues united and shining together This was above all his other conquests Cyrus his most renowned Victory as Xenophon tells us without wounds or scars to himself without grievance or regret to others The places that were impregnable by strength of arms he overcame and took them by his rare and unparallelled humanity Many Daughters have done vertuously but this for sweetness in an angry world seems greatly to excell them all Such love shall justly deserve and easily procure love back again love free from envy respect without constraint Oh ● that you dear Children may walk with so happy so even a foot in all your waies CHAP. V. Instruction in respect of relation and a right deportment therein BUt this precedent Subject being exceeding large even as large as life it self with all the various occurrences and passages of it I must forbear the further unfolding of it it is more than this present Paper is able to admit I shall only now request you 1. As Children to an obediential carriage toward your Parents 2. As Servants to a due subjection toward your Masters First As Children in relation to your Parents Let it not seem a burden to you to honour them as becomes you in the Lord. God doth not so much urge your duty upon you by force of bare command but fatherly sweetens it with a very welcome and grateful promise Honour thy Father and thy Mother which is the first Commandment with promise Be you truly dutiful to those from whom under God your life came and God shall poure forth his dear blessing upon you and your whole life all your daies in the Land of the living Sow not sparingly if you desire to reap plentifully Writers have been on all hands voluminous in this righteous and lovely subject and have frequently told us There is no equal requital can be made to God or Parents So great is your debt so great is your duty to both The Heathen have been very full and express in it professing that it is no waies enough that we barely refrain such evil courses as would become a positive grief and sorrow to Parents which yet too many will not forbear but it will be further expected that we do not privatively detain from them that joy and comfort which is their just due but endeavour in the most filial deportment to lay before them all sweet matter of gladness and of rejoycing Honour them and obey them It was no meaner Person than our Saviour himself of whom we read that he went down with Ioseph and Mary his Mother and came to Nazareth and was subject to them Loe here an example indeed Be ye followers of Christ as dear Children Accept their Counsels with thankfulness They are the counsels of their long-drawn experience and may be of great use faithful guides through your following life Bear their rebukes with meekness they are the rebukes of Parents that have authority over you they are the fruits of tenderest love which your selves know they so affectionately bear unto you Despise not their age though frail slight not their persons though mean
Divulge not their infirmities though many lest the Curse of Cham overtake you for adding to their weakness your wickedness These things it may be the Lord may thus order for your trial for the more kindly and genuine expression of your duty Hearken unto thy Father that begat thee and despise not thy Mother when she is old Where the hedge is lowest God repairs it strongest that our duty might still remain inviolable If they be as Iacob in any straights be you as Ioseph their staff or like the pious Stork the nourisher of their Age. If God shall hereafter shine upon you and raise your future condition to an honour amongst men Hide not your eyes from your meaner Parents Acknowledge them chearfully Honour them willingly Behave your selves in their presence very respectfully Say still as that King of France Though I be now Superiour to many others I am still Inferiour to my Parents The glory of the Aged is their experience and their wisdom The glory of the young man is his modesty and submission And we may truly say as the Apostle in a case not altogether unlike He that honoureth not his natural Parents whom he hath seen how shall he honour his heavenly Father whom he hath not seen Your Parents have hitherto cared for you with an exceeding great care and what shall now be done for them Oh! requite their affectionate tenderness toward you with a filial Ingenuity and Respectfulness toward them He were hard-hearted indeed and unnatural beyond expression who could requite his Parents evil for all their good Secondly As Servants in relation to your Masters Be ye indeed their Servants to whom you yield your selves to obey Your very relation speaks you not your own but theirs If you receive their wages do not your own much less Satans work Be you to your several Masters as Eleazar once to Abraham religious prudent industrious and faithful in all your Masters business Interesting the Lord as he by humble prayer in all your undertakings Careful as he also was though at the greatest distance from your Masters eye Speaking as he likewise did becomingly of the Family in the hearing of strangers and very desirous as he still shewed himself that your Masters affairs might prosper under your hands Such a Servant the heart of his Master shall rejoyce and easily trust in him Such a Servant we may truly say is already preferred to an higher place The Apostle plainly tels us that such serve the Lord Christ and shall of him receive the reward of inheritance Faithful Servants whatever others do God will take a particular care of them and will see that their wages shall not be abridged or detained from them Their Masters may account with them for their outward service but when they have so done God will assuredly yet further requite them an hundred fold because they have done this thing in the singleness of their hearts serving their Masters as in the sight of God and for his sake You are ready it may be sometimes too dejectedly to sit down and complain That the Orbe and Sphaere in which you are placed is low and mean and so indeed comparatively it is but still it is such that the Lord reckons his very Gospel stands capable of receiving great lustre much honour from you and your gracious carriage It is you that in so particular a manner may adorn the doctrine of God and our Saviour To be saved by the Gospel is much but to be an ornament to the Gospel seems more yet this may the meanest the poorest Servant be And oh what praise like the widows mite above the stately gifts of richer ones doth it offer to the name of the Lord when a Child of God intituled to heaven can bring down his heart willingly to stoop and serve him in the meanest capacity which he shall please to set him in here on earth Blessed are those Servants whom the Lord when he cometh shall sind so doing Be ye then satisfied rest your selves contented in the condition wherein the Lord hath called you Service may seem some Eclipse but still as the Eclipse it needs no●●e total Your nobler part your soul without the least injury to your service may nevertheless fairly enjoy a divine liberty Service and freedom the Lord himself tells us are sweetly compatible You may be servants to others accordin to the flesh and yet as truly the Lords freemen walking in much liberty of Spirit Cast not away your encouragements Let not the comforts that are so peculiarly su●ed to your condition seem mean in your eyes A vertuous Epi●letus may at any time live s● better and more honourably upon his poor service than a vicious Nero upon a whole Empire Your service in your several places for the present it is not your M●sters advantage only but your own als● it is your preparation and making ready for your selves against the 〈◊〉 wherein we may all too ●ruly conclude ●vil courses under anothers roof are rarely mended very sel●om redressed when we come to live under our own Be ●●●eful to serve the Families wherein you ●●r pre●en● 〈◊〉 diligently cherfully and 〈◊〉 now and in that sweet habitu●l ●●●●sition you shall gr●w up and beco●e a blessing to yours whenever God shall make you 〈◊〉 by your selves CHAP. VI. Characters of the truly vertuous Young Man First Negative I Have thus far exhorted you I shall now endeavour once more to write the Vision before you and make it what I can as in the Prophet plain upon the Tables that you may see as in a glass what manner of young persons I have been recommending and am still setting before you for your imitation 1. I shall first describe them by their negative Characters what they are not That you may therein understand what you also ought to keep your selves free from 2. I shall describe them by their affirmative Characters what they plainly are That you may therein see what you likewise ought to be First Negatively the Young Person of vertue or hopefulness he is 1. Not one that ●ver r●viles Religion or religious people Oh! no Though as yet he hath not much understanding in these things yet he sees Religion it is sacred The preserver of a most divine Correspondency between Heaven and Earth Our Prerogative above the Beasts The sweet means of our Converse with the Lord The greatest appeal that can be made The highest claim that man can possibly say toward Eternity Contempt herein he finds it so odious hat all Ages have even trembled at it and the very Heathen would never bear it against their sorry Idols much less dares ●e contumeliously offer it against the true God This is Crimen laesae Majestatis High Treason against the throne and dignity of Heaven Vengeance in these cases is very particularly the Lords And he will surely and soon enough see to the repaying of
