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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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perisheth as the Wiseman speaketh CAP. V. Of the loue of God and diuers vertues which spring from it §. Sect. 1 Of the loue of God what it is and wherein it consisteth and of the measure and meanes of it THe next mayne and principall dutie is the loue of God when as knowing beleeuing and remembring his infinitenesse in all goodnesse excellency beauty and all perfection and his inestimable loue grace and bounty towards vs we doe loue him againe with all our heart soule minde and strength aboue all things and all other things in him and for his sake So that the causes of our loue towards God are his goodnesse excellencie beautie and perfection in himselfe and his goodnesse grace and benignity towards vs. For goodnesse is the onely obiect of loue neither doe wee loue any thing which is not either truely good or at least appeareth good vnto vs. And therfore seeing God is the summum bonum and chiefe goodnesse when his nature appeareth to be so we should loue him chiefly and place our chiefe happinesse in his fruition But yet because in this state of corruption we are full of selfe-loue therefore wee cannot loue God perfectly and absolutely for himselfe as we ought till wee bee assured of his loue towards vs and haue it shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost for we loue him because he loued vs first as the Apostle speaketh Now the Rom. 5. 5. 1. Ioh. 4. 19. measure of our loue wherewith we are to loue God ought to be without measure both because he is immeasurable in goodnesse in his owne nature and also because his loue towards vs hath exceeded all measure the which appeareth not only in our creation whereby he hath giuen vs vnto our selues and made vs his most excellent creatures but also in our Redemption wherein he hath giuen himselfe vnto vs euen his onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne of the same nature with himselfe to die for our sinnes and rise againe for our iustification and that when we were not friends but of no strength strangers sinners enemies vnto him and his grace the slaues of Satan and children of wrath as well as others And therefore if he thus loued vs when we merited no loue yea when we deserued wrath and hatred how much more if it were possible should wee loue him who is most louely and infinitely deserueth our loue But because our nature being finite we cannot loue him infinitely wee ought therefore to loue him as much as is possible for vs with all our hearts soules and strength Or if we cannot thus doe in respect of our corruption yet at least we must loue him in sincerity and vprightnesse of heart as much as we can and be heartily sorry that wee can loue him no better We must loue him aboue all things in the world as house lands parents children wiues yea our owne liues and be ready with all cheerefulnesse to lay them downe for him as he hath first laid downe his life for vs. For if we ought to loue all things in him and for him then ought wee to loue him much more preferring his glory euen before our owne saluation when as they come in comparison the one with the other And this is that loue of God which is to be imbraced of vs as being in it selfe a most excellent vertue and in diuers respects to be preferred before faith and hope 1. Cor. 13. 13. and to vs most profitable feeing it assureth vs of Gods loue and remission Luk. 7. 47. of our sinnes transformeth vs after a manner into the diuine nature for where is loue there is likenesse and it is the nature of it to change the louer as much as may be into the party beloued and finally weaneth our hearts from the loue of the world and earthly vanities and lifteth vp our affections and thoughts vnto God and heauenly things maketh all that we doe or suffer for Gods sake easie and tolerable yea sweete and comfortable for it seeketh not her owne beareth all things endureth all things it inableth 1. Cor. 13. 6 7. vs to offer vnto God cheerefull obedience and to performe all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse required vnto a godly life with ioy and delight which without it are irkesome and vnpleasant yea intolerable and impossible vnto flesh and blood Now the meanes whereby our hearts may be inflamed with this diuine fire of Gods loue are first that we often meditate vpon Gods infinite goodnesse excellency beauty and perfection which make him worthy of all loue and how hee hath exercised these sauing attributes towards vs in our creation and preseruation in our redemption giuing his only Sonne to die for vs and for his sake forgiuing vs all our sinnes and in bestowing vpon vs all the good things which wee inioy in this life or hope for in the life to come §. Sect. 2 Of the zeale of Gods glory what it is and wherein it consisteth Now the vertues and graces which arise and issue from loue are diuers as zeale of Gods glory ioy and reioycing in God thankefulnesse and obedience Zeale is the fruit and effect of our feruent loue towards God and as it were a flame arising from this diuine fire whereby we are made most carefull and earnest in seeking Gods glory both in aduancing and furthering all meanes whereby it is furthered and in opposing hindring and remoouing all the impediments whereby it may bee hindred And this is to be shewed in all other vertues as being the intension of them and in all duties which we performe vnto God So the Apostle telleth vs generally that it is good to be zealously affected alwayes in a good thing Gal. 4. 18. Our loue towards God and hatred of sinne must be zealous and hot and not cold or luke-warme our repentance must bee ioyned with zeale Bee zealous and amend We must zealously worship and serue God according Apoc. 3. 19. to that of the Apostle feruent in Spirit seruing the Lord. Wee must not Rom. 12. 11. Tit. 2. 14. 1. Thes 3. 10. onely doe good workes but be zealous of them Wee must pray with zeale exceedingly and powre out our hearts like water before the Lord with Lam. 2. 19. zeale we must preach the Word and be inwardly affected with that wee speake that so also we may affect others and we must with zeale heare the Word and euen hunger and thirst after this spirituall food of our soules 1. Pet. 2. 1. that we may grow vp thereby But yet our care must be that our zeale be guided with knowledge and not shew it selfe in all things but as the Apostle speaketh onely in a good matter and also that in aduancing of the Gal. 4. 18. meanes of Gods glory and remoouing the impediments wee keepe our selues within the limits of our callings Now the meanes to attaine vnto this zeale is to consider often and seriously how great things
the Lord hath done for vs which will make vs thinke that we can neuer be too earnest in seeking his glory nor too intent and feruent in all holy duties of his seruice That it is an inseparable propertie of all grace to be zealous in them and therefore there can be no grace at all where zeale is wanting That is an vndoubted signe of those who are the redeemed of the Lord to be zealous of good works therfore where there is no zeale there can be no Tit. 2. 14. signe of redemption by Christ finally that luke-warmenesse is most lothsome vnto God and that those who are so he will spue out of his mouth Apoc. 3. 17. §. Sect. 3 Of reioycing in God what it is and the meanes wherby we may attaine vnto it The second vertue arising from loue is ioy and reioycing in God when being assured of his loue towards vs and louing him againe tasting for the present how good the Lord is and perswading our selues of the full fruition of him in the life to come we are exceedingly delighted and euen glory in the assurance and sense of Gods fauour For it is the nature of loue to make vs reioyce in the thing beloued and as the more excellent any thing is in our conceite the more our loue exceedeth so according to the measure of our loue such also is our ioy when we inioy it And therefore needes must our ioy and reioycing in God exceed all other ioy because our loue ought to bee proportioned to his goodnesse and excellency and our ioy to our loue In which respect this diuine ioy swalloweth vp all worldly griefe and causeth vs to glory not onely in worldly prosperity but also in persecution and tribulation Rom. 5. 3. And this is that ioy vnto which the Scriptures exhort vs Reioyce in the Phil. 4. 4. 1. Thes 5. 16. Psal 37. 4. Lord alway and againe I say Reioyce Reioyce euermore Delight thy selfe in the Lord and he will giue thee the desires of thine heart Which if we attaine vnto then haue wee euen in this life the first beginnings of our heauenly happinesse For as the Apostle teacheth vs the Kingdome of God Rom. 14. 17. consisteth in righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Now the meanes to obtaine this ioy is to labour after assurance that wee are vnited vnto Christ for we cannot haue it in our selues but in and through him according to that of the Apostle We ioy in God through our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5. 11. by whom now we haue receiued the atonement Secondly if we would haue this ioy we must labour after the assurance of our iustification and remission of our sinnes for peace with God followeth our iustification by faith Rom. 5. 1 3. and ioy this peace Thirdly let vs labour after this assurance that wee are the sonnes of God by adoption and grace and to haue it sealed vnto vs in our hearts and consciences by his holy Spirit that so our assurance of our heauenly inheritance may vphold our ioy and reioycing in the middest of temporary crosses and afflictions Finally let vs labour to feele Gods loue shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which wee shall best discerne by finding them inflamed with feruent loue towards God approoued to bee sincere by our care to flee all sinne which is odious vnto him and imbracing all vertue and goodnesse which is acceptable in his sight And if wee inioy God in this mutuall loue wee shall in all estates glory and reioyce in it and in the middest of all worldly extremities comfort our selues with Dauid in the Lord 1. Sam. 30. 6. 1. Thes 1. 6. our God §. Sect. 4 Of thankfulnes vnto God what is required vnto it and the meanes of it The third vertue arising from the loue of God is vnfained thankfulnes for when in consideration of Gods goodnesse mercy and bounty towards Psal 116. 12. vs our hearts are inflamed with his loue and replenished with ioy vnspeakeable and glorious then doe we thinke with Dauid what wee may returne vnto him for all his benefits and finding no possible meanes of making the least requitall in regard of our impotency and Gods all-sufficiency we doe at last resolue to remaine for euer thankfull debters and to expresse our thankefulnesse both by our words in praysing and magnifying and in all our actions by glorifying him our Benefactour who hath beene so infinitely gracious vnto vs seeing wee haue nothing else to returne vnto him So that our loue of God proceeding from his loue towards vs is the roote of our thankefulnesse and our reioycing in his loue and goodnesse an inseparable companion of it For this thankefulnesse is a vertue whereby knowing acknowledging and reioycing in the sense and feeling of Gods loue goodnesse and bountie towards vs wee are inwardly thankefull vnto him for all his benefits and outwardly expresse it by praysing and glorifying his holy Name both by our lips and liues whereby it appeareth what is required to this vertue of thankefulnesse First that wee apprehend Gods loue and inwardly reioyce in it hauing our hearts thorowly affected with the sense of his goodnesse and bounty towards vs. Secondly that wee doe not ascribe the blessings and benefits which wee inioy vnto any Jam. 1. 17. thing else but onely vnto God as our supreme and chiefe Benefactour who is the principall Author of all our good Thirdly that wee doe not smother our thankefulnesse in our hearts but cause it to breake forth first in our words by praysing magnifying Gods holy name for as the Psalmist speaketh It becommeth the righteous to be thankefull and secondly in Psal 33. 1. our workes by doing those things which are pleasing vnto God in whom our soule delighteth that so the light of our godly liues shining before men we may cause them also to glorifie our Father which is in heauen Mat. 5. 16. The which ought to be performed of vs in all things and at all times both in prosperity and aduersity plenty and penury health and sicknesse according to that of the Apostle But be filled with the Spirit speaking to your selues in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melodie Eph. 5. 18 19. in your hearts to the Lord giuing thankes alwayes for all things vnto God the Father in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ An example whereof wee haue in Iob who blessed the Lord when he was depriued of all his substance Iob 1. 21. and in the Church grieuously afflicted who in the middest of all her calamities did acknowledge Gods mercies in that they were not vtterly Lam. 3. 32. consumed Now the meanes whereby vve may be stirred vp to this duty and inabled to performe it are first to consider that this thankfulnes and thanksgiuing is good pleasant and comely according to that of the Psalmist Praise ye the Lord for it is good