the readiest and loveliest way thereunto He therefore rests not as too many fondly do in a thin verbal commendation but presseth still further after the most familiar acquaintance with these sacred and only evidences of his heavenly inheritance making much conscience of putting in practice that faithful advice of the Ancients Wisely to contract his occasions in the World that he may have the more leasure and freedom to read and meditate and that day by day in the good word of God He remembers with himself the Tables of old were carefully kept in the Arke And that he might never lose his Bible he laies it up safely in his best Cabinet his very heart 6. He is one that willingly prepares and composes himself to some honest calling wherein he may live afterward serviceable and comfortably in his Generation He is loth to come into the world as an useless Cipher or to stand in it as a Tree that cumbers the ground and therefore often forethinks with himself how he may appear in his time with somewhat of true worth upon the Stage He reckons his life as a Lamp which should be giving some light to others while it spends it self And is very prone to conclude with him who was wont to say There is too little difference between him that is dead indeed and him that lives dead in point of usefulness The Lord hath committed to all some Talents for improvement though with great variety To some more eminently those of the inward man for counsel and direction To others more manifestly those of the outward man for labour and exercise It will be expected at all our hands that we bind not up our Lords Talent in a Napkin but as we are individually qualified we should address our selves and chearfully attend our measure of service to the good of the whole We are all of us Gods witnesses that throughout the whole Creation from the Angel in heaven to the Hyssop by the wall from the Sun in the Firmament to the waters in the hidden veins of the Earth all of them labour to perform those good offices which God in his wisdom hath created them unto Thus is uselesseness to all these a thing unknown The industrious Young Man is willing to take example from them and desires not to stand idle in the Market place while all other Creatures are thus diligently at work in the Lords Vineyard His first care is in the choice of his Calling Wherein he observe ●00 many miscarry Some by unadvisedness therein bind themselve as it were Apprentices to continual temptations and in effect necessitate themselves to the promoting and service of what no man should abet or shelter sin and vanity in the World Others again match themselves to imployments which their dispositions can never affect and so toil in them as the Slave in the Turks Gallies heavily and unwillingly all their daies These Rocks he endeavours wisely to shun And therefore aims that his Calling may he in its nature just and lawful In its discharge comporting with a publick good and serviceable to his private support In its kind he remembers the Lacedaemonians wisdom and seeks to have it in some measure suited to his own abilities and inclinations And because in these things he is young unexperienced and very subject to mistake he refers himself very far to the riper judgement and disposal of his Friends His next care is concerning his due carriage in his Calling Having thus chosen he now setles his mind reckons his Calling the Sphaere and Station which God hath set him in and studies henceforth how to adorn his Province A homely Cottage well kept may yield a delightsome abode And the meanest Calling may be highly beautified by a wise carriage in it He is very desirous to be truly dexterous and skilful in it His affections are even enflamed having observed the Scripture to take such an honourable notice of Tubal Cain as being an Instructer of Artificers So lovely is ingeniousness even in these lower things before the Lord. For the encouragement whereof he is pleased to record it as proceeding from his own Spirit That Bezaliel was so skilful about the work of the Tabernacle See saies God and let no man slight it I have called Bezaliel by name and have filled him with the Spirit of God in wisdom and all manner of workmanship It is his God that teacheth even the Plowman his discretion He is further willing to be heartily painful Chearfully submitting himself to that great Law which is now unalterably imposed on all flesh In the sweat of our brows to eat our bread He flatters not himself with great expectations of building his nest on high Duty is his the Lord hath left that with him Disposal is the Lords and he is contented it should rest there A blessing from God that indeed he counts much upon and joyes greatly in it but as concerning the World he easily sees all things are and will be here full of disappointments vanity and vexation of spirit He takes himself concerned be his Calling never so plain to commend his endeavours and all their success by prayer to the Lord in the Language of the Psalmist Let the beauty of the Lord my God be upon me establish thou the work of my hands yea the work of my hands establish thou it Thus our Young Man chooseth and thus he travelleth in his Calling He that passeth by may justly break forth and say The Lord be with you we bless you in the name of the Lord. 7. He is one that is easily contented with almost any food and raiment He sees the time of his life in the whole of it is like to be but short and he concludes with himself it were very preposterous very unbecoming if our thoughts about such inferiour things as these should be very long Fond cares about the body prove commonly as Absalom that stole away the hearts of Israel from one more righteous than himself from David his Father These also too frequently entice away the strength of the mind after them they love to hunt abroad but they even starve the precious soul and leave that neglected and disrespected enough at home He therefore shares the dividend as equally as he can between them both Somewhat he is sensible he owes to both and is willing to wrong neither His soul shall have the first fruits as an offering due to that The remains and gle●nings he thinks will be enough and may well serve for the body In his diet he hears plainness and temperance breed the kindliest health and constitution of body the freshest agility and liveliness of mind preserving life so dearly desired of all with much sweetness and freedom from diseases through the blessing of the Lord unto gray hairs Such are the fruits of Temperance it makes a fair amends in the end whether it pleaseth or no for the present These
things the sober Young Man accounts matters of weight too great to be h●zarded Vitellius-like for the humouring of an irrational appetite and therefore resolves to be justly tender of them The ancient care and carriage of the Primitive Christians is highly honourable in this respect and he is willing to take it for his Golden Rule He eates what may temperately allay his hunger he drinks what may equally quench his thirst Such a proportion in both as may become the modest and chaste to allow themselves His whole deportment shews while his Religion is the Theory his Conversation is the Praxis He so eats and so drinks as one that receives Instruction as well as food as one that is ever mindful of the righteous Laws of Christian Discipline and doth all that he doth to the glory of God It is to him a maxime not altogether contemptible To rise up from Table as well as sit down with some stomack The Italian Proverb frequently whispers him in the eare as he sits at meals If you would eat much eat little Oppress not nature quench not the fire by casting too much fewel upon it His health it is to him as the salt and sauce which give the relish to every dish upon the Table It is his best bed-maker that makes his bed so easie to rest on and his sleep so refreshful to him It is his taster to all the comforts of life without which nothing savours nothing pleases And therefore he bids farewell to those surfetting dishes which would otherwaies banish and force away so sweet so pleasant a Companion from him The endowments of his mind and their exercise are to him still far dearer It is by them that the Soul looks forth out of her Mansion of the body appears at the Casement of the Senses and shews her self fair as the Morning clear as the Sun a Princess indeed the Daughter of the great King He would not for a world that the least indignity should be offered to so Noble a Guest or any obstruction put upon those honourable operations it is so divinely imployed in That the motion of those Golden Wheels should be clogged by any Kitchin dust or filth getting within them He allows his body very much respect as remembring it shall be one day Copartner with him in glory But desires it still to rest satisfied with what is fit for it in its place that as a Servant it may be alwaies ready ●t the Souls beck a weapon of righteousness to serve the glory of the Lord. In his habit his cloaths are to him the sad memorial of his sin the covering of his shame taken up at the second hand having been either the Lodging of Worms or the every-day Coats of Beasts before ever they were his He remembers and thinks on these things and sits down finding but cold encouragement to be proud of his Cloaths The utmost that he henceforth aims at is a clean and decent plainness Concluding as Lycurgus amongst his Laced●monians that it is he the endowments of his mind the comlines of his body which must rather be an ornament to his cloaths than they to him He is willing with that Ambassadour to wear his Doublet of Cloath of Gold with a plainer baize Coat over it without Any Garments satisfie him outwardly so he may but have his Cloath of Gold underneath an enlarged heart toward God and goodness inwardly It is enough to him if he hath with Iacob any convenient rayment to put on He troubles not himself with a restless affectation and niceness about trifles what trimming or what Lace he knows Wisdom and Vertue are far the best The Peacock may be the gayer but the Eagle is still the far nobler bird And indeed cloaths with any are but like the Sign over the door which tell all men what kind of shop and mind there is within 8. He is one of great modesty and chastity in all his carriage This he reckons his Shibboleth his nearest trial wherein nature must and soon will discover it self whether filthiness or holiness the righteous commands of God or the wretched lusts of the flesh be dearest to it This is indeed the dangerous season of his life The Archers begin now to shoot sore temptations and enticing thoughts rush in thick upon him But he goes to Gods Armory he takes up his Bible and often reads the Fathers conversion-Scripture praying the Lord that it may prove his also and a preservative to him from the power of evil Not in chambering and wantonness but in putting on the Lord Christ. We may I see in a few words understand all of us what our life and great care should be These last daies of the World are greatly sunk from a generous nobleness and man-like delight in heroical a●chievements to a Spirit of effeminacy and so●tness It is not desirable nor indeed altogether convenient to lay before the chaste Reader much description of it Let it be thrown amongst the works of darkness to be brought to light no more let it so die the sooner the better Only we cannot be ignorant we are born to far higher things toward God toward our native Country and toward ou● own Souls than wanton Complements and dalliances of the Flesh. And oh that all would know a Sard●napalus life seldom but meets with a Sardanapalus's death Babylon shall one day receive for all her luxury wherein she hath been so profuse measure for measure from the avenging ●and of God How much she hath lived deliciously so much sorrow and torment give her Such is the sad Exit of a loose and vicious life he dieth and is numbred for ever amongst the unclean These things are the Young Mans warning pieces and for their sakes he is resolved to stand upon his guard and to abstain from all appearance of evil Wantonness in Gestures obscaeness in Speeches lasciviousness in Actions however too much favoured by others are to him as the sulphurous sparks of Aetna as so many flames breaking forth from the bottomless pit the shame of the Actor the danger of the Spectator an immodest abusing of nature an open defiance to all Vertue and which is yet far more an high contempt poured forth in the fa●e of Religion it self His Soul as the righteous soul of Lot is grieved and he turneth away from them Chastness is still exceeding dear and honourable in his eyes As the cleanness of the vessel where the heavenly Treasures should be put the clearness of the Paper whereon the words of life should be written the Souls fidelity to God under all allurements to the contrary its victorious triumph and conquest over the snares of Satan He willingly cuts off all occasions which might in the least endanger or stain the purity of his mind and watcheth●to the utmost that he may keep himself unspotted of these pollutions of the flesh He ●irst maketh a Covenant with his
eye that it should not rove after vanity He knows the heart is weak and too prone to be drawn away by it He hears of some that have eyes full of adultery that cannot cease from sin the sad character of too many but he desires to feast his on the good Word of God and then without rowling to or fro to look straight forward and to ponder the path of his feet He sets the like guard upon all his other Senses remembring the sage ●though almost Paradoxal counsel of the Ancients Shut up those five windows that the house may shine the clearer and the noble Inhabitant the soul may rest the safer He then wisely withholds making provision ●or the flesh Lest giving lust its baits it should become as the Sons of Zervia too hard for him Fulness of bread and idleness were Sodoms sins and all unnatural leudness was by and by Sodoms shame Strange and light attire it is to him a thing needless to provide it burdensome to mind it and when all this is done disgraceful to wear it He hath heard the Ancients much condemn it and he doth not desire it But above all he chargeth his heart that it should not dare to dally with any lustful thoughts though never so secretly Sin is sin in the root as well as in the fruit in the thoughts as truly as in the actions and S●tan will soon grow bolder If he once gets footing so far as the heart he will sc●rce be so modest as to stay long there The fire once kindled there will quickly break out further Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth will speak the hands will act and will no● be restrained Or however his danger is still the same where sin seeks most for shelter in the secret chambers of the heart there even there Gods searchers come most God will have the secretest Cabinet opened Where his sins burn most the eye of God shall find him out The unclean person may take it as a Mene Tekel written upon the wall for him I the Lord search the heart and try the reins to give unto every man according to his waies and according to the fruit of his doings Finally He concludes as we all likewise justly may that our bodie ought to b● the Temples of the Holy Ghost If he could break away from other considerations and set light by them yet the dread of God comes in and curbs him with this tremendous warning in his ear If any man shall de●ile the Temple of God that man shall God destroy Oh Sirs it is no deceiving our selves or dallying with sin God cannot be mocked 9. One that wisely laies up all the memorable experiences and observations of his Youth for the better instruction of his riper years These are that good Treasure so well worth our gathering the safest and trusty guides of life The Eleazars the faithful servants with which the most tender mind as Rebeccah is very inclinable to go along It is by them that so many Arts and honourable Attainments have been hatched up and brought by degrees to any maturity Books and bare reading may render us nicely witty and ingenuous for airy discourse but it is still left to further experience to settle and furnish us out more solidly for real affairs We may reckon and not misreckon neither as Affranius the old Poet in hi● famous Inscription upon the doors where the Roman Senators so frequently met If Wisdom be the Child Experience seems the Parent that brought it forth and Memory the Mother in whose bosome it rests and still lies It runs much in all our minds naturally to say as he in the Gospel Except I see I will not believe Knowledge it seems must come in by the broad gates of the Senses ere it can have its access to the mind or any private audience in those inward Chambers The ingenuous Young Man hears all this And what Historians tell us was ingraven of old upon Plato's Seal he is freely willing it should be the sententious Motto of his Arms Experience when all is done is the great Governess that beareth the best rule in all things And therefore that he might not lose the surest means for his good information or live upon trembling uncertainties all his daies he agrees heartily with himself to get the best and ●ullest satisfaction that he can as an eye-witn●ss in all things And therein resolves more particularly 1. To keep a Diary and just account of all the sore judgments of God upon wicked men in his time For they are indeed as the severity of God upon Shiloe as devouring flames upon our neighbours house and may well be a near warning to us They are as the stroke upon the two first Captains and their Fifties that we might fall upon our faces and say Oh my Lord let my life be precious in thy sight I will henceforth fear and not dare to do thus presumptuously 2. Of all the Lords tender mercies toward his faithful servants The hidden Mannah wherewith he inwardly so often feasts them The manifold sweet outward deliverances wherein he so remarkably in their greatest straights owns them Which makes him cry out as the Queen of Sheba Blessed are these thy servants oh Lord Happy are they that are in such a case whose God is the Lord. Oh! that I may be also as one of those upon whom thine eyes are thus for good continually 3. He is as desirous to preserve the Register of all the Lords dealings by him in particular and whatever befals him from his Youth Herein the Lord plainly chargeth him as Moses of old adjured the Israelites Thou shalt well consider in thine heart and remember all the way that I have hitherto led thee to try thee and to prove thee that thou mightst in the following part of thy life know and acknowledge the God of all thy mercies Dear Children these things I commend unto you with the utmost Cordialness that I am able He is a Scholar indeed that is Gods Scholar and he learns indeed that meditates in the Works as well as in the Word of God Here you may see all things as in a glass before you Here you may gather every one of you a little History of your own wi●h great delight and profit Be oh I pray be you truly careful herein and it shall be a sweet means to make you wise in your Generation as men to establish you in a great composure of Spirit in all your profession as Christians 10. One that willingly bears in mind that great Memonto which the Lord hath so particularly given in charge to Young People Rejoyce oh Young Man ● if so thou darest and thine heart can serve thee to sport securely in thine own ruine but know that for all these things God will bring thee into judgement This is that day that shall come as a snare