and thankfulnesse and so make vs to become earnest and vnwearied in rendring vnto God praise and thankesgiuing when as we obserue a solemne fast and keepe vnto God a Esa 26. 16. day of humiliation consecrating it wholly to the exercises of religion and charity especially prayer and meditation And finally at all other times when we are fitted thereunto by Gods Spirit and sufficiently qualified with the former graces The which notwithstanding is to be vnderstood of priuate prayer by our selues and not when we pray in the company of others for then we are by the rule of charity to haue respect vnto them and not to tyre their zeale and deuotion and cause them to sinne through our tedious prolixity by wearinesse and wandring thoughts although we our selues haue a good appetite to this exercise for this were to force them to sit long at the table who haue quickly dined to cloy the weake of disgestion with variety of dishes because wee who beare them company haue good stomackes and to constraine young beginners and children in Christ to hold out with vs in our pace who are come to a ripe age and so to tyre for wearinesse before they come halfe way to their iourneyes end Which if it deserueth to be iudged vnequall how much is our practice worthy to bee condemned if in our meetings wee contend to out-vie one another striuing who shall exceed in length of prayers and variety of choyce words for the apt expressing of our minds heereby making prayer like vnto a mastery or race wherein we contend for the prize of praise which they are to win who are swiftest and best at length §. Sect. 3 Of the quality of our prayers The second thing to be considered is the quality of our speech which ought to be such in our prayers as is fittest both to stirre vp and expresse our zeale and deuotion Wherein we are to auoyd two extremes the first is curious affectation of words seeing the Lord respecteth not the eloquence of our speech but the sincerity of our hearts and the feruency of our desires which are as loud cries and most perswasiue orations in his eares when wee are most barren in words The second is rudenesse of speech without any fit words or good sense order or coherence which is caused through negligence want of preparation and of due reuerence and respect of Gods glorious Maiesty before whom wee stand and vnto whom we speake not caring what nor how wee babble in his presence though for our credit sake wee would be more carefull in speaking to mortall man not much superiour vnto vs. For otherwise if it proceed not from carelesnesse but from naturall infirmity and want of vtterance which we may iudge of if we be so in other discourses and vpon other occasions our prayers notwithstanding proceeding from vpright hearts and being ioyned with zeale and deuotion will be acceptable vnto God yea euen our imperfect speeches sighes and grones will as effectually moue him to heare vs and grant our suits as the most eloquent speeches which haue all the helpes and ornaments both of nature and art CAP. XVI Of the forme and method which are to be vsed and obserued in our prayers c. §. Sect. 1 Of formes of prayer set downe by others THe last thing to be considered respecteth the forme and manner of powring forth our soules in prayer vnto God which is either by vsing set formes or contriuing of prayers according to present occasions as we are inabled therunto by the Spirit of God The former sort are either such as are inuented by others and learned by hearing or reading their bookes and writings or else by our selues vpon due study and meditation Both which may bee lawfully and commendably vsed of Christians according to their seuerall states and gifts Written and printed formes by those who want ability to pray in their owne words or to frame their suits and petitions and expresse their minds in any good manner and order The which was one end of penning Dauids Psalmes that they might by skilfull Musicians be sung in the Congregation and vsed also in priuate both in families and by our selues alone And our Sauiour prescribed that perfect forme of the Lords Prayer not onely as a rule according to which we are to frame our prayers but also as a prayer to be vsed it selfe and therefore as it is said in one Euangelist After this Math. 6. 9. Luk. 11. 2. manner pray ye so in another When ye pray say Our Father And therefore as children before they can goe are not suffred to sit still but are trained and taught by others that hold them by the hand so though wee want spirituall strength and skill to performe this exercise by our selues yet wee must not neglect it altogether but yeeld our selues to bee trained by others as the Disciples did desire of our Sauiour Christ and as it were holding them by the hand to vse the helpe of their meditations But wee are not to rest in this as sufficient without any further proceedings for though it be fit for a child in Christ that he may be thus trained to goe alone yet when wee come to a riper age and in respect of our meanes should be able to teach others it is a shame for vs and argueth either great impotency and lamenesse in Religion or else negligence sloth and want of exercise if we cannot goe alone but still like children need leading by others Besides we cannot by others meditations vnburthen our selues of our owne particular sinnes of which God and our owne consciences onely are witnesses nor expresse those speciall wants which most pinch vs and which we most desire should be supplied nor fit our occasions to their prayers nor their prayers to our occasions but wee must as God requireth by the Prophet when we come vnto him as suiters take words vnto our selues and frame our petitions and thanksgiuings according Hos 14. 2. to our owne wants and occasions Neither let any that hath beene long trained in the schoole of Christ obiect his want of gifts and abilities seeing if he speake true he proclaimeth his owne shame and non-proficiency For if we had any sense of our wants and sinnes wee might finde some words to expresse them that we might craue a supply of the one and pardon for the other especially to our heauenly Father who is so gracious and willing to beare with our infirmities and who better accepteth of such imperfect prayers as are indited by our selues and vttered with zealous deuotion of honest hearts then of such as are in the best manner penned for vs by others Euen as euery wise father better accepteth of an Epistle inuented and written by his owne sonne himselfe though full of imperfections because it is the meanes to traine him vp to more perfection then that which is done to his hand by one of his fellowes of an higher forme though much more exact
to sing praises vnto our God for it is Psal 147. 1. pleasant and praise is comely Secondly consider that it is the will of God that we should be thankefull vnto him for all his benefits which if we performe he requireth nothing else at our hands nor any other requitall for all his mercy and goodnesse towards vs. And this reason the Apostle vseth 1. Thes 5. 18. Psal 50. 13 14. In euery thing giue thankes for this is the will of God in Christ Iesus concerning you Thirdly that it is most pleasing vnto God and that the sacrifice of the calues of the lips is much more acceptable then of Bulls and Goats Fourthly let vs continually meditate vpon Gods manifold and inestimable mercies bestowed vpon vs in time past his eternall loue our election creation the great worke of our redemption by the death of his onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne our vocation and effectuall calling to the participation of this great benefit from which innumerable others are excluded our iustification sanctification continuall preseruation together with our assured hope of glorificatiō with al special blessings which from day to day he bestoweth vpon vs. With all which our hearts will be filled with thankfulnes and our mouthes with praises thankesgiuing if we throughly meditate on them especially if withall we consider our vnworthines of the least of Gods fauours and according to Iacobs example Gen. 32. 10. compare Gods inestimable mercies with our demerits Lastly let vs meditate and consider what a foule vice vngratitude is how vile and odious in the sight of God mē that the Lord wil neuer let it go vnpunished nor suffer any to inioy his benefits who through their vngratitude wil not acknowledge them nor render the praises which are due vnto him §. Sect. 5 Of obedience vnto God what it is and wherein it consisteth and of the properties of true obedience The fourth and last vertue arising from the loue of God is obedience which is a fruit of our loue and thankfulnesse whereby in all things we submit our selues our wills and actions wholy vnto Gods good will and pleasure both in doing all that he requireth and in patient suffring whatsoeuer he imposeth So that this obedience is of two kinds First our actiue obedience to Gods Law whereby wee conforme our whole man vnto the reuealed will of God The which is an inseparable fruit of our loue towards God and an infallible note whereby wee may discerne that which is sound and sincere from that which is false and counterfaite for if we loue God we will keepe his Commandements And this is the loue of God if we keepe his Commandements and his Commandements are not grieuous The Ioh. 14. 15. properties of this obedience are these First that it be absolute vnto whatsoeuer 1. Ioh. 5. 3. God requireth and admit of no discourse of reason when we know his will but whether profit or disprofit honour or disgrace the fauour or displeasure of men doe follow vpon it we are to doe the things that he Act. 4. 19. 5. 29. inioyneth Secondly it must be total both in respect of the obiect and subiect In respect of the obiect we must obey God in all his Commandements at all times neither adding nor detracting nor declining therefrom Gal. 3. 10. Deut. 12. 32. Ios 1. 7. on the right hand or on the left Neither is it sufficient that wee obey God in some things and neglect others or in many and most things and not in some few for he that thus sinneth in one thing is guilty of all but we must propound vnto our selues the whole Law of God for the rule Iam. 2. 10. of our liues obseruing one table as well as another and worship him both in holinesse and righteousnesse and that not only for some small time but Luke 1. 74 75. all the dayes of our liues In respect of the subiect our obedience must bee Deut. 11. 1. with the whole man and like our loue from which it springeth it must be performed with all our hearts soules and strength But especially the Lord requireth the inward obedience of the heart wherein he chiefely Pro. 23. 26. Iohn 4. 23. Luke 1. 74. 2. Chro. 25. 2. delighteth we must worship him in spirit and truth in sincerity and vprightnesse of heart as before his face and in his sight and presence neither is it sufficient that we doe that which is right vnlesse we doe it vprightly It must be voluntary with cheerefulnesse and delight as the Saints and Angels doe the will of God in heauen For loue maketh euery burthen light and the Commandements of God not to be grieuous Yet this internall obedience is not sufficient vnlesse the externall be ioyned with it 1. John 5. 3. For God will bee worshipped with the whole man with our bodies as well as with our soules with our outward actions as well as with our inward affections §. Sect. 6 Of the meanes of obedience whereby we may be enabled to performe it Now the meanes which may moue and enable vs to yeeld this obedience are these first we must consider that the Lord hath created vs to this 1. Cor. 6. 20. Luke 1. 74. Rom. 6. 18. end that we should serue him and to the same purpose when we were by sin vtterly lost hath redeemed vs with the inestimable price of his Sonnes most precious blood that wee should worship him in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the dayes of our liues that being freed from sinne we should become the seruants of righteousnesse and from the slauerie of Satan that we should spend our dayes in Gods seruice Secondly let vs meditate on the riches of reward and that liberall wages which the Lord hath freely promised to giue vnto those who faithfully serue him in which respect we may iustly say of our actiue obedience as the Apostle of our passiue that all our seruice in this present world is not worthy the glory Rom. 8. 18. 2. Cor. 4. 17. which shall be reueyled for it is slight short and imperfect but shall cause vnto vs a farre more excellent and eternall waight of Glory Thirdly let vs consider that though our best seruice be mingled with many imperfections and stayned with our corruptions yet God in Christ will accept of it and not only pardon our wants but reward our wills and workes For he will Mal. 3. 17. spare vs as a man spareth his sonne that serueth him accepting of our will for the deede and of our sincere affections as of perfect actions Fourthly let vs consider that hereby we shall be assured of all Gods promises for Godlinesse is profitable for all things hauing the promises of this life and of that 1. Tim. 4. 8. which is to come Neither doth God require our obedience for his owne sake for he is most absolute in perfection and our righteousnesse doth not
15. 10. grace seeing of our selues we are not able so much as to thinke a good thought 2. Cor. 3. 5. Phil. 2. 13. but it is God alone that worketh in vs both the will and the deed §. Sect. 5 Of the excellency and vtility of humility And this is that humility which as it is in it selfe most excellent so vnto vs most profitable and therefore of vs to be much esteemed and earnestly 1. Pet. 5. 5. desired It is most excellent as being the most beautifull ornament which maketh vs appeare glorious in the sight of God in which respect the Apostle exhorteth vs to decke our selues with it Yea it adorneth all other vertues making them as the foyle the Iewell being in themselues rich and beautifull much more precious and glorious in the sight of God and men It is most profitable also for when we humble our selues and become euen with the earth we are thereby preserued from falling and when we iudge our selues we shall not be iudged of the Lord. Yea if wee humble our selues the Lord will exalt vs and if with the poore Publicane we 1. Cor. 15. 32. Luk. 18. 12. acknowledge our sinnes we shall depart iustified and find God faithfull 1. Ioh. 1. 9. of his promise in forgiuing vs our sinnes So the Apostle Iames Humble your selues in the sight of the Lord and he shall lift you vp And the Apostle Jam. 4. 10. Pro. 15. 35. Peter Humble your selues therefore vnder the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you in due time And thus the Lord exalteth the humble by inriching them with all his gifts both temporall spirituall and eternall With temporall benefits for by humility and the feare of the Lord are riches honour Pro. 22. 4. and life With spirituall graces for he resisteth the proud but giueth his 1. Pet. 5. 5. grace to the humble Hee filleth the hungry with good things but sendeth the proud empty away For he a Psal 25. 9. Mat 11. 25. Pro. 11. 2. teacheth them his wayes and reuealeth vnto them the secrets of his Kingdome making them thereby wise vnto their saluation He giueth them the grace of iustification and the b Luk 18. 12. Mat. 11. 28. forgiuenesse of of all their sinnes Hee maketh them c Gen. 32. 10. 1. Chro. 29. 15. thankefull in prosperity acknowledging themselues with Iacob and Dauid lesse then the least of Gods mercies and that all the good which they haue they haue receiued it from God and not onely patient but also thankefull d Lam. 3. 22. in greatest afflictions acknowledging that it is the mercies of the Lord that they are not vtterly consumed He blesseth them with his e Esa 57. 15. Iob 22. 29. presence taking delight to dwell with them that are of an humble heart and contrite spirit and so with his power and prouidence safegardeth them from all euill Finally in the life to come he crowneth humility with eternall glory and felicity according to that of our Sauiour Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome Mat. 5. 3. of heauen So that humility is not onely it selfe a most excellent grace but the chiefe meanes also of obtaining all other graces seeing God giueth them onely to the humble For they only shall haue the riches of Gods best and most precious gifts who will bee thankefull vnto God for them those onely are thankefull who highly esteeme them and they alone make this estimate who haue felt the want of them and earnestly desired them and they and no other haue thus done who are thorowly humbled in the sight and sense of their owne pouertie emptinesse and nakednesse §. Sect. 6 Of the meanes whereby we may attaine vnto humility And thus when our hearts are inlarged with that loue of this excellent and profitable grace let vs in the next place carefully vse all good meanes whereby we may be decked and adorned with it And first we must often and seriously meditate vpon Gods excellency and infinitenesse in wisedome glory power iustice and goodnesse and then the opinion of our owne worth will vanish like the light of a candle when the Sunne shineth in its full brightnesse and our seeming perfection which much pleased vs when we beheld it alone or compared it with others who come short of vs will appeare to be nothing but imperfection and wee vile and of no worth in our owne eyes Secondly let vs compare our state as it is with that it was in our creation and there will be great cause of humiliation in the best gifts and graces in vs seeing they are but the ruines of an old building and like base worne-out ragges of sumptuous apparell Thirdly let vs compare our vertues and duties with that which the Law requireth and so we shall haue good cause to be cast downe in the sight of our imperfection when we see what perfection euen vpon the penaltie of the curse it exacteth of vs. Fourthly let vs meditate on the matter whereof we are made and into which we shall againe be resolued and then may wee in all humility say with Iob to corruption Thou art my father and to the Iob 17. 14. worme Thou art my mother and my sister yea with Dauid that we are wormes and no men And acknowledge with Abraham that wee are but dust and Psal 22. 6. Gen. 18. 27. ashes vnworthy to appeare in Gods presence or to make any suite vnto him Fifthly let vs set our many and grieuous sinnes before vs our originall corruption which is the roote of all wickednesse and our actuall transgressions both of omission and commission and withall the wrath of God and curse of the Law due vnto them and this will make vs with the Publicane to cast downe our eyes and smite our brests and with broken and contrite hearts to cry out God be mercifull vnto me a sinner Luk. 18. Sixthly with our graces and vertues let vs compare our vices and corruptions and so our few graines of gold will be couered with such a masse of drosse our small quantity of good corne mixed with so much chaffe that our good parts will not so much lift vs vp as our ill will pull downe and humble vs if we weigh them in the ballance of an vnpartiall iudgement Seuenthly let vs remember that we haue nothing but what we haue receiued 1. Cor. 4. 7. and 15. 10. and that by the grace of God we are that we are and therefore let vs not boast as though we had not receiued them but retaining the ioy and comfort of Gods graces vnto our selues let vs returne all the praise and Iam. 1. 17. glory vnto him whose gifts they are and not carry our selues as proud owners but as humble and thankefull debters Eighthly let vs consider that what good things soeuer are in vs they are the Lords talents of Luk. 16. 2. which we must giue an account at
salt of wisedome and either tending to spirituall edification by instruction admonition exhortation reprehension Ephe. 4. 29. counsaile or comfort or to his temporall good in his worldly affaires And our owne comfort and saluation is furthered when vnto these former wee adde such speeches as more properly tend to our owne good as to the increasing of our wisedome and knowledge the strengthening of our faith the increasing of any other sauing grace as when we mutually informe one another and stirre vp the graces of God in vs by holy conferences or else such as are profitable in respect of our temporall estate as about the ordinary businesses of our callings and earthly affaires in which wee are daily conuersant Now that wee may thus rule our tongues and order our speeches in this holy manner abstaining from all light and vaine words friuolous and vnprofitable discourses and rotten and vnsauoury communication let vs consider that God hath giuen vs this excellent gift of speech that wee might thereby glorifie him and benefit one another especially in the best things therefore they who neglect these and direct their speech to contrary ends doe most fearefully abuse this excellent gift and thereby iustly deserue to be depriued of it Secondly let vs consider that God is alwaies present with vs and is an eare-witnesse of all our speeches and therefore let vs blush for shame to speake any thing in his hearing which we would not vtter in the presence of a graue wise and religious superiour Thirdly let vs continually remember that fearefull saying of our Sauiour that wee shall giue an account of euery idle word at the day of Iudgement and that by our words we shall either Mat. 12. 36 37. be iustified or condemned And therefore let vs not vainely and causelesly increase our accounts not onely by idle and vnprofitable but rotten and vnsauourie speeches nor vse this winde of words as bellowes to kindle against our selues the flame of Gods wrath here and the fire of hell in the life to come And to this purpose let vs with the Prophet Dauid take heede Psal 39. 1. to our waies that we offend not with our tongue and considering that it is an vnruly euill and as the Apostle Iames compareth it like an headstrong Iam. 3. 3 4. Horse that will stand on no ground let vs breake it with the terrours of Gods Iudgements and curbe it in with the bridle of his feare that it may not rush into any vnprofitable wicked speeches And because we cannot by all our force and skill care and watchfulnesse tame this wild and vnruly beast but that it will breake out and vtter such things as are either vaine and vselesse or hurtfull and sinfull let vs often desire the Lord who gaue vs our tongues that he will by his grace and holy spirit rule and order them and that he will set a watch before our mouthes and keepe the doore Psal 141. 3. of our lips that we may speake onely those things which may tend to Gods glory and the mutuall good of one another §. Sect. 3 Of the right ordering of our workes and actions Finally our daily care and indeuour must be rightly to order and dispose of all our workes and actions that they may be conformable to the Law of God both in doing the duties which he hath commanded and in leauing vndone the vices and sins which he hath forbidden and condemned and that whether they respect God or our neighbours and our selues For our time and strength must be spent either in the religious duties of Gods seruice or in the workes of iustice charity and mercy towards our neighbours or of temperance sobriety and Holinesse towards our selues either in the generall duties of Christianity or the speciall duties of our callings or in vsing the meanes and helpes whereby wee may bee the better fitted and enabled vnto all and euery of them That so wee may Matth. 5. 16. 1. Cor. 10. 31. 2. Pet. 1. 10. Ephe. 4. 1. glorifie our heauenly Father by hauing the light of our godly liues shining before men edifie our brethren by our good example make our owne calling and election sure walke worthy of our high calling adorne our profession gaine others to the profession and practice of the true Religion and by our fruitfulnesse of obedience obtaine a plentifull haruest of ioy and happinesse when Christ shall come to Iudgement and render vnto euery one according to their workes Neither must we onely take care that our mindes and hearts bee taken vp and furnished with good thoughts and holy affections and our tongues exercised in Christian communication and speeches sauouring of grace and godlinesse but also that wee bring them to good effect by practizing what wee thinke and speake in all our workes and actions Nor that wee mortifie sinne in our soules and affections but also in our earthly members Col. 3. 5. and outward man and if through frailty wee haue entertained into our minds and hearts sinfull thoughts and desires or broken out into rash and inconsiderate speeches yet at least let vs stay heere and not produce it into act which is to giue this cursed birth full growth and strength and to consummate and bring it to full maturity and perfection Jam. 1. 14 15. §. Sect. 4 Of the sixth maine duty which is to submit our selues to Gods good pleasure in all things The sixth maine dutie which we are daily to performe is to submit our selues in all things to Gods good will and pleasure and to resigne our Rom. 5. 3. soules bodies and states to be gouerned and guided by his prouidence without murmuring or repining being contented with whatsoeuer hee sendeth and to indure what he inflicteth not onely with meekenesse and patience but also with cheerefulnesse and spirituall ioy of which wee haue the Apostle Paul an example for our imitation who had learned in all estates to be content so that he could be abased and abound full and hungry yea was able to doe all things through the helpe of Christ that strengthened him Phil. 4. 11. 12. To the attaining of which contentation we are to consider that the Lord is infinitely wise and knoweth what is better for vs then we our selues infinite Matth. 6. 32. in power and able to do that which in his wisedome he knoweth to be best and infinite in goodnesse mercy and compassion towards vs and therefore that he will doe that vnto vs and for vs which in his wisdome hee knoweth most profitable especially for the eternall saluation of our soules That by his prouidence he ruleth all things in heauen and earth and most wisely and powerfully directeth them to the good of all that depend vpon him that in an especiall manner he doth thereby watch ouer them that feare and trust in him and will not suffer them to want any Psal 34. 9. thing that is good Finally we are to remember
1. Deut. 8. 17. receiue vnto secondary causes and inferiour meanes as to our owne wisedome power and industry but ascribe them wholly vnto God whose gifts they are for otherwise we shall not giue God the praise but sacrifice Hab. 1. 16. Isa 10. 13. to our owne nets Thirdly we must not thinke how much we want but what we haue not how many are preferred before vs but how many better then we come behind vs and want the good things which wee inioy The helpes whereby we may be furthered in this duty of thanksgiuing are first to take notice of those manifold blessings which the Lord heapeth vpon vs euen of his particular gifts at the very time they are receiued for whilest they are new they more affect vs and stirre vs vp to greater thankfulnesse Secondly we must highly value them in our iudgements if not in their owne worth yet as they are loue-tokens sent from God pledges and pawnes of his fauour and earnest-pennies of euerlasting life and happinesse for the better wee conceiue of Gods benefits the more thankefull will we be vnto him for them Thirdly we must keepe blessings receiued in former times in faithfull memories that we may often recount them and adding them to the new wee may become more feruent and cheerefull in performing of this duty especially those mayne benefits of Gods loue our election creation redemption vocation iustification sanctification continuall preseruation and assured hope of our glorification The which we shall the more readily doe if we consider that it is an especiall meanes to mooue the Lord to conferre vpon vs new benefits when as we are truely thankefull vnto him for the old which is the mayne end for which he gaue them and to cast vpon vs the seeds of his blessings with a liberall hand when as we are not barren grounds but yeeld vnto him the fruits of thanksgiuing CAP. XII Of the duties of the daily exercise in euery seuerall part of the day And first of waking with God by Prayer and Meditation §. Sect. 1 Of lifting vp our hearts vnto God assoone as we awake that we may offer vnto him our first seruice HAuing spoken of those Christian duties which are necessarily to bee performed thorowout the whole day we are now come to shew how the day is to bee spent in the particular parts of it and what speciall duties are to be performed in them seuerally as God shall giue vs conueniency and opportunity The which we will diuide as the naturall day consisting of foure and twenty houres is diuided into such duties as respect either the day or night The duties of the day are either those which ordinarily and constantly are to be done in certaine parts of the day without omission or alteration vnlesse vpon some vrgent cause or those which respect circumstances persons states occurrents not limited vnto any certaine time of the day but wayting vpon the most opportune and fit occasions Of the former sort are duties meerely religious and belonging to all Christians generally and indifferently or ciuill duties which notwithstanding ought to be performed of all the faithfull after an holy and religious manner The first religious duty wherewith wee are to beginne the day is that assoone as we awake out of our sleepe wee offer vnto God a morning sacrifice and as it were the first fruits of all our thoughts affections and indeuours sequestring them from the world and earthly vanities that they may bee fixed vpon God and things heauenly and spirituall And euen whilst our bodies lye still on our beds and before we haue vnbarred the dore of our lips to giue passage vnto our words in this still silence we must lift vp our hearts vnto God to commune with him and as it were to salute him by consecrating vnto him their first and best seruice Of which duty we haue Dauid an example for our imitation who no sooner awaked but he was presently with God as he professeth and sought him Psal 139. 18. Psal 63. 1. earely thirsting in his soule after him like a dry and thirsty land Yea so diligent and feruent was he in doing this duty that he preuented the dawning Psal 119. 147. of the morning and before he was thorowly awakened and had all his senses set fully at liberty from the bands of sleepe his heart is rowzed vp and fixed vpon God to giue him praise and then that being awaked Psal 57. 7 8. doth also awaken his tongue and instruments of musicke and his whole man to ioyne together in glorifying God So the Church in Esayas song saith that shee longed after God in the night and resolueth that with her Spirit Esa 26. 9. within her she would seeke him earely Which that wee may likewise practise let vs consider that the Lord our God is our chiefe treasure and our soules sole delight and therefore let our hearts bee first there where our treasure is and seeing he is the onely true cause of all comfort and reioycing let vs solace our selues in our fruition of him by this sweete communion For if worldly men who haue fixed their hearts on earthly vanities doe meditate on them in the night without wearinesse and no sooner awake in the morning but presently they consecrate vnto them their first thoughts and desires as the couetous man to his riches the ambitious man his honours the voluptuous man his pleasures let vs be ashamed if wee cannot be as feruent and diligent in dedicating vnto God the first seruice of our hearts who is infinitely more worthy of our loue Againe there is no businesse in the world of like waight and worth vnto this as bringing singular comfort to our hearts saluation to our soules therfore let vs giue it the priority and precedencie and not suffer euery pedling and pelting trifle take vp our hearts first and make it to watch at the doores and sometimes to depart away for want of admittance And seeing God is the most worthy person and offereth to conferre with vs about the waightiest occasions let vs not after an vnmannerly and foolish fashion suffer him to attend our leisure till we haue done conferring with the contemptible and worthlesse world about earthly occasions which are slight and of no value Finally the morning is the best and fittest time for the vndertaking and atchieuing of any imployment because of the freenesse of our minds from all incumbrances the viuacity and cheerefulnesse of the spirits and the vigour and abilities of all our parts by reason of our late rest and therefore let vs consecrate the very prime of it vnto our gracious God who best deserueth our best seruice §. Sect. 2 Of lifting vp our hearts by some short prayer Now this first seruice which we are to offer vnto God consisteth in prayer and meditation which are the two wings of our soules whereby they soare aloft into heauen and there inioy the presence of God The first duty