and destruction from the Almighty upon the Children of Men. A day that all are enough warned of a day that few duly provide for This is that day that shall decide that great Case which hath so long depended that shall resolve that Question of all Questions which to this hour hovers and passes to and ●ro so thoughtfully in all mens minds Then shall the Lord shew who is holy and who are his This is that day wherein the World to its utter astonishment as Iosephs Brethren troubled at the unexpected ●ight of one so little looked for so little delighted in shall yet once again hear and see more of Christ That the residue o● the great work of Redemption might be finished and the Kingdom delivered up according to the earnest longing of the whole Creation in the fulness of its glory to the Father This is once more that day wherein grace and grace alone shall find favour in the eyes of God Hypocrisie shall then shelter none Estates shall then buy off none It is the just Judge of the whole Earth who sitteth then upon our trials and a righteous judgement according as every mans Case shall then be sound he will impartially pass None can here plead ignorance o● say they heard not of it Enoch the seventh from Adam so long ago prophesied of this so openly that who would might understand it Behold he cometh with ten thousand of his Saints We cannot make our selves strangers to it The blind and the deaf both heard and saw it The poor Heathen awaked as amazed men and said one to another This World will one day have a tragick end and we shall all be certainly judged for what we now do Their Philosophers they freely yielded it Their Sybils and Poets dayly sung of it And all flesh may now without further thought or doubt sit down and confess with the Apostle 〈◊〉 We know we must all none excep●ted appear before the judgement seat of Christ in the solemnest case that ever was tried to receive of him according to the things done in the body whether they be good or whether they be evil 2 Cor. 5.10 Oh Young Man Young Man how often hast thou seriously thought of this day A day wherein these eyes of thine shall see Christ himself coming in the clouds with great power and glory from the brightness of whose presence Heaven and Earth shall be ready to flee away Then shalt thou see th●se Royal Officers of State the Angels of Heaven so numerously up and down amongst us attending their Masters business summoning the Graves of the Earth calling to the Waters of the Sea to deliver up their dead almost now forgotten that have been so long since committed to them Then shalt thou hear the shrill voice of the last Trumpet sounding that solemn Call to all Flesh Arise ye dead and come unto judgement Oh how loth will the Sinner be to rise at the ringing of this Watch-bell How little heart will he have to put on his old cloaths of sinful Flesh and appear in them before the Lord How loth to meet with his body in so sad a place upon so sad an occasion that they may now together as joyless Companions receive the bitter wages of all their former sins Then shall you see the Prophets Vision dry bones live indeed then shall the dead awake from their Long sleep the Father with the Son the Poor with the Rich and go to receive every one their several Sentence from the Lord. Then must the Sun be content to be darkned and the Moon to the amazement of all beholders shall become as bloud Then must the Stars like withered leaves fall from their places The Flouds roaring the Earth flaming the Elements melting the Heavens like a Scrowl of Parchment passing away and almost all Flesh shreeking and crying out In vain have we flattered our selves in vain have we put far from us the evil day Notwithstanding all our lothness it is come even the day of his wrath and who can stand before him Then comes forth the definitive Sentence from the Judge's own lips to the godly on the right hand Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared so long by me desired so affectionately by you Enter ye now at length once for ever into the joy of your Lord. Then also comes forth that heart-wounding Condemnation on the left hand Depart from me ye Cursed go go cursed ye are and shall now to your own everlasting smart feel it far from any rayes of blessedness shining upon you shall your place henceforth be and your condition as far from rest or ease Depart from me ye Cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels Then shall that slighted word Eternity trampled so much under foot now be found and felt a ponderous thing indeed This oh this shall make the night of Sinners sorrow so doleful to him there shall never never never more arise or shine any day upon him Never so many aking hearts never so many pale faces seen together since the World began Then shall the stout hearted be spoiled and he that knew not how to brook the fe●r of the Almighty here on earth his spirits shall then fail him apace his heart shall thenceforth meditate terrour and his own tongue confess his punishment is now become greater than he knows either how to avoid or how possibly to bear This great day is to the pious young man the Memorial of all Memorials a cogent and constraining argument to bring him into Gods Vineyard As the Apostle calls it the terrour of the Lord and he is willing it should perswade him He goes up to his Watch-tower he concludes with himself what ever lies neglected this day must be timely provided for and he prepareth unfainedly as he is able for it 1. He first spreadeth his hands toward heaven and draweth with much humility toward God Having been so exceeding sinful hitherto he is loth to be false or further dilingenuous now He freely confesses guilty And what could easily enough be proved against him if he should go about to deny it he filially acknowledgeth passing sentence upon himself as one whom God for his manifold and hainous sins most righteously might condemn Yet still hoping the Lord will give him the benefit of his reading and the blessed favour of that sweet Scripture He that judgeth himself shall not be judged of the Lord. 2. He then beforehand entreats the Judge himself for the Lord in his stupendious mercy allows it to become his Advocate He dares not indeed trust his Case in any meaner hands He now putteth the very hopes of his life in his Saviours righteousness saying That and that alone is the righteousness that can answer for him in times to come 3. He lastly resolves to set the straightest steps to take the greatest heed to his whole Conversation doing those things
your tender body the more necessity of Garments of salvation for your soul. Few Friends and no Inheritance that you are ever like to possess on Earth Oh! what cause have you to entreat the Lord to be your God and to give you an inheritance amongst his Saints in light Little or no Education here for accomplishing or polishing of nature How great an Enoblement would it now be unto you to be made partakers of that Spirit and Grace of God which makes the righteous more excellent than his Neighbour Such grace will be truly more to you than all riches It will preserve you from contempt for who dares despise him whose goings are with God It will make you welcome to all good men for the grace of your lips every man shall be a friend unto you It will procure you an ●rgh testimonial of honour from the Lord. I know thy poverty but thou art rich It will truly prefer you before those who upon all other accounts are far your Superiours The odds indeed is great but the decision and determination of the case God hath for your encouragement made it very clear Better is a poor and wise Child than an old and foolish King who will be no more admonished In a word it will cause your faces to shine it will fill your hearts with comfort it will be the forerunner of endless glory You may here modestly smile and tell any man as once Antisthenes answered Socrates when Socrates asked him What makes thee oh Antisthenes so chearful when it is known thou hast so little He candidly replies Because I plainly see true riches and poverty lodge not in our houses and coffers but in our souls and minds There he enjoyed inwardly what men had thought he wanted outwardly The destruction of the poor Solomon tells us is their poverty And so indeed too commonly it proves But it needs not be so with you See dear Children oh see what a sweet relief you might have to your mean Condition Accept it I pray you and seek it carefully that in the day of your accounts it may be said to your honour This is that poor child that in much poverty and affliction received the Gospel Let him now enter into the joy of his Lord. Secondly Hath the Lord by your Friends provided for you a larger measure in the good things of this life You had need now take all care that your mind for its part be as rich as your Estate You are like to inherit Israels blessing Houses that you builde● not and Vineyards that you planted not You cannot now refuse Israels duty Now therefore fear the Lord and serve him in sincerity and truth You can do no less in thankfulness to him from whom you have received all You can do no less in the sense of your own accounts whose reckoning will be not like the poor mans for one Talent but for ten Where much is given it is but righteous and we must not take it ill if much be required Riches without Grace Estate without Wisdom alas what are they● As the Indians Gold which they know not what use or improvement to make of it You might say as he Here is the ●re and here is the wood but where is ●he Sacrifice for the Lord An house ●ull of these as the Oratour wittily ●aid will never make a rich man It is the prefixing of the Figure ●hat makes the following Ciphers significant It is the stamp upon the Silver that makes it current Coin And we may more truly say It is the grace of God that is the figure of account it is the Image of God that is this ●oyal stamp whereby our enjoyments become so valuable and blessings un●o us Without this they will be but as ●ewel to our lusts and as the glass of seeming honey wherein the wasp dies To the ungracious his Estate is a curse his enjoyments a snare like Dives his barns where their Master ●he and his heart too lodge day and night A price is put into his hand and he hath no heart to make use thereof No understanding to dispose and order it to the praise of God It is Grace when all is done that is as salt and keeps these things from putrifying Oh! for your very estates sake be ye gracious And while the Lord in much goodness thus brings and leaves them with you Say you as Manoah once did Oh! let my Lord come again and shew me how I shal order them and make friends for my sou● out of the Mammon of this world Thirdly Hath the Lord given you comeliness of person Should you now harbour a profane ungodly heart under that fair and amiable complexion it were as rotten bones under a fair Tomb or as the Apples of Sodom beautiful and fresh afar off but nothing save dust and smo●k nearer hand too like Apelles his rare Picture of Cherries so curiously drawn that Historians tell us the Birds came flying to it but returned empty they quickly found it was no Cherries but a sorry painted cloath And such will your beauty be if it be but an outward one whose verdure be