Lord keepe the City the watchman waketh but in vaine It is in vaine for vs to rise earely to sit vp late and to eate the bread of sorrowes not affording our selues a good meales meate out of our earnest desire to become rich For if wee neglect Gods seruice the Lord will blow vpon our labours and then though we sow much we shall bring in little wee shall Hag. 1. 6 9. eate but not haue enough we shall drinke but not be satisfied clothe our selues and not bee warme and earning wages for our worke we shall not bee the richer but put it all into a bag with holes Or if our labours prosper for the increasing of worldly wealth yet Gods blessing being wanting it shall doe vs more hurt then good bringing with it no sound comfort and contentment but carking care feare and griefe whereas the blessing of the Lord maketh rich and hee addeth no sorrow with it as the Wiseman speaketh Pro. 10. 22. And if we thus performe the duties of our callings in loue towards God and in obedience to his commandement and desire by prayer his blessing vpon our labours and yeeld him praise when he hath vouchsafed to giue it then shall we therein doe seruice vnto God though our condition and the workes of our vocation be neuer so meane and base as well as in hearing the Word or receiuing the Sacrament or in performing the most excellent duty which he hath commanded seeing though they differ in the matter yet not in respect of our minde and manner of doing them And so we may be assured not only that the Lord will prosper vs in them and giue them such good successe in this world as shall be most fitting for his glory and our spirituall good but also will richly reward them among other duties of his seruice with euerlasting ioy and happinesse in the life to come The which argument the Apostle vseth to perswade seruants to walke faithfully in their calling obeying their masters according to Col. 3. 23 24. the flesh and herein performing their duty with all cheerefulnesse and singlenesse of heart as vnto the Lord and not vnto men knowing that of the Lord they should receiue the reward of the inheritance because in seruing their masters they serued him §. Sect. 8 Of the vertues which must accompany vs in the duties of our callings The next thing to be considered is the vertues which ought to accompany vs in the right and religious performance of the duties of our callings For howsoeuer all vertues and graces are necessary vnto the person that must thus walke acceptably before God and scarce any can bee wanting to the well-performing of any good action yet there are some which more specially and properly belong to these duties of our callings and doe so immediately concerne them that they can in no good sort bee done of vs vnlesse in some measure we be qualified with them As first knowledge and iudgement whereby we must be inabled to discerne betweene good and euill right and wrong which must be our light to guide vs in all our wayes and our loade-starre to direct vs in all our courses which if it bee wanting we shall walke in darkenesse and be apt to fall into many errours Secondly affiance in God whereby we cast our selues vpon his promises and prouidence in the vse of lawfull meanes the which the Psalmist requireth of vs Commit thy way saith he vnto the Lord trust also in him and Psal 37. 5. he shall bring it to passe The which we may more easily doe if wee rightly consider our Sauiours argument which he vseth to the same purpose for if the Lord take care to feede the fowles of the aire which take no care for themselues and clotheth the lillies of the field which neither toyle nor spin how much more will hee prouide for vs all things necessary who rest vpon him in the vse of all lawfull courses and take moderate care and Mat. 6. 25 28. conuenient paines to serue his prouidence which affiance if it bee wanting we shall be subiect to innumerable discouragements macerate our selues with carking care and rush vpon all occasions into the vse of vnlawfull meanes when lawfull are wanting thereby shifting for our selues because we haue no assurance that God will prouide for vs. Thirdly wee must be accompanied with a good conscience both towards God and towards men and willing with the Apostle to liue honestly wee must with Act. 24. 16. him keep it in all things For hauing alwayes in our company this Monitour Heb. 13. 18. and Iudge it will notably preserue vs from all secret sinnes and craftie conueyances whereby we are naturally apt to wrong our neighbours that we may benefit our selues from all halting dissembling and double dealing when as it may be so cunningly and closely carried that respect of our credit worldly shame nor legall punishment are no sufficient bonds to restraine vs from them and from sloth and vnfaithfulnesse in performing our duties when no eye of man can take notice of it Fourthly we must haue contentation for our companion whereby we are in all things contented with Gods good pleasure and thinke that estate and condition best for vs in which he hath placed vs giuing indifferent welcome to prosperity or aduersity pouerty or riches gaine or losse because they are messengers alike of his sending and though some more then others doe in rougher tearmes deliuer his message yet when we doe entertaine them aright they all assure vs of his loue as being meanes to further our saluation And of this we haue an example in the Apostle Paul Who had learned Phil. 4. 12. both how to be abased and how to abound to be full and to be hungry to exceede and suffer want Vnto which if we attaine then shall we not be discontented with the basenesse of our callings nor enuie others their greater preferments their lesse labours and more gaines we shall not bee set vpon the racke of ambition aspiring daily after higher dignity seeing the place in which we are being of Gods appointing is most fitting for vs. Neither can any calling be thought too base for vs wherin acceptable seruice may be offered vnto God yea wherein he ioyneth with vs as our helper and assistant and rewards the paines which we take in them with no lesse wages then an heauenly inheritance We shall be preserued from that deadly dropsie of vnsatiable auarice for our conuersation may bee without Heb. 13. 5. 1. Tim. 6. 6. couetousnesse if we come to thinke godlinesse the greatest gaine and can bee content with such things as we haue And consequently we shall walke honestly in our callings when being contented with our estate and condition we will vse no indirect and vnlawfull meanes nor fraudulent violent or vniust courses to inrich our selues with other mens goods And goe on in our duty with much comfort and inward peace when
steale no more but rather let him labour Eph. 4. 28. working with his hands the thing that is good Vnto which precepts of holy Scriptures prescribing labour in the duties of our callings we may adde the examples of all the Saints of God in all ages as fit patternes for our imitation who haue alwayes liued in lawfull callings and haue faithfully laboured in the duties of them as of Abel and Noah before the flood the one a Shepherd the other an Husbandman and after the flood of the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac and Iacob and all their posterity that descended of them of Moses Dauid the Kings and Prophets of the Disciples of our Sauiour Christ and especially of the Apostle Paul who as he professeth laboured more aboundantly then they all not onely 1. Cor. 15. 10. 1. Thes 2. 9. 2. Thes 3. 7 8 9. imploying himselfe in his painefull Ministery and Apostleship but labouring also with his hands that he might not be offensiue but be a good example for others to imitate Yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe who though hee were free borne and the onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne of his Father submitted himselfe as a seruant to the common Law of mankinde tying himselfe by a voluntary necessity to labour in his calling and to doe the workes of him that sent him The which hee did with Iohn 9. 4. such cheerefulnesse and delight that he professeth it to bee his meate and Iohn 4. 34. drinke to doe the will of him that sent him and to finish his worke And therefore if the Sonne and heire could not be free from labour how should any of his seruants be exempted If the Lord of the Vineyard could not bee Matth. 20. 6. priuiledged from taking paines with what face can any of the hired labourers excuse their idlenesse §. Sect. 2 That it is Gods ordinance that wee should labour in our callings Againe let vs consider that the Lord himselfe is the Author of our callings and that it is his ordinance that we should labour in them It is he that created and redeemed and continually preserueth vs who hath called and set vs in our places and hath appointed vnto euery one their worke and taske and hath not onely promised his helpe and assistance in all our labours but also hath incouraged vs to take paines by assuring vs that he will richly reward them when wee haue finished our worke And therefore if after all this we will detract our labour and spend our time in sloth and idlenesse what is it but to leaue our standings and to withdraw our selues from vnder his gouernment to neglect Gods worke and to doe seruice vnto Satan and the sinfull lusts of our owne flesh what is it but to depriue our soules of that comfort which we might haue in his company and assistance and by pretending difficulty in the atchieuing our labours to argue and accuse him of insufficiency who hath vndertaken to assist vs and by his helpe to giue good successe vnto all our iust indeuours what is it but for the inioying of short and carnall ease to our flesh to forfeit all hope of obtaining those rich heauenly and euerlasting rewards which he hath promised vnto vs as the free and gracious wages of our momentany labours §. Sect. 3 That God blesseth the diligent with many benefits Finally let vs consider the manifold benefits wherewith God hath promised to blesse our labours if we be painefull and diligent in the duties of our callings And contrariwise how much he abhorreth and condemneth sloth and idlenesse punishing them that liue in it with innumerable euils which he hath iustly caused to attend vpon it Concerning the former it may be a strong inducement to make vs diligent in our callings if we consider the benefits which accrew vpon it For whereas euery one is ready to aske Who will shew vs any good and is easily drawne to any course by the Psal 4. 6. golden chaine of gaine and aduantage the Wiseman telleth vs first generally that in all labour there is profit whereas idle talking with the lips tendeth Pro. 14. 23. onely to penurie And in many other places he setteth foorth more particularly the manifold benefits that doe accompany it For it exalteth to honour and authority according to that The hand of the diligent shall beare Pro. 12. 24. rule but the slothfull shall be vnder tribute And againe Seest thou a man diligent Pro. 22. 29. in his businesse he shall stand before Kings he shall not stand before meane men It buildeth the house and maketh and erecteth mansion places for themselues and their posterity So saith Salomon Prepare thy worke without Pro. 24. 27. and make it fit for thy selfe in the field and afterwards build thy house Contrary to the practice of many in these times who preferre building and neglect husbandry and take care to set vp faire houses before they haue any land to lay vnto them building themselues quite out of dores and like fooles making houses for wise men to dwell in It is crowned by the Lord with riches and plenty For he that tilleth the land shall be satisfied with Pro. 12. 11. 28. 19. Pro. 10. 4. 20. 13. bread and the hand of the diligent maketh rich And whereas that which commeth lightly is as idlely spent that which is gotten by honest labour is preserued and multiplied according to the saying of the Wiseman Wealth gotten by vanity shall be diminished but he that gathereth by labour Pro. 13. 11. shall increase It preserueth the body in health which languisheth with idlenesse maketh the meate pleasant by quickning the appetite and the sleepe sweete whereas the idle turne vpon the bed as a dore vpon the Eccl. 5. 12. Pro. 26. 14. hindges and not being able to rest because they haue not laboured toyle themselues with too much ease and are tired with tumbling euen vpon their beds of downe being iustly punished by God with restlesse tossing and sweating in the night because they would take no paines to serue him in the day It affordeth comfortable and liberall meanes not only for the maintenance of our selues and those that belong vnto vs but also whereby we may be beneficiall vnto others that neede our helpe and exercise our charity in the workes of mercy and in relieuing the poore members of Iesus Christ which hee will richly reward and crowne with glory and Mat. 25. 34 35. 1. Tim. 6. 18 19. Pro. 21. 25 26. happinesse at the day of Iudgement For whereas the sluggard whose hands refuse to labour getteth nothing for himselfe to satisfie his desire though hee coueteth greedily all the day long the righteous that is diligent in the workes of his calling hath not onely sufficient for his owne vse but giueth liberally to others and spareth not And this end the Apostle propoundeth to our paines in our honest callings willing men to labour Eph. 4.