we never so loath must soon decay All flesh is grass and the goodliness thereof be it never so lovely as the flower of the field which may blow pleasantly with the morning but must as certainly to its funeral and with the Evening hang down its head and die The Lord make you comely with a truer and more lasting comliness the beauties of holiness which abide for ever We read of one Alcibiades Socrates his Schollar that he was the beauty of all Athens another Absalom for comliness of person outwardly but the reproach of mankind another Nero for all viciousness and odiousness of nature inwardly Oh! take heed a second Alcibiades be found in none of you Play not the hypocrite if thy body which is but the Cabinet be so richly enamelled so curiously wrought by the hand of the Lord Oh! beg of God that thy soul the jewel within may be somewhat sutable adorned with the blessed graces of his spirit Fourthly Is thy body as course clay walls but plain and homely to look upon Yet be not discouraged It is no dishonour to be as the Tents of Kedar outwardly so thou beest as the Curtains of Solomon inwardly Caesars Garland of Laurel was enough to compensate the blemish of his baldness Crates his learning rendred him dear and honourable to all notwithstanding the crookedness o● his back And you may reckon beyond them both and say The ornaments of grace it is they that are ● greatest price in the sight of God And these may lodge as the Pearl in a for ry shell A withered arm a lame leg a poo● crooked body no form no comliness that thou shouldst be desired Wha● then Hath God given thee a wise and understanding mind to know him A faithful and willing heart to wal uprightly before
and nobleness cuts off ●i● right hand and plucks out his right eye for Christs sake this oh ● this is the true Disciple indeed We may say here as God once said of Abraham By this we know that he feareth God seeing he hath not withheld his dearest his darling Isaac from him Oh! be you perswaded to turn ●way your eyes from bosome vanities Set your greatest watch where you ●ie in greatest danger Flee youthful ●usts but follow after righteousness Fourthly Take heed yet further ●hat you neglect not your day of grace Let Esaus loss be your warning Time was when he carelesly slighted that which afterwards he sought with tears with bitter tears but sound no place for repentance Such tears you will see dropping from many eyes another day There are two Rocks whereat most miscarry in this matter 1. By slum●ering and taking no notice of Gods call 2. By faint promises which never ripen to performance Take you great heed of both Concerning the first There are those golden opportunities of mercy wherein the Lord seeks to save that which is lost I gave her saies God a space to repent This great gift it may be the Lord in much mercy sets before you And your selves are best privy to those choice seasons wherein the Lord comes upon this great occasion and knocks at your door Sometimes by Sickness sometimes by Parental Counsel sometimes by more publick Ordinances sometimes by his more remarkable divine judgments upon sinners While the Lord is thus speaking to you your hearts as those Disciples even burn within you your very Souls telling you it is the voice of Christ graciously calling you to repentance Oh! seek the Lord while he may be found True opportunity in most cases is a rare thing and comes but seldom but had need be imbraced with both hands when it comes It will be too late said the Ancients to tender our Sacrifice when the appointed time is past and gone Behold this is the day of your visitation oh that it may prove the day of your regeneration and true acquaintance with the things of your everlasting peace Your Father your Master calls you in the Morning and you arise and go about his work Well Sirs let me also counsel you as Eli once counselled Samuel listen diligently and it shall come to pass if the Lord thy God shall thus call thee thou shalt answer Speak Lord for thy servant heareth Concerning the second our evasions and procrastinations with the Lord we must all freely confess delaies and faint promises for the future they are but the artificial excuses of an unwilling mind for the present Like the goodly words of the Son in the Parable that saies but never goes into the Fathers Vineyard How piously did St. Austine bemoan the treachery of his own heart for a due warning to all posterity in this matter I begged saies he longer day promising presently Lord By and by have but a little patience with me and I will come But oh saies he that Presently lingred beyond all bounds of modesty and this By and by proved a long day and loth to come Dear Youths if these vows of the Lord be upon you defer not to pay them And cast not your selves by delaies upon that sad Dilemma That your own Promises should be as your hand-writing to the Obligation and yet your Conversation render you guilty of non-payment Fifthly Take heed yet again of the sins of the Times wherein you live All Ages all Places have their peculiar reigning sins And most men will needs vainly follow the present fashion in sins as well as cloaths though they lose their very souls by it These last daies are the sad receptacle of almost all precedent corruptions The Lord himself hath told us they are and will be very perillous daies Daies wherein that undesirable thing Sin will every where too much abound Nature the Satyrist could long ago observe grows now in its old age very degenerous we had need watch to the utmost and keep our garments The Boat usually goes full of Passengers and carries multitudes down the stream with it And who so in the fear of God or love of righteousness departeth from the iniquity of the times that man maketh himself a prey in the gate Aristides his justice costs him his life and Socrates his fidelity to one only as the true and living God in the rage of a giddy multitude procured his death So dangerous alwaies is it to dissent from present times be they never so vicious But as for you my Friends● be ye careful indeed you oppose no man wilfully but be ye still as careful that you follow no man in evil course●s wickedly It was not without cause told us The whole world as now it is lieth in wickedness And if any man will be the friend of this world he enters that friendship upon very hard terms he must thereupon become the enemy of God So difficult and even impossible is it for any man to serve two Masters In these sore straights Young Man what wilt thou do Before thou resolvest to sin with the world now seriously ask thine heart this one question Canst thou be content to fare as the world fares to be condemned and suffer with it hereafter Ungodly men will wonder it will be a piece of strange and amazing news that others run not with them to the same excess of riot that others are not vile and vain as well as they but you are Travellers whatever others do on the right hand or on the left you must not turn aside but mind your journey The Nations might do as they would by their Idolls but Moses plainly tells Israel The Lord their God had not suffered them to deal so by him Not durst Ioshah soon after judge the Iews strange uncertainty his sufficient excuse or security If saies he it seems evil in your eyes and the case is there hard indeed where the righteous service of the Lord seems evil to any yet saies Ioshuah however I and mine are bound to serve the Lord. Noah had perished in the waters if times had carried him Lot had burnt in Sodom if the Multitude had swayed with him The sins of times Gods people may alwaies be pious mourners for them but never profane practicers of them Be ye whatever others are righteous in your generation before the Lord. Sixthly Take heed yet further that you enter not upon Religion at first superficially slightily or carnally Religion is solemn and had need be solemnly and reverently approached unto Mistakes here are very easily run into but more hardly redressed the forest mistakes in the whole world And yet saies the Father there is scarce any thing more common then for men to deceive their own souls and go as the Prophet expresseth it with a lie in their right hand all their daies Their Religion they judge is good and they
complaint of all Ages that goodness is too rare and vertuous men exceeding few But it shall be the more lovely the more honourable that good things are found in you as in that Child of Ieroboam toward the Lord God of Israel The disobedience of others how evil soever in them may serve the more highly to commend your obedience in the sight of God and men It is praise-worthy indeed to shine as the Lilly among the Thornes to be sound as the Proverb of the Ancient adviseth like the fruitful Olive in the midst of Thistles Be you an example in Gods good waie unto all let none be snare● in evil unto you Corrupt examples ' may sway with weak minds but the wise in heart will rather regard and consider what is their duty If most shall vilely c●st away their dear immortal souls as if no mercy no salvation were tendred unto them be you so much the more careful to ●ave yours Though you should travel somewhat solitary here on Earth yet comfort your selves you shall meet with good company in Heaven What Themistocles once wrote setting up a Bill upon an house he had to be lett adding for encouragement sake to them that should hire it this commendation There are good neighbours about it This oh this is indeed the happiness of heaven The Saints and Angels of God the Prophets the Apostles and blessed Martyrs with all your godly friends are all there There may you meet with Daniel who purposed while he was young that he would not defile himself There may you see the three Children whom the very sl●mes could not affright from choosing to trust and serve the Lord in their tender years Be you also whatever others are like the vision of the Almond-tree holily ambitious to blossome with the first Thirdly Say not it is hard and truly though I dare not altogether deny it yet I scarce know how to like or love it Canst thou love sin and canst thou not love grace Is it an easie thing to serve Satan and hard to serve the Lord These are strange objections ●e never thus learned Christ. It hath been wont to be said by holy men that were before us Those are of all other to be reckoned the hard things which injure the precious soul and hazard Eternity But canst thou be indeed against the true fe●r of God and the making of thine own Calling and Election sure Oh! tremble and know it is hard entring such unrighteous dissents and standing out with God we are not any of us stronger than he It w●s once indeed the Fathers case I was saies he both willing and unwilling my Conscience fr●ely gave its Yea but my Affections were so shameless as to return their Nay But I arose and contended with my self till my backward heart became at length better perswaded Dear Youths you ●re it seems too far involved in the same conflict oh come forth as honourably in the like gracious resolution Our stubborn and humorous wills left c●relesly to themselves Lord what utter woe and distress will they soon bring upon the whole man Thou that canlt not fare with thy duty how wilt thou ever be able to fare with thy misery and that for ever If duty may be disingenuously put off now yet will not that be so answered or sent away then And should there be any neglect or miscarrying in this great matter it is thy self thy dear self that is like to be the sufferer and bear the smart of it Come come be not unwilling with thine own duty be not averse toward that which would in conclusion prove thy greatest mercy The painful Countryman is never more in his Element never better pleased then when he is laboriously at work in his Calling And if we be indeed the Servants and Children of the Lord it must and well m●y be our meat and drink to do the will of our heavenly Father Fourthly Say not The pleasures of sin are sweet and I would fain have my time and share in them God grant you bet●er Sweets than they will ever prove More lawful more real Of these we must all say with the Poet They have more of the Aloes than of the Honey in them Young Palates indeed are usually taken with any green raw fruits but their end is bitter Satan hath learnt how to bait the sharp hook how to guild the bitter pill artificially enough He easily over-reaches our credulous minds but his deceit and our disappointment will too soon appear What Nature is now so fond of Grace would even in an holy scorn trample under its feet saying as once St. Austine The pleasures I was sometimes afraid to part with it is now my greatest joy to be clearest from them The●e are those at this day in Hell that are sick enough sick at heart of those very pleasures which they themselves when time was so violently lusted after and could now wish they had never known or called of them Oh! that you would tender your souls health and be perswaded to forbe●r them Ple●sures you may have only fo●her sinful ones God would have none be duil though he bids all be innocent Heaven it self shall be 1 Paradise of divine delights for the People of God A vertuous heart me thinks should scorn Sin for its pastime and should not think so well of transgression as to dare to take it for its recreation but modestly chooses things harmeless and ingenuous and gracious and therein only takes delight There are more noble and peculiar entertainments for the mind as well as carnal surfettings for the body The soul hath also its delights more divine more enduring And oh how well would it become us to bethink our selves and choose as the Angels to feast on such heavenly food rather than with bruit beasts to immerse our selves in the fordid lusts of the slesh Oh! how did the Heathen both chide and grieve to see Nature abused under sensual pleasures Canst thou saies one of them after God hath given thee a mind then which there is nothing in the whole world more noble or divine Caust thou so prostitute and debase thy self that there shall scarce remain any longer difference between thee and the sorry beasts Let us take the words as spoken to our selves and life up your inclinations Dear Youths toward those cleaner pleasures which may best answer their own name which may best become you and your nature If others shall please themselves in wanton plaies the whole Creation may be your Theater where you may dayly see a lively Scene all variety upon the Stage every Crea●ur● acting us part and the Glory of God to the just admiration of all Spect●tors ●is●l●ied in the whole If others delight themselves in idle book you may rejoyce in the L●w of the Lor● and say wi●h David My meditati●● of him shall be sweet unto me Religion wants nor its true delights
let i● no wan● its due p●ofessors Fif●hly Say not Alas I know n●● what to do far wiser than I the p●ud●m the ancient are at great c●nt●oversie abo●● Religion who can tell where to pitch It is true it is too sadly true There are many pious men that may and doubtless have much sweet communion with the Lord who yet through the straightness and frowardness of their own hearts will have but little each with other Thus men wrangle themselves into a life too joyless to themselves too dishonourable to the Lord. Cadmus Teeth of strife seem every where sown and coming up very thick We might justly renew Erasmus his sad complaint of the former Age Contention lives while love and sweetness dies Tenets of faith are usually multiplied while sincerity goes as palpably down the wind Such is our wound oh that God would drop into it the balsom of love oh that he would bind it up and become our healer But because men can or rather will agree no better refer thy self and thy thoughtful heart to God and his Word Give credence in the strength of his grace to what he is there pleased to express or promise to thee Depend upon him according to all that he hath there allowed thee And compose thy self to be intirely at his command Aiming that whenever thou comest to die thou mayest resign thy self to God with these few words unfainedly breathed forth I have in my weak measure kept the word of thy patience on earth And now oh Lord be thou pleased to remember thy Servant according to this word of thine wherein thou hast caused me and I upon thy invitation have taken boldness for to hope Religion however pulled several waies is of it self a quiet and striseless thing Holy indeed but harmless Divine but still shining forth in much plainess and simplicity And be you as near as you can of that Religion which gives Glory to God on high on earth peace and good will toward men Oh! that the Lord would hasten such sweet times of refreshment from his own presence amongst us In the mean season if you see somewhat of inferiour diversity in gracious hearts a peculiar feature as it were upon several faces who have yet somewhat of true life and beauty shining in each be not too much amazed Remember Solymans great delight at the variety of flowers in his Garden professing himself highly pleased in this Though they were various they were still sweet and comely flowers Or rather call to remembrance the Fathers pious and ingenious Allusion Iosephs Coat may be of several colours so it be without a rent If you also see uncomely contentions even unto Paroxysm's and the utmost bitterness as once between the Apostles themselves it sadly was step in and tell them they are brethren desire them to be kinder to each other The Master is at hand If you shall lastly see and hear great controversies and little agreement yet know there is a true and plain way that leadeth unto life The way fating upon though a fool needs not erre therein Go 〈◊〉 to God and he will shew thee 〈◊〉 ●●w and living way which conducteth unto himself There are many oh that they were not so many that quarrel themselves carnally to Hell be thou cordial with God laborious in the profession of his name so shall hearty Faith and unfained obedience become thy safe and honourable convoy unto Heaven Whoever quarrel in other things no man shall blame thee no man shall charge thee with folly for these Sixthly Say not lastly I have a greater discouragement yet behind then I almost dare make known some of my Friends are not so willing to have me mind such things or meddle much with Religion It is a sore temptation where the Complaint is true What shall that poor Child do whom God hath spoken to as once to the children of Israel in the Land of Egypt and his very heart even melts within him opening it self day and night as Daniels window toward Ierusalem and yet all the countenance he hath from the Family is like that churlish speech of Pharaoh He is idle he is idle encrease his burden and let him not go to ●erve the Lord This is indeed the ●rial of all trials wherever it falls A 〈◊〉 straight which needs tears rather ●han words Oh that none would lay this stone ●f stumbling before young people ●est it unhappily revives that undesired ●●gh used by some in the Primitive 〈◊〉 Our Parents are become unto us 〈◊〉 the Ostrich in the wilderness and almost the murderers of our souls It 〈◊〉 hard for any to be an hindrance ●here they ought rather to be a fur●erance To be found a real offence 〈◊〉 discouragement to the least of Christs little ones Here have we cause to renew the ●mentation in the Prophet and say ●he children are once more come to the ●●rth and there wants strength to bring 〈◊〉 Here will be need of much wis●ome and choiceness of spirit more ●●an such tender years commonly at●●in un●o to cut the tread aright so 〈◊〉 obey the Lord as to shew the ut●ost tenderness of disobeying or dis●●easing Friends and yet so to ful●●ll our respect to them as not to forget we still owe as the Father well states it a far greater unto God The Lord himself put the everlasting arms underneath and bear up those discouraged children whose hard lot this is till he hath brought them with joy to his own bosome But this case blessed be God is rare the case of very few and I hope none of yours Be you modest I charge you Cast not the blame upon others to excuse your selves God easily sees through such pretences and understands right well where the fault still chiefly lies You know not the heart of a Parent It is natural to them though evil and too regardless of themselves to desire the welfare of their Children Your Parents have been often instilling good things have been previously laying in ponderous memorials upon your tender minds They have with much c●re brought you up to reading They have procured you that treasure of all treasures the Bible they have recommended it to you as your Saviours Legacy where you may find the words of eternal life your safest guide your best Friend when they are gone So that you may justly confess as St. Austine concerning his Mother Monica with how great solicitousness of heart they have often admonished you in the Lord. Whose Counsels you ought to receive as Iunius the instructions of his Father Scarce ever without tears So greatly might the weight of the Argument so greatly might the authority of the Speaker affect and move you And must it now be objected or dare you now say your Friends are unwilling with your souls good It is likely they would not have you pretend Religion to be stubborn against them It is very likely they would not have