shamefull ouerthrow vnlesse our Christian Armour be put on and fastened vnto vs with the girdle of verity and vnlesse wee be trained vp in this Christian warfare and taught rightly to vse the sword of the Spirit the Word of God Now if vowes must be paid without delay then Psal 76. 11. how much more this which importeth vs as much as our saluation A third reason may be taken from Gods loue and fatherly care and prouidence watching ouer vs and preseruing vs from all perils and dangers in the time of our infancie and childehood vnto which as we were naturally most prone so were wee vtterly vnable to auoid them by our owne prouidence or to vse any meanes to helpe our selues Which consideration should moue vs as soone as we are come to knowledge and discretion to testifie our thankefulnesse by learning his waies that wee may walke in them and thereby glorifie him who hath so graciously preserued vs. Fourthly let vs consider that the Law was giuen not onely to the ancient and them of ripe age but also to children and young men that they might cleanse their wayes by taking heede thereunto according to Gods Psal 119. 9. Word which made Iosuah to reade it vnto them all alike And both old Iosh 8. 35. and yong shall be called to giue an account of their workes and waies at the last day according to that in the Reuelation I saw the dead great and Apoc. 20. 12. small stand before God and the bookes were opened c. and the dead were iudged out of those things which were written in those bookes according to their workes And therefore the young as well as the old must prepare themselues for their reckoning and learne both what strength the Booke of the Law hath to indite and condemne him and how by the Gospell they may trauerse this inditement and be acquitted from that dreadfull sentence of condemnation by pleading full satisfaction by Iesus Christ And therefore when his soule wallowing it selfe in carnall delights saith vnto him Reioyce Eccles 11. 9. O yong man in thy youth and let thine heart cheere thee in the dayes of thy youth and walke in the waies of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes then let him remember that for all these things God will bring him to iudgement Fifthly consider that this age aboue all others is most fit to receiue and retaine instruction and information in the wayes of the Lord as also reformation and amendment of our sinfull courses Which if it bee deferred to riper age they will be lesse able to learne the will and wayes of God to hold them in memory or to obey and walke in them For the faculties of the soule will bee more enfeebled and they distracted with earthly cares and loue of the world ambition couetousnesse voluptuousnesse they will then be more apt to content themselues with their ignorance wherin they haue bin so long nuzzled their passions will grow strong and violent and custome of sinning laying fast hold on them will pull them backe from the schoole of piety yea will make them openly to professe that they are now too old to learne by all which who seeth not how desperately they hazzard their saluation who put off instruction and neglect the meanes of it in the time of their youth And therefore let vs hearken to the Wise mans counsell and remember now our Creator in the daies of our Eccles 12. 1. youth while the euill daies come not nor the yeeres draw nigh when thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Sixthly let vs remember that God would haue first fruits offered vnto him as a type to teach vs that the prime of our age is an oblation wherein he chiefly delighteth that our Sauiour was much pleased when little children entertained him with their applause Crying Math. 21. 15. Psal 8. 2. Hosanna to the Sonne of Dauid that God out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hath ordained strength because of his enemies that he might stil the enemie the auenger Finally that in the time of the law they were inioyned to offer vnto God the yong and lusty not the old and lame to shew that the Lord would haue the prime of our age and strength consecrated to his seruice although in the Gospell all are inuited to the marriage Supper the poore Luke 14. 21. maimed halt and blinde because so we bring with vs the wedding garment it is better in our age to come halting to the feast and through the dimnesse of our sight groping for the right way then to frame worldly excuses and absent our selues altogether §. Sect. 9 Of the great profit of this exercise of catechizing Lastly let the profit manifold benefits which accompany this dutie be an effectuall meanes to perswade vs vnto it For they only are saued who Ioh. 3. 16 17 36 Mar. 16. 16. Rom. 10. 15 17. haue faith and they faith alone who haue knowledge both which come by hearing as the Apostle teacheth vs How shall they call vpon him in whom they haue not beleeued and how shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard and how shall they heare without a Preacher So then faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the Word of God And this the Apostate Iulian well knew and therefore to roote out the Church he thought it the most effectuall way to put downe Christian Schooles and Religious exercises that being depriued of all meanes of knowledge hee might leade them in their ignorance which way hee listed Secondly it is a notable meanes to free them from errours and heresies when they are grounded in the knowledge of the truth and the analogie of faith that will serue them as a touchstone and rule according to which doctrines must bee examined which whoso want may easily be led euen into fundamentall errours For as the Apostle saith there must bee heresies in the world vnto 1. Cor. 11. 19. which men naturally are more inclined then vnto the truth and therefore we must not hand ouer head hearken vnto euery spirit nor when we heare iudge of them according to our naturall reason but wee must as the Apostle Iohn exhorteth vs try them whether they be of God or no by 1. Ioh. 4. 1. bringing them to be examined by the touchstone of his Truth The which wee shall be vtterly vnable to doe if we be not acquainted with the Scriptures and haue no knowledge of the maine principles and the analogie of faith contayned in them Where by the way wee may note the cause why Popery so much increaseth amongst vs namely because for want of catechizing in many places the people remaine ignorant of the principles of Christian Religion and so vpon the alleadging of any carnall reason plausible to corrupted nature they become an easie prey to the Priests and Iesuites Thirdly It helpeth notably to the hearing of Sermons with profit
publike seruice out of our great plenty either for the better effecting of it or for the easing of those who by reason of their weake estates are not so able as wee to beare the burthen The latter by exercising our bounty and Christian charity in almes-deeds and in doing the works of mercy feeding the hungry clothing the naked visiting and relieuing the poore that are sicke and imprisoned To which end let vs consider that God hath giuen vnto vs our plenty and greater store not as vnto absolute Lords to spend it how we list but as vnto Stewards for the good also of our fellow seruants who shall be called vnto account if we haue beene faithfull in thus imploying them and haue giuen to euery one in the houshold their due portion that where God hath giuen much there hee will also require much and that they who by his bounty haue much goods and exceede in riches doe also much good and as the Apostle speaketh Be rich in good workes ready to 1. Tim. 6. 17 18 19. distribute and willing to communicate laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold on eternall life Finally let vs consider that they are not so much to bee valued in their owne excellency or the present profit which they bring vnto vs seeing these commodities haue so many discommodities that it is hard to say whether exceede but as they are the great instruments of well-doing and as it were spacious fields in which our bounty and charity are not confined in narrow limits but may take large liberty to walke abroad and to exercise themselues vnto full contentment Whereby as wee are inabled to doe good vnto many so most of all to our selues seeing for the present wee purchase of them their best iewels at low rates euen their loue hearts and feruent prayers for some poore pittance of earthly trifles and for the time to come the Lord will infinitely reward of his meere grace and large bounty these gifts of ours which hee hath first giuen vs as though wee were not Stewards but Owners and in our owne right had bestowed them not so much vpon the poore as vpon Iesus Christ himselfe as he will before the Saints and Angels professe at the day of Iudgement Mat. 25. 34. The which excellent dutie is so necessary vnto the exercise of a godly life and is so much neglected in this cold and vncharitable age not onely amongst gripple and greedy worldlings who are ready rather to strip the poore then to clothe them and to pull the meate out of their mouthes by depriuing them through oppression of their meanes then to feed and nourish them but euen among professors of Religion who seeming to make conscience of religious duties are notwithstanding exceeding cold in their deuotion and charity that I would much more fully and effectually haue insisted vpon and pressed it had I not already published a full Treatise of this argument §. Sect. 3 Three other Cautions to be obserued for the right vse of prosperity Fifthly vnto the right vse of prosperity and temporall benefits there is required that wee vse them as pilgrims and strangers and not as Citizens of the world for so Gods Saints haue alwaies acknowledged themselues Gen. 47. 9. Psal 39. 12 Heb. 11. 9 13. 13. 14. 1. Pet. 2. 11. Heb. 12. 1. Phil. 3. 20. Col. 3. 1 2. and that they had heere no continuing city but sought one to come The consideration whereof must weane our hearts and affections from the immoderate loue of the world earthly vanities and cause vs to fix them on heauen and heauenly things which is our country and place of residence to fight against our carnall lusts which fight against our soules and to contemne and cast away whatsoeuer becommeth an hindrance in our iourney towards our heauenly home And seeing wee are Citizens of heauen wee must haue our conuersation there seeking those things which are aboue and not those which are beneath and thinke that nothing more doth misbeseeme vs then that being the children of God heires apparent to his heauenly Kingdome wee should like base slaues spend our time and strength in the diuels drudgerie and in toyling in the workes of darknesse and seruitude of sin for the contemptible wages of earthly vanities Sixthly we must vse them not as durable and permanent riches and inheritances but as things momentany and mutable which are ready daily and hourely to leaue vs and wee them And therefore our best course will bee to vse so these flitting vanities as that they may further our assurance of our heauenly patrimonie which is permanent and euerlasting and as our Sauiour counsaileth vs to make vs friends of the Mammon of iniquitie by vsing them as helpes and instruments to further vs in the workes of Luke 16. 9. mercy that when they are taken from vs and wee from them wee may bee receiued into heauenly habitations Finally if wee would rightly vse our prosperity and temporall blessings wee must not suffer our mindes and hearts to rest vpon them but vse them onely as steps whereby wee may mount vp aloft in heauenly meditations and desires As when wee see any beautie or excellencie in the creatures to thinke how infinitely they exceede in the Creator from whom they haue them when wee are ready with the Queene of Sheba to thinke our selues happie in hearing the wisedome of an earthly Salomon to raise our mindes higher and to thinke on their happinesse who attaine vnto the vision and fruition of God and heare with rauishing admiration his all-knowing and infinite wisedome When we are delighted with the society of Gods Saints in earth who like our selues are full of imperfections to take occasion hereby of meditating of that felicity wee shall haue in our heauenly fellowship when both they and wee shall bee perfected in loue and louelynesse When wee take pleasure in our earthly prosperity honours and riches mixed with many miseries and are but Gods common gifts which he giueth in as great plenty to his slaues as to his sonnes to his enemies as well as vnto his friends nor to rest in these worldly delights and to say with Peter in another case It is good being here but raise our mindes and hearts by these occasions to an higher pitch thinking how incomparably greater our ioy shall be when we shall attaine vnto the full fruition of our heauenly happinesse which shall not be embittered with any miserie and to the inheritance which God hath prepared in peculiar for his Sonnes and Saints in whom hee is chiefly delighted And so shall we not dote in our worldly and carnall loue nor haue our minds and hearts caught and intangled in this birdlime of worldly vanities but vse them onely for present necessity and refreshing that so wee may againe like Eagles leaue the earth and mount aloft in heauenly meditations and desires §.
either from the causes which are efficient or finall or from the subiect and adiuncts of our afflictions And first in our meditations we are to consider that God himselfe is chiefe cause and principall Author of all our afflictions whatsoeuer bee the meanes and instruments The which may confirme our patience and comfort vs in our afflictions seeing they must needs be good and iust as comming from him who is the chiefe Goodnesse in himselfe and the Authour and fountaine of all goodnesse which is in the creatures Secondly that hee hath not onely in some generall manner in his eternall counsell preordained our afflictions and left all the rest to bee disposed by chance and fortune but that hee specially ordereth and ruleth them with his most wise iust and gracious prouidence both in respect of their manner measure and continuance making the ends of all inferiour causes to serue for his supreme ends which are his glory and our saluation Thirdly that the meritorious causes of all our afflictions are our sinnes which are so many and grieuous that our greatest afflictions are farre lesse and lighter then by our sinnes we haue iustly deserued Fourthly that our afflictions are not signes of Gods hatred nor the punishments of a iust Iudge but the chastisements and corrections of a gracious Father and that they proceed from his meere loue the which appeareth first in the measure of our afflictions both in respect of their quantity and time of continuance For he hath appointed a measure which cannot be exceeded and this quantity is small and light and how long also they shall last and continue the which time is short and momentany in comparison of that super-excellent and eternall waight of glory which they shall cause vnto vs. Yea he so measureth our afflictions vnto vs as that they do not exceed our ability to indure 1. Cor. 10. 13. them seeing he is alwayes ready to lessen our burthen or to increase our strength that we may be able to beare it Neither doth the Lord take delight in our smart to inflict vpon vs more then is needfull but measureth our afflictions not according to desert but so much onely as is necessary for his owne glory and our saluation §. Sect. 4 That our afflictions tend to the setting foorth of Gods glory Fifthly let vs also consider the ends of our afflictions which God propoundeth vnto them wherein his great loue shineth and appeareth The first and chiefe whereof is his owne glory seeing he manifesteth his power and goodnesse by assisting vs in our afflictions and by taking occasion thereby to shew and try his spirituall graces which he hath bestowed vpon vs the which should comfort vs in all our troubles seeing God heereby vouchsafeth vs this high priuiledge to be instruments of his glory The second end is the good both of our neighbours and our selues They receiue much good by our afflictions seeing they learne by our example to feare God in his iudgements and are restrained from the same sinnes which they see corrected in vs. Secondly as wee are ensamples of Gods graces shining in this fiery triall and also through our infirmities of humane frailty that seeing Gods perfection in our imperfections and his power and wisedome in our folly and weakenesse they may take occasion to glorifie him Thirdly because by our afflictions wee are made more compassionate and more able and ready to comfort others with those consolations wherewith our selues haue beene comforted The which also should make vs patient in our troubles yea euen to be thankfull and greatly to reioyce in that God vseth vs as meanes and instruments of our neighbours good whom wee ought to loue as our selues and as much as in vs lieth to helpe them in all things which may further their saluation §. Sect. 5 That God vseth our afflictiōs as means of our owne good Secondly let vs consider that the Lord vseth our afflictions as notable meanes of our owne good and of deriuing vnto vs many singular benefits both in respect of this life and the life to come For first hee vseth them for trials for the discouery of those spirituall graces which he hath giuen vs not vnto himselfe who knowing all things needeth no such helpes but vnto vs and others that hee may bee glorified in them and take occasion thereby to glorifie vs by crowning his gifts when by this Iam. 1. 12. triall they are approoued and may also edifie those who obserue them in vs and mooue them to follow our good example And likewise for the making knowne of our infirmities and corruptions that wee may be truely humbled in the sight and sense of them In which regard our greatest trials not exceeding our strength as God hath promised should bring vnto vs an answerable measure of sound comfort seeing they are assured signes vnto vs of the greatest measure of sauing graces in vs. Secondly hee vseth them as effectuall meanes to further our conuersion fitting and preparing vs thereby for the more diligent hearing of the Word and so working in vs by both ioyned together true contrition and humiliation Thirdly hee vseth them as speciall meanes to preuent sinne and to preserue vs from falling into it and also to mortifie and subdue those corruptions by all good meanes which adhere and cleaue vnto vs as pride carnall concupiscence selfe-loue and loue of the world The which should greatly increase our patience and comfort vs in afflictions for if we are willing to indure so much to be eased of bodily and temporall euill how much more should we chearefully indure any afflictions to bee Heb. 12. 9. freed from those which are spirituall and euerlasting as the Apostle reasoneth Fourthly he vseth them as notable helpes to increase in vs all his spirituall graces as sauing knowledge and remembrance of God a liuely faith vnfained repentance firme affiance hope loue feare patience and humility both by making vs more carefull in the vse of the meanes whereby they are begun and increased in vs and by exercising them with these trials And also to bring forth the fruits of these graces by new obedience prayer and more zealous performance of all other duties of his seruice Finally by our afflictions the Lord also maketh vs more forward to imbrace all vertues and to performe all Christian duties which concerne both our neighbours and our selues For whereas prosperity vsually incourageth men to wrong and oppression affliction being sanctified vnto vs is a notable motiue to perswade vs to carry our selues iustly in all our actions to be mercifull and compassionate towards others in their miseries and to bee meeke humble and courteous towards all men So also they increase the knowledge of our selues our courage Christian fortitude and strength to beare our crosses and miseries as being the spiritual exercise of these graces and finally our temperance sobriety modesty chastity as it were easie to shew if we could heere insist in these particulars In respect also
those in the day and that in all of them wee may carry our selues so as becommeth Christians And in this regard there are some duties to be performed at our going to bed and some in the rest of the night At our going to bed we are generally to cōsider that wee are still in the sight and presence of God who seeth our downe-lying and our vprising and searcheth our most secret actions yea euen our hearts and reines And that there is also a guard of holy Angels who are appointed by our great Lord to pitch their tents about vs and to watch ouer vs that they may preserue vs from all perils and dangers vnto which wee are waking and sleeping continually subiect In regard of which glorious and holy presence we are as carefully and conscionably to behaue our selues in all Christian duties as if all the world should looke vpon vs. The first whereof is that at our lying down when all things being quiet about vs and wee freed from all worldly distractions wee spend some little time in holy meditations calling to our remembrance and examining our conuersation how wee haue behaued our selues in the performance of all Christian duties required of vs in the day past of which we haue before spoken As first how wee haue performed those generall duties which belong to euery day and all parts of it Whether and in what manner wee haue renewed our couenant with God by renewing of our faith and repentance How wee haue sought the Lord our God by consecrating our selues wholy both in our soules and bodies vnto his worship and seruice and haue laboured to make him our owne in and through Christ and to recouer our right in him which we had lost in Adam How wee haue profited in the sauing knowledge of him and in our adhering vnto him with our hearts and affections how our sweete communion with him hath bin increased and the comfortable fellowship of his holy Spirit dwelling in our hearts sealed and assured in vs and how we haue indeuoured to haue and hold his face and fauour in Iesus Christ Whether wee haue kept the whole Armour of God fast buckled vnto vs and if wee haue failed herein then in what graces wee haue found greatest defect How wee haue indeuoured to arme our selues against all sinne and what new strength wee haue gathered to withstand and mortifie our corruptions especially those vnto which wee are naturally most inclined and with what desire and resolution wee haue imbraced all vertue and laboured to performe all Christian duties vnto God our neighbours and our selues Whether wee haue rightly disposed our hearts tongues and actions so as they might in all things bee conformable to the Law of God How we haue submitted our selues in all things to Gods will and pleasure and resigned our soules bodies and states to be gouerned and guided by his wise prouidence without murmuring and repining Finally whether wee haue beene frequent and feruent in powring forth our soules in prayer vpon all good occasions desiring the things wee neede and praysing him for those benefits which we haue receiued §. Sect. 4 That we must examine our selues how we haue spent the day past So likewise we may examine our selues how we haue performed those duties which belong to the particular parts of the day As whether wee did awake with God and offred vnto him our morning sacrifice of prayer and meditation with what faithfulnesse wee haue walked in the duties of our callings and how therein we haue ioyntly aymed at Gods glory and the good of our neighbours together with our owne profit whether we haue done the duties of them in the obedience and loue of God and haue performed our earthly duties with heauenly minds and affections Whether we haue rightly vsed our recreations refreshing our bodies and mindes with lawfull sports in a good manner to right ends with obseruation of the rules and cautions required in them especially in respect of their time that we haue not beene ouer-lauish to the thrusting out but rather fitting our selues for better exercises How wee haue carried our selues in receiuing of our food blessing it by prayer and thanksgiuing and vsing it with temperance and sobriety so as wee haue thereby beene better fitted for Gods seruice Whether wee haue rightly vsed our solitarinesse spending our time neither idly nor vnprofitably and how we haue behaued our selues in our society both in our choyse of good company and in performing with them all Christian duties of piety Iustice and ciuill honesty for the mutuall good of one another How we haue performed duties belonging to the family and what care wee haue had that not onely our selues but also those who are vnder our charge should serue the Lord. How we haue carried our selues in our prosperity by praising God for it and by so vsing it as that wee might be the better inabled to glorify him and to performe all good duties to our neighbours and how also we haue profited by our afflictions and chastizements for the drawing of vs neerer vnto God in all holy and righteous duties and the weaning of our hearts and affections from the loue of the world The which examination wee should not thinke too tedious and laborious if at least wee be in our health and strength and not disabled thereunto by our weakenesse infirmities and vnaptnesse to take our rest if at the first it be but a little disturbed in which case if our imployments will affoord vnto vs any fit leysure and opportunity it were good to allot some short time vnto this exercise before our going to bed seeing if wee bee once accustomed vnto it wee shall performe it at least in those points which are most necessary for our owne particular with great facility and in a little time Yea in truth if wee would but consider how farre some of the Heathens themselues haue proceeded in this dutie and what singular fruits and benefits arise from it we might well be ashamed who professe Christianity of our great neglect and bee moued to spare some little time from our sleepe when as wee may improue it to so much spirituall profit and aduantage I vse saith Seneca this authority Vtor hac potestate quotidie apud me causam dico c. Senec de ira lib 3. cap. 36 and daily pleade my cause with my selfe When the light is taken away and my wife being acquainted with my custome holdeth her peace I examine vvith my selfe the vvhole day past and reuievv all that I haue said or done I hide nothing from mine ovvne scrutiny I passe by nothing for vvhy should I feare any thing by reason of my errours vvhen as I can say See that thou doest it no more and for this time I vvil pardon thee And the same counsaile hee giueth to his friend Lucilius Conuince Quantum potes teipsum coargue c. thy selfe saith hee as much as thou canst search into thy selfe First execute