pray know It is no less than Life or Death that now stands before you waiting for your Yea or Nay It is so small or inferiour matter of little moment of light consequence that you are now to give your answer in It is Heaven it is Eternal life I need say no more it is your own happiness for ever and ever how can you turn your backs upon it Yea further know there have been those among the poor Heathens that never durst think thus lightly of sin as you do They alwaies held it the greatest evil and the sorrows of it the heaviest sorrows in the whole world There have been tender hearted Ninevites that have come to God at one call and gladly closed with their own mercy And there yet are at this day how backward soever you may be thousands filially returning as the Prodigal with tears of joy to their Fathers house longing for him and welcome to him going where there is what they and you likewise want Bread of life and change of Rayment that you might be cloathed Oh why should you stand out against such sweet mercy and harden your selves so unnaturally to your own destruction You might yet further know though it will be sad enough to know it there is never a Companion of yours with whom you have now sinned but shall be ready to witness against you Never a leaf in all your Bible but shall be enough to condemn you Ministers Parents Friends and Foes shall all come forth against you And oh how cutting will it be to be made a spectacle of scorn to God to Angels and to Men How wounding to thy astonished heart to become an everlasting By word upbraided of all pitied of none It is the condition will they say that he hath long ago deserved and let him bear it This as an holy man rightly observed will make thy load and burden heavy indeed Yea God himself who here hath wooed and so often so long even waited to be gracious shall then set every sin in order before you and make your guilty Consciences with everlasting blushings to own them Then saies the Father shall it be said in the audience of Heaven and Earth Behold the man and all that ever he did let it be had in everlasting remembrance whether it be good or whether it be evil Then shall your selves also look back upon that dear Salvation that you have negligently lost that wretched misery that you have wilfully brought upon your selves and sinke down with heart-breaking sighs and horrour at the Bar of Christ. Then may you be ready to take your last leave of all comfort and say Farewell my day of Grace which is now gone and never more to shine upon such a wretch as I am Come in all ye my hainous sins and the bitter remembrance of you The Lord hath sent you to stand as adversaries of terrour round about me Sting as so many fiery Serpents in this bosome of mine and spare not Oh! that you might have leave to make an utter end and rid me out of all my pain Oh how will the tears trickle down to see the Lord so gracious so loving to others and yet so justly severe and full of indignation towards you To see those that prayed while you slept that so willingly kept the Lords Sabbaths while you as constantly profaned them to see those that ●●isely redeemed that time which you so lavishly wasted to see those very persons so well known to you it may be your near acquaintance in the Kingdom of God and your selves shut out Then though never till then will the heart that hath held out as long as ever it could begin to falter and fail Then shall the lips break forth with that righteous acknowledgment I am undone undone for ever and my destruction is of my self Oh my dear Friends my bowels even yearn for you Hast thou but one blessing oh my Father bless our Young People even them also that they may turn to thee and live But I cannot thus leave you My Errand I confess is now even done but your duty henceforth to be taken up and still carefully carried on I may justly say of this whole Letter as once the Roman Oratour well said to his Son It will be of more or less service to you as you make it truly practicable in the sequel of your life Counsel stored by us in Books and neglected in life it is like the co● vetous mans bags of Gold which lie wholly dead and no good use made of them Suffer me then once more for greater sureness sake to rehearse my Message again unto you It is you Dear Youths to whom I am as the Father affectionately said in this Paper to apply my self It is you who have yet seen but the third hour of the day with whom the Message whether it lives or whether it dies must now be finally left You are desired in the higest Name that can be used in the Name of the great and most glorious God who made the Heavens and the Earth and gave you that breath you breathe between your Nostrils You are desired in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ who freely shed his precious bloud in a readiness to redeem and cleanse you from all your sins You are desired in this great and dreadful Name and by all the respect you bear unto it to remember your Creator in the daies of your Youth You are desired to strive to enter in at the straight Gate You ●●e desired to accept the richest the gre●●est gift that God himself ever b●stows upon any his own dear Son You are desired to be kind to your own Souls and to lay up a good foundation ag●inst times to come You are desired to come and live with God for ever Dear Youths what do you purpose to do in this great matter These are not Requests to be slighted these are not Requests to be denied Such a capacity for mercy how would the damned prize it oh let not the living set light by i● This short moment how meanly soever you may think of it once wretchedly lost and an Age will not recover Eternity it self as long as it is will never restore the like advantages to your souls again And now are you oh are you at length willing to go about this blessed work and become happy for ever if there may be yet any hope in Israel concerning your case Behold the arms of Mercy are open ready to imbrace you whatever is past how unkind how hainous soever God is ready to forgive willing to forget it He calls Heaven and Earth to record if you miscarry let the blame lie where it ought it shall not be his As I live saith the Lord I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that he turn from his wicked way and live Turn ye oh now unweariedly doth the Lord renew his call turn ye from
your evil waies for why why indeed will ye die oh house of Israel Such are the Fathers bowels toward us too too regardless of our selves What answer as the Father piously said can ever be solidly made if such bowels of love such dear such free salvation as this should be ungratefully slighted Oh let your hearts even melt and your very souls be dissolved within you If the Lord be willing be not you unwilling neither let these tender arms of mercy be spread forth all the day long in vain Behold the Lord Jesus Christ at the Fathers right hand making continual intercession and the poor of the flock are his care the weary and broken in spirit the Objects of his pity It is their names he bears on his breast-plate and commends with such endearing arguments unto the Father Suppose your selves hearing him calling to you and arguing with your trembling thoughtful hearts on this wise Wherefore thinkest thou poor soul was I numbred amongst the transgressors and made a man of sorrows Wherefore was my Side pierced with the Spear my Head with Thorns and my dearest Bloud poured forth What dost thou conceive should move me to take upon me Humane Nature and become so near akin unto thee if it had not been to perform the office of a Kinsman and take the right of thy Redemtion upon me What could have perswaded me to sustain the bitter the accursed death of the Cross if it had not been to save such as thou art from thy sins Hast thou no need of my Righteousness What shall I do for thee What dost thou want What is it thy thirsty affections most pant after for thy souls good Speak freely and forbear not I am now ascended to my Fathers right hand and able to relieve thee Where are thy Prayers and I my Self will present them to my Father as from me perfumed with the sweet incense of my righteousness and he will shew favour unto thee Oh blessed encouragement here is the Golden Scepter held sorth indee● What answer wilt thou now return to all this such overflowing love of so dear a Saviour Sit down with thy self poor Heart Advise by meditation what to aske and then send forth Faith and Prayer as the trusty and successful Messengers to fetch in supply Go thy waies take thy life in thy hands as once Hester did present thy Petition and say as she still did If I have found favour in thine eyes oh Lord let my life the life of my soul be given me at my request Do thou cry and he will hear He will graciously wash thy leprous soul in his own bloud and send his blessed Spirit as the Chariots and Horsemen of Israel to prepare and bring thee safely to glory Behold also the holy Angels of God waiting ready to rejoyce in your even in your Conversion There is not the meanest