Saturday in the afternoone and resort to the Church that their bodies being refreshed by rest and their minds prepared by prayer and meditation they might be the better inabled to performe the publike and solemne duties of Gods seruice the Day following The which being now neglected and both Masters and seruants taken vp with their laborious businesse later for the most part that night then any other in the weeke with watching and wearinesse they are made altogether vnfit to performe Gods worship their hearts being full fraught with their worldly affaires not hauing had so much leisure as to take a farewell of them and their heads so drowzy and heauie that they cannot hold them vp from nodding and sleeping euen in that time which is allotted to diuine exercises §. Sect. 4 That in our preparation we must purge our selues from all sinfull corruption And as we must thus in our preparation purge our hearts from worldlinesse so must we with no lesse care cleanse them from all sinfull wickednesse 1. Pet. 2. 1 2. To which purpose we must search and examine them if no sinnes lye lurking in them vnrepented of especially such as most hinder our profiting by the publike Ministery as wrath and maliciousnesse and chiefly against our teachers filthinesse dissimulation hypocrisie preiudice and forestalled opinions voluptuousnesse couetousnesse worldlinesse and such like And yet more particularly wee must call to our remembrance what sinnes wee haue committed the weeke past and seriously repent of them lest continuing in our wicked courses and cherishing our sinnes as it were in our bosomes when we present our selues before God they moue him to abhorre vs and our sacrifices of prayer and thankesgiuing Esa 6. 9. and to giue vs ouer to be further hardened by the deceitfulnesse of sinne whereof it will follow that our hearts becomming fat our eares heauie and our eyes shut we shall heare and not vnderstand and see but not perceiue that we might be healed and conuerted And this the Lord required of the Israelites that they should first wash them and make them cleane Esa 1. 16. namely in turning from their sinnes by vnfained repentance and then approch and come vnto him The which was typically signified by that commandement of washing their clothes before the giuing of the Law Exod. 19. 10. answerable vnto which is the sanctifying and purging of our hearts by faith and repentance from all pollution of sinne before wee approch into Gods presence to receiue his Word For he will not turne vnto vs nor by his gracious promises assure vs of his fauour till we turne from our sinnes nor suffer the precious liquor of his Word to be corrupted and spoyled by powring it into our hearts whilest they continue in their pollution and vncleannes Neither are we fit to receiue the ambassage of our reconciliation till we haue made our peace with him For if hauing offended Math. 5. 23 24. our brother we may not approch vnto the Altar to offer our gift till wee haue first sought to be reconciled vnto him then much lesse may we presume to offer vnto God any religious seruice vntill first by our vnfained repentance we haue made our peace with him And if our fallow grounds must be prepared and plowed vp before they be sowed then must wee in like manner plow vp the fallow grounds of our hearts as the Prophet exhorteth Jer. 4. 4. before they can be fit to receiue the seed of Gods Word §. Sect. 5 That in our preparation we must vse al helps which may further vs in the sanctifying of the Lords Day Secondly we must in this preparation vse all helpes which may further vs in the sanctification of the Lords Day as namely those common Psal 119. 20. Psal 42. 1 2. meanes of prayer reading the Word and other holy writings meditation c and more especially we must worke as much as may be longing desires in our hearts after the Lords Day that therein wee may come into Gods holy assemblies and be made partakers of his holy ordinances and that we may truly say with Dauid My soule breaketh for the longing that it hath vnto thy iudgements at all times And againe As the Hart panteth after the water-brookes so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God for the liuing God O when shall I come and appeare before God For if wee expect it not with desire we shall not greatly reioyce in the fruition if it be not our longing before it approch it will not when wee inioy it be our delight Now to stirre vp these longing desires after it wee must meditate on the excellency of this Day aboue all others seeing God hath consecrated it vnto his worship and seruice as his owne peculiar drawing neerer vnto vs in all visible signes of his presence and admitting vs to come neerer vnto him then at other times Let vs thinke on the spirituall beauty and brauery of Gods House and of his holy Assemblies graced and adorned with his speciall fauours and with the light of his countenance which infinitely excelleth the Sunne in brightnesse and comfort whereby the Church becommeth faire as the Moone cleere as the Cant. 6. 10. Sunne and terrible as an army with banners with which spirituall beauty being rapt vp and rauished let vs cry out with Dauid O how amiable are Psal 110. 3. thy Tabernacles O Lord of Hosts My soule longeth yea euen fainteth for the Psal 84. 1 2 10. Courts of the Lord my heart and my flesh cryeth out for the liuing God c. A day in thy Courts is better then a thousand I had rather bee a dore-keeper in the House of my God then to dwell in the tents of wickednesse Let vs meditate on the singular priuiledges which the Lord on this Day imparteth vnto vs with a liberall hand admitting vs into his Chamber of presence and communicating himselfe vnto vs by giuing vs free liberty to speake vnto him about all our wants and grieuances and to offer vnto him our suits and petitions with a gracious promise that hee will heare and grant them yea into his Councell chamber where he imparteth vnto vs all his secrets and the chiefe counsels of his Kingdome and not only causeth the great Charter of our peace and manifold priuiledges to be read and expounded vnto vs but also sealeth it by his Sacraments for our owne peculiar vse Finally let vs consider of the manifold benefits which the Lord on that Day communicateth vnto vs. For it is Gods Festiuall wherein hee nourisheth our soules vnto life eternall if wee bring a good appetite to this spirituall banquet It is his great Seale Day wherein hee signeth and sealeth vnto vs a generall pardon for all our sins and all our spirituall euidences of our heauenly inheritance both by the priuie Signet of his Spirit and the great Seale of his Sacraments It is the Day of Gods largesse wherein he
gouernours of the family doe examine them and require of them an account of that which they haue heard that they may see how they haue profited by the publike Ministery For if they thinke it necessary that they should giue them an account of their worldly businesse or how they haue layd out their moneys when they haue sent them to the Market then much more should they examine them what spirituall Markets they haue made for the good of their soules and how much they haue gained by the vse of Gods holy Ordinances for the inriching of them with the treasures of knowledge In all which the Master of the family must shew much loue and patience commending those who answere well and bearing with the infirmities of such as are of meaner capacities and weaker memories when they see that they doe their best and doe not faile through grosse negligence that they may not by being shamed and disgraced be altogether discouraged in these religious exercises To which purpose they must make the best they can of their imperfect answeres by inlarging and perfecting them and supplying that in which they are defectiue And on the other side the inferiours must shew themselues tractable and teachable and with willingnesse and cheerefulnesse submit themselues vnto Gods holy Ordinances that they may profit by these exercises and increase more and more in the knowledge of God and his will §. Sect. 3 Of other priuate duties to be done on the Lords Day After the finishing of which family exercises wee are to spend the rest of the time before Supper in other Christian duties as in visiting and Mat. 25. 35. comforting those that bee sicke or in any other great affliction and ministring vnto their necessities if they stand in need of our helpe In making peace and friendship betweene those who are at variance by compounding the differences which are betweene them In meditating vpon the great Booke of the creatures and obseruing in them the infinite and admirable wisedome and goodnesse power and prouidence of our gracious God that wee may take occasion to render vnto him the glory and praise of his owne workes when wee see their wonderfull variety and comely order their qualities and formes their beauty and excellencie their vse and profit for the seruice of man Obseruing likewise in them such good properties as are worthy our imitation and bee ashamed that they should exceed vs in them who haue the vse of reason and so many religious helpes and meanes and their ill properties that wee may auoyd them taking occasion thereby to be humbled in the remembrance of our fall from our created purity and integrity as being the principall cause of all their defects and imperfections So also vvee may in this respect make good vse of the Creatures when by them wee take occasion of some spirituall Meditation As when wee see their beautie to thinke how infinitely beautifull hee is that created them when we consider how delightfull and profitable they are vnto man to conceiue thereby what surpassing excellencies God hath prepared for his owne Children in his Kingdome of Glory when wee obserue how seruiceable they are to man to thinke how much more diligent wee should be in seruing our great Lord and Master who hath giuen both to them and vs our birth and being More particularly when we behold the earth whereof we were made let vs take occasion to thinke of our owne basenesse and that we shall be resolued into earth againe when we see the flowers of the field let vs thinke of the momentany mutability of worldly prosperity and of Eccl. 12. 7. Esa 40. 6. our owne mortality who are like vnto them when we looke vpon the Suns glorious brightnesse let vs take occasion thereby to thinke of Gods glorious Maiesty and of the glory and brightnesse of the Saints in heauen who shall farre exceed it Of which we haue our Sauiour Christ an example for Iob. 4. and the 6. our imitation who tooke occasion from corporall bread and water to discourse of the spirituall Manna and Waters of life from a worldly feast to Luk. 14. 15 16 17. Iob. 7. 38 39. speake of a spirituall banket and of the liuing waters of his grace and holy Spirit giuen to all that beleeue in him And this is a fit and profitable exercise on the Lords Day commended vnto vs by the Scriptures and practice of the Church as heereby it appeareth in that the Psalme which was Psal 92. specially appointed for the Sabbath containeth in it for the most part a Meditation vpon the workes of God §. Sect. 4 That the euening must be spent ●n religious exercises In the euening of the Lords Day we are not to surcease our Christian and religious exercises but after wee haue at supper refreshed our bodies with the vse of Gods creatures and our soules with holy conferences wee are to spend some time in singing of Psalmes and in reading the Scriptures or other religious and profitable writings After which duties performed all in the family ought to ioyne together in hearty and effectuall prayer not thinking themselues excused from priuate duties because they haue beene at the publike exercises of Religion wherein as wee are to acknowledge other sinnes and imperfections so those especially wee haue shewed the day past in our cold formall weake and negligent performance of the duties of Gods seruice And as we are to craue other blessings so especially that the Lord by his grace and holy Spirit will blesse vnto vs the meanes of our saluation and Ministery of his Word whereof we haue been partakers on that Day writing the things we haue learned in our memories and hearts and inabling vs to put them in practice and to make vse of them in the whole course of our liues And finally as we are to praise God for all his other mercies so particularly for giuing vs time to sanctifie his Sabbaths and suffering vs to inioy the blessed light of his Word and Gospell for granting vs liberty with such peace and safety to tread in his Courts and to make our suits and supplications knowne vnto him with assurance to haue them heard and granted And thus hauing finished this holy exercise and the time of sleepe approching we must prepare our selues thereunto with such religious Meditations as on other dayes were prescribed the which at this time are to be done with extraordinary zeale and deuotion and so commending our soules and bodies into the hands of God we are to desire him that he will watch ouer and sanctifie vs so with his grace and holy Spirit that we may spend the night also in an holy Rest being freed from worldly carnall and sinfull dreames and hauing our phantasies and thoughts our hearts and affections both sleeping and waking taken vp and exercised in good and godly Meditations And that he wil so season our hearts with the sauour of the Dayes religious exercises that euen
Congregation And next vnto it our speech must tend to the furthering of our owne saluation and edification of our brethren For if our hearts bee sincere and holy such also will our conferences bee as before wee haue shewed more at large §. Sect. 4 That we must practise what we know in our works and actions Secondly with our words and outward profession wee must ioyne also our workes and actions in doing seruice vnto God without which wee cannot approoue our hearts to bee vpright before him Neither is it sufficient to make vs accepted of God that wee speake religiously and make a glorious profession of the Truth vnlesse our practice be sutable in the works of holinesse and righteousnesse It is not enough as our Sauiour hath taught vs to cry Lord Lord for entring into Gods Kingdom vnlesse we Mat. 7. 21 23. do the wil of his Father which is in heauen no nor yet that we haue prophecied and preached in his Name seeing we shal be excluded depart from him if we be workers of iniquity For not the hearers and talkers of the Law but the Rom. 2. 13. doers therof shall be iustified Neither will God render vnto vs according to our outward profession but according to our deeds we shal receiue at Christs Rom. 2. 6. 2. Cor. 5. 10. Tit. 1. 16. appearing to Iudgement not according to our words and shewes but according to that we haue done whether it be good or bad Yea in truth bare profession without practice doth make vs the more odious in Gods sight And if we deny God in our works whō we professe to know with our words we become abominable hypocrits who dishonour him more by their sins then any other In which regard the Lord would haue none to make profession of Religion who do not indeuour to practise what they know in their liues What hast thou to doe to declare my Statutes or that thou shouldest take my Couenant Psal 50. 16. into thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behind thee And such our Sauiour reprooueth Why call ye me Lord Lord and doe Luk. 6. 46. not the things which I say Before therefore we compasse Gods Altar to offer vnto him with our tongues the sacrifice of praise wee must first with Dauid wash our hands in innocencie If we would approoue the sincerity of Psal 26. 6. our faith outward confession of the Truth we must with those beleeuers in the Acts of the Apostles shew it by our deeds If we would make it manifest Act. 19. 18. that our harts are inwardly inflamed with the loue of God we must shew it by our actions rather then by our words according to that of our Sauiour If ye loue me keepe my Commandements And againe He that hath my John 14. 15 21. Commandements and keepeth them is he that loueth me Yee are my friends if ye doe whatsoeuer I command you Iohn 15. 14. §. Sect. 5 Diuers reasons perswading vs to good workes By all which it appeareth that vnto the duties of a godly life there is required reall practice in our workes as well as verball profession with our mouthes neither doth an holy profession alone make any man holy but only bindeth him to the duties of holinesse The which though it bee acknowledged of all men yet because it fareth with the most as with men grieuously sicke who hauing lost their appetite approoue good meate in their iudgment and discourse but when they are mooued to eate of it put it by because it is lothsome to their corrupted stomacks therefore it will not be amisse that we inforce this point a little further that I may set an edge on their appetite and as the Apostle requireth may prouoke them vnto Heb. 10. 24. loue and good workes First therefore let vs consider that as the Lord requireth an vpright heart and holy profession so also the fruits of them both in good workes For he would haue vs not onely hearers of his Word but also doers of it and chargeth vs to doe good vnto all to be rich in good workes Iam. 1. 22. Gal. 6. 10. 1. Tim. 6. 17 18. 2. Thes 3. 13. Tit. 2. 14. Luk. 1. 74 75. 1. Tim. 2. 10. and neuer weary of well-doing Secondly that he hath created vs vnto good workes that we should walke in them and redeemed vs that wee should not onely doe good workes but also bee zealous in doing of them Thirdly that they are the chiefe ornaments of Christians which much more decke and beautifie them in the sight of God and all good men then all Iewels gold and gorgeous apparell Fourthly let vs consider the exceeding profit of them seeing God doth richly reward them both in this life and the life to come Fifthly that they are notable and singular meanes to assure vs of all Gods graces in this life and eternal happinesse in the life to come whereby we attaine vnto spirituall comfort peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost For they are the assured signes of our election and effectuall calling seeing if we doe these things we shall neuer fall They are the 2. Pet. 1. 10. fruits of our regeneration and new birth whereby wee are assured of our spirituall life euen as the naturall life is knowne by action and motion and that we are trees of righteousnesse which Gods owne hand hath planted for the tree is knowne by the fruits seeing a good tree cannot bring foorth Math. 7. 17. 12. 33. those which are euill nor an euill those which are good They assure vs of our iustification for he that doth righteousnesse is righteous as the Apostle Iohn 1. Job 3. 7. Rom. 2. 13. telleth vs. They are signes of our adoption and spirituall kindred with Christ for they that heare the Word and doe it are his brethren and sisters By them we may be assured that our wisedome is spirituall and heauenly according Mat. 12. 50. to that of the Apostle Iames Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge amongst you Let him shew out of a good conuersation his workes with Iam. 3. 13. meekenesse of wisedome That our faith also is liuely and iustifying For they and they onely doe truely beleeue in God who are carefull to maintaine good workes seeing as it inwardly purifieth the heart so also it worketh outwardly Tit. 3. 8. Act. 15. 9. Gal. 5. 6. Iam. 2. 14. 17. 26. by loue And therefore the Apostle Iames concludeth that such a faith as bringeth not forth these fruits doth nothing profit vs for our iustification and saluation because it is dead and not a liuing body but a dead carkasse which breatheth not So that though workes doe not iustifie vs but faith onely for wee are first made righteous before wee can bring foorth the fruits of righteousnesse yet that faith which is alone doth not iustifie vs because it is a dead faith