the poorest of you but your Repentance might become an occasion of much joy in Heaven It is a fresh feast to those noble Creatures to see the least encrease of the Kingdom of God To see though but one single sheep added to the flock of Christ. So precious is Grace so dearly is the recovery of a lost soul esteemed on high I might further tell you the damned themselves even groan unto you saying as in the Parable Oh! take warning by us and come not into this place of torments There is not one no throughout the whole Creation there is not so much as one that can heartily say unto you Go on in evil waies and prosper I charge you before the elect Angels and as you tender their comfort I charge you by the flaming p●ins and cries of the damned and as you would be loath to share with them i● all their M●series take heed take serious heed to the saving of your souls All the divine threatnings of God stand naked and open before you as the hand-writing upon the wall that stand not there for nought They sound as so many shrill Trumpets from Mount Ebal and they also charge you to break off your sins by repentance Or else as sure as God is in Heaven iniquity will one day become your ruine All the sweet Promises are lastly appointed to attend your encouragement and furtherance in your Salvation They are sent forth in Gods name to invite you to his blessed kingdom and to assure you from him whatever pains you faithfully take heavenward your labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. These are the Christians choice Feast and Banquet the Promises that you so joyfully should study that speak so comfortablie and withall as truly to the wearie soul. God himself hath made them and he will fulfil them It is the Concern of his glorie to make good the word that is gone out of his lips his faithfulness lies at stake therein Whosoever cometh unto him thus filiallie quoting and relying upon hi● Fathers word he will in no wise cast him out Come you and welcome Your work is good your wages will be great your fellow Servants the Excellent of the Earth your Master you are to go unto the lovingest the ●blest the Faithfullest the justest the k●ndest that ever was served Wha● can you possibly scruple Or where can you mend your selves Speak your hearts and spare not What danger think you can come of being safely reconciled unto the Lord What hinderance shall this be to any to be made an Heir of the Crown of life What wrong to others to save our selves What discredit to become a Child of the most High What Embasement of spirit to be renewed in our minds to the blessed Image of God Or what sadness can this ever occasion to be intituled to everlasting joyes We must even blush and holily fall out with our selves in the language of the Father saying as he Whence oh my soul whence is this horrid this strange and unreasonable thing that thou wilt be under no Command accept of no mercy heavenward Men may revile and our own wretched hearts may suspect the holy Counsels of God but the waies of the Lord are right and happy is that man that chooseth to walk therein He shall be able to lift up his face with Comfort not ashamed of his God nor disappointed of his hope ●hen the greatest p●rt of the World ●n the very depths of all distress and horrour shall call but alas in v●in 〈◊〉 Rocks and Mountains to fall upon them Awake then I beseech you for the Lords s●ke while it is yet the morning of your life the flower of your ye●rs Let your life be what indeed ●ll our lives ought to be a living Epistle a fair exemplification of the Gospel th●t men may see in you what in Primitive times the very Heathen saw so legible in Christians then The true portraiture of your Saviours life the just account of his Doctrine in the answerableness of your deportment and conversation Awake and arise
Shoot shoot saies Satan all 's our owne 4. Fond foolish Rome how dat'st oppose Whom God in his safe bosome laies Thy malice may it self disclose But frustrate still shall turn to praise 5. The Crozier staff thy Triple Crown Those ensigns of deceit and pride Thy Purple Robe thy blaz'd Renown The dust shall ever ever hide 6. Thy Merchants shall thy fall lament Thy Lovers all in sackcloath mourn While Heav'n and Earth in one consent Shall sing Amen let Babylon burn 7. Then Lord thy Spouse whose dropping eyes Whose sighs whose sufferings prove her thine Shall from her pensive sorrows rise And as the Lamb 's fair Bride shall shine 8. Sweet day sweet day when shall it be Why staies my Lord Dear Saviour come Thy mourning Spouse cries after thee Stay with me here or take me home He was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed Isa. 53.5 1. THus died the Prince of life thus he That could not die even died for me My thoughtful heart Lord shall arise And ponder these deep mysteries 2. What means his death who knew no sin Or what my life who live therein Mine was the debt and death my due Though thou wast pleas'd thy Son to sue 3. Thou Lord I wast pleas'd on him to lay The debt and he the price to pay Thy Gospell feasts though sweet to me Are th' Emblems of his Agony 4. And oh how great his sufferings were Who th' wrath of God and man did bear The Father then forsakes the Son And Creatures 'gainst their Maker run 5. Iudas betraies Disciples flee Whil'st Jews and Romans crucifie Hereat the Sun furls up his light And cloaths the Earth in sable night 6. The joyless Stars even seem'd to say Israel had quench'd the Lamp of day The stubbourn Mountains they lament The Rocks they are asunder rent 7. The Graves their sealed doors unclose The Dead awakened also rose Th' amaz'd Centurion mourning cries Oh! 't is the Son of God that dies 8. Thus these all labour to consels Thy Deity thy righteousness Enough dear Lord these offer me Supports for th' utmost faith in thee God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Iesus Christ Gal. 6.14 1. MY Song is love unknown My Saviours love to me Love to the loveless shown That they might lovely be Oh who am I That for my sake My Lord should take Frail flesh and die 2. He came from his bless'd Throne Salvation to bestow But men made strange and none The long'd-for Christ would know But oh my Friend My Friend indeed Who at my need His life did spend 3. Sometimes they strow his way And his sweet praises sing Resounding all the day Hosannah's to their King Then Crucifie Is all their breath And for his death They thirst and crie 4. Why what hath my Lord done What makes this rage and spite He made the Lame to run He gave the Blind their sight Sweet injuries Yet they at these Themselves displease And 'gainst him rise 5. They rise and needs will have My dear Lord made away A Murderer they save The Prince of life they slay Yet cheerful he To suff'ring goes That he his Foes From thence might free 6. In life no house no home My Lord on earth might have In death no friendly tombe But what a Stranger gave What may I say Heav'n was his home But mine the tombe Wherein he lay 7. Here might I stay and sing No story so divine Never was love dear King Never was grief like thine This is my Friend In whose sweet praise I all my daies Could gladly spend The Pilgrims Farewell to the World For we have here no continuing City but we seek one to come Heb. 13.14 1. FArewel poor World I must be gone Thou art no home no rest for me I 'll take my staff and travel on Till I a better World may see 2. Why art thou loth my heart oh why Do'st thus recoil within my breast Grieve not but say farewel and fly Unto the Arke my Dove there 's rest 3. I come my Lord a Pilgrims pace Weary and weak I slowly move Longing but can't yet reach the place The gladsom place of rest above 4. I come my Lord the slouds here rise These troubled Seas foam nought but mire My Dove back to my bosom Flies Farewel poor World Heav'n's my desire 5. Stay stay said Earth whither fond one Here 's a fair World what wouldst thou have Fair World oh no thy beautie 's gone An heav'nly Canaan Lord I crave 6. Thus th' ancient Travellers thus they Weary of Earth sigh'd after thee They are gone before I may not stay Till I both thee and them may see 7. Put on my Soul put on with speed Though th' way belong the end is sweet Once more poor World Farewel indeed In leaving thee my Lord I meet Christs future coming to Judgment the Christians present Meditation Behold he cometh with clouds and every eye shall see him Rev. 1.7 1. BEhold he comes comes from on high Like lightning through the flaming skie The Saint's desire the Sinner's fear Behold that solemn day draws near 2. He comes who unto Judgment shall All flesh to his Tribunal call Me thinks I see the burnish'd Throne Whereon my Saviour sits alone 3. Me thinks I see at his right hand His smiling Saints in triumph stand Me thinks I hear condemned ones Howling their never-dying groans 4. Me thinks I see even Time expire The Heav'ns and Earth on flaming fire Think not my Soul thy self to hide Thou canst not 'scape but shalt be tri'd 5. Loe here the Book whence Justice reads Sentence on Sinners sinful deeds Loe here the Mercy Psalm wherein My Judge speaks pardon to my sin 6. I tremble Lord yet must I say This is my long'd-for wedding day My Bridegroom is my Soveraign Lord My Joynture drawn in his fair Wo●d 7. My Mansion built by him on High Where I may rest eternally Then come my Lord dear Saviour come And when thou pleasest take me home Amen Even so come Lord Iesu● come quickly The Resurrection Though after my skin worms destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God Job 19.26 1. MY Life 's a shade my daies Apace to death decline My Lord is life he 'l raise My dust again even mine Sweet truth to me I shall arise And with these eyes My Saviour see 2. My peaceful grave shall keep My bones till that sweet day I wake from my long sleep And leave my bed of Clay Sweet truth to me I shall arise And with these eyes My Saviour see 3. My Lord his Angels shall Their Golden Trumpets sound At whose most welcome call My grave shall be unbound Sweet truth to me c. 4. I said sometimes with tears Ah me I 'm loth to die Lord silence thou those fears My life 's with thee on high