and therefore cannot apply vnto vs Christ our Righteousnesse Though they doe not iustifie vs before God yet they iustifie vs before men that is declare that we are iustified Though they be not causes yet they are necessary and inseparable effects of our iustification Though they are not required vnto the act of iustification but faith onely vniting vs vnto Christ our Righteousnesse yet vnto the party iustified for as hee that doth righteousnesse is righteous so hee that is righteous 1. Ioh. 3. 7. doth righteousnesse the cause and effect alwayes concurring and going together Finally though they bee not meritorious causes of saluation which is Gods free gift an inheritance and not a purchase made by our selues yet they are the meanes which assure vs of it and though they be not the cause of our raigning yet they are the way to the Kingdome Finally they are the vndoubted signes and as the Apostle calleth them the proofe of our loue whereby we may try whether it be vnfained or hypocriticall Ioh. 14. 15. for if we loue God we will keepe his Commandements and also of the truth and sincerity of our Religion which is not so well knowne from that Iam. 1. 27. which is false by an outward profession as by the holy practice of it in the workes of piety iustice mercy and Christian charity §. Sect. 6 Of the rewards of good works Lastly let vs consider that the Lord will richly of his free grace reward these workes with glory and happinesse in his Kingdome For though the strength of our title stand vpon Gods free gift yet wee are entred into the possession of it by the workes of mercy as being infallible signes that wee are the true and lawfull heires vnto whom this heauenly patrimony doth belong by right of Couenant according to that of our Sauiour Come ye Mat. 25. 34 35. blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world for I was hungry and ye gaue me meate I was thirsty and ye gaue me drinke c. So the Apostle saith that at the day of Iudgement Christ will render to euery man according to his deeds To them who by patient continuance Rom. 2. 7 8. in well-doing seeke for glory honour and immortality eternall life but to them that are contentious and doe not obey the truth but obey vnrighteousnesse indignation and wrath c. Whereby it appeareth that if euer we meane to attaine vnto euerlasting happinesse we must not content our selues with an opinion of our inward piety and sincerity nor with an outward profession of Religion but we must bring foorth the fruits of them both in the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse For not euery one that saith Lord Mat. 7. 21 22. Luk. 11. 28. Ioh. 13. 17. Apoc. 1. 3. Lord shall enter into Gods Kingdome but they that doe his will And they only are pronounced happy who heare the Word of God and keep it As for those who please themselues with the profession of piety neglect the practice in the fruits of obedience and duties of a godly life they are presently in danger to be cut off like hypocrits dead branches with Gods iudgemēts according to that of Iohn the Baptist Now is the axe laid to the root of the trees Mat. 3. 10. Ioh. 15. 2. Therefore euery tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewne downe cast into the fire And in the World to come shall be excluded from Gods presence and haue their portion in euerlasting fire prepared for the deuill and his Mat. 7. 23. 25. 41. angels not only as workers of iniquity but also as neglecters of the workes of mercy and Christian charity to the poore members of Iesus Christ CAP. IIII. That we must performe vniuersall obedience to the whole will of God §. Sect. 1 That only vniuersall obedience to Gods will Word is accepted of him AND thus haue we shewed that our obedience ought to bee vniuersall in respect of the subiect or the person that performeth it In the next place we are to shew that there is also an vniuersality required in respect of the obiect whereby we vnderstand the whole will of God reuealed in the Scriptures Neither is it sufficient that we performe some or many duties and neglect the rest but wee must in all things bee conformable to all Gods Commandements which is not so to be vnderstood as though we could actually doe all that God requireth for in many things wee sinne all but of Iam. 3. 2. an habituall obedience and disposition of our hearts whereby wee desire resolue and indeuour in all things to doe Gods will in as great perfection as we can bewailing our wants and imperfections when we faile and come short of our desires Of which we haue an example in Dauid who Psal 119. 6. had respect vnto all Gods Commandements and in the remnant of the Captiuity who bound themselues by couenant and oath to walke in Gods Law Nehem. 10. 29. and to obserue and doe all the Commandements of the Lord their God and in Zachary and Elizabeth who were righteous before God walking in all the Luk. 1. 6. Commandements and Ordinances of the Lord blamelesse The contrary whereof we see in the example of Iehu who obeyed God in destroying the house 2. King 10. of Ahab and Baal with his Priests for the establishing of his owne Kingdome but not in taking away the golden Calues In Herod who Mark 6. 20. heard Iohn the Baptist willingly and obeyed his doctrine in many things but would not leaue his Incest In Iudas and Demas who performed many good duties but would not forsake their couetousnesse and loue of the world And finally in Ananias and Saphyra who were content to share Act. 5. with God but kept part of the possession which they had wholly consecrated vnto him for their owne vse But our obedience must be vniuersall keeping no sinne as sweet vnder our tongue but we must in the disposition Job 20. 12. desire and purpose of our hearts renounce all sinnes whatsoeuer without exception be they neuer so pleasing or profitable yea wee must with greatest hatred pursue those vnto which our corrupt natures are most inclined making warre as against all these wicked enemies of God so most earnestly against this Canaanitish brood which dwell in our Land And contrariwise we must loue and imbrace all vertues and practise all Christian duties which God hath commanded though they be neuer so hard and difficult to our corrupt disposition yea the more auerse our sinfull natures are vnto them so much the more earnestly we must labour to imbrace and practise them For if we make any composition with Satan and our owne flesh to giue willing entertainement vnto any sinne or to neglect any vertue or Christian duty our obedience is but hypocriticall and fained and the sinne reserued like a
meanes is the remembrance of Gods Iudgements The third meanes is often to call vnto our remembrance Gods fearfull Iudgements executed vpon all sinners but especially vpon such as haue Mat. 24 38. continued in their wickednesse with carelesse security and wholly neglected to keepe this watch as of the old world who liued in all rechlesse security eating and drinking buying and selling marrying and giuing in marriage so doing these things as that they neglected all things else which were necessary for their safety and saluation vntill Noah entring into the Arke they were all swept away with an vniuersall deluge Thus also Sodom and Gomorrah liuing in their sinnes with all security were attached with Gods fearfull Iudgements when they least thought of them and were wholly destroyed with fire and brimstone Thus Babylon exceeding Esa 47. 8 9. in security as much as in all other sinnes had those punishments which she least feared inflicted vpon her Thus the Lord threatened the Church of Sardis that if they would not watch he would come as a thiefe against Apoc. 3. 3. them that is bring vpon them suddenly vnexpected iudgements with which when they neglected this warning they were afterwards fearfully surprized But of this poynt I haue spoken at large in another Treatise of carnall security and hardnesse of heart Treatise onely let it suffice here to shew that as neglect of Gods Iudgements maketh vs secure and carelesse so the often calling of them to mind is a notable meanes to make vs watchfull that wee may not haue the like or greater inflicted vpon vs. The which is the principall vse that our Sauiour intended in propounding the former examples of the old world and of Sodom and Gomorrah fearefully punished because they securely Mat. 24 3● 42. Luk. 〈…〉 35 3● went on in their sinnes that wee might not be ouertaken with the like but that continually watching and praying wee might bee thought worthy to escape them when God commeth in his visitation to take notice of our wayes And thus also the Apostle hauing called to remembrance Gods heauie Iudgements inflicted vpon the Israelites saith that all these things were written for our learning vpon whom the ends of the world 1. Cor. 10. 5. to 12. are come that by flying their sinnes wee might escape their punishments and thereupon inferreth this vse that wee should not presume on our owne strength but that he who thinketh hee standeth should take heed of falling §. Sect. 3 Of the fourth meanes which is to remember the day of death The fourth meanes is that wee continually remember the day of our death not as though it were farre off but neere approching and euen knocking at our doores For our liues are short and momentany and this short time so vncertaine that we haue no assurance that we shall liue another day no not so much as the next minute When wee goe abroad wee know not whether we shall returne home nor when we are at home whether wee shall liue to goe abroad when wee goe to bed wee cannot tell whether we shall euer rise and when we rise whether we shall againe goe to bed For many haue been thus suddenly taken away going well out of doores and neuer returning lying downe securely to take their rest haue been found dead the next morning Now seeing that which befalleth one may happen to any and that which hath been the case of many may probably betide any one let it be our wisedome to stand continually vpon our watch that we may be found in readinesse seeing it is a matter that concernes vs no lesse then the euerlasting saluation or damnation of our soules And seeing we are not sure of liuing another day let vs thinke that euery day may be the last and so take occasion to watch carefully ouer our wayes that we may when God pleaseth to call be prepared to goe vnto him with cheerfulnesse and ioy and when wee are inticed to commit any sinne as to loue the world immoderately to increase our riches by fraud and deceit or violence and oppression to sweare lye and profane the Lords Day to drinke drunken commit filthinesse or any other sinne let vs say vnto our owne soules Would I commit this or that sinne if I were sure that this day were my last Farre would it be from me if I were thus perswaded And therefore let mee bee now as farre from giuing way willingly vnto any of these or the like sinnes seeing for ought I know it may be the last minute And thus when wee finde our selues slacke and backward vnto any duties of Gods seruice let vs examine our owne hearts whether we would not shake off all sluggishnesse and goe about them with all care and diligence if we were perswaded that wee should not liue another day and then if wee be wise we will bee as circumspect and carefull that wee neglect no good duty which may bring comfort to our hearts peace to our consciences and assurance of saluation to our soules seeing many as lusty as we being well in the morning haue beene dead before night §. Sect. 4 The last means is to meditate often on the day of Iudgement The last meanes which I will heere touch is that we often meditate vpon that great and terrible Day of the Lord when hee shall come with 2. Cor. 5. 10. thousands of his holy Saints and Angels to iudge both the quicke and the dead when as we must all appeare before the Iudgement seate of Christ that euery man may receiue the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad Of which Day because we are vncertaine when it will be we should alwayes keepe our spirituall watch that we may whensoeuer Christ commeth be found ready And this vse our Sauiour himselfe maketh of his assured and yet vncertaine comming Of that day and Mar. 13. 32 33. houre saith he knoweth no man no not the Angels which are in heauen neither the sonne but the Father onely Take yee heed therefore watch and pray for yee know not when the time is lest comming suddenly he finde you sleeping So likewise the Apostle Peter The end of all things is at hand be yee therefore 1. Pet 4. 7. sober and watch vnto prayer And surely if wee would but seriously consider with what rauishing ioy at that Day the hearts of all those shall be possessed who like wise and faithfull seruants shall be found watching and waiting for the comming of their Lord when as hee who hath pronounced Mat. 24. 45 46. them blessed already shall then enter them into the full fruition of blessednesse and make them ioynt owners of all that hee hath the vnspeakeable ioyes inestimable riches and triumphant glory of his Kingdome and on the other side with what shame and confusion of face vexation of spirit and horrour of conscience they shall bee plagued and tormented who with the euill
tranquilla valet inhiare Gregor Moral lib. 5. able to behold those diuine things which without much difficulty it cannot see when it is most quiet And therefore if wee will meditate with any fruit and profit wee must not be more carefull to sequester our selues outwardly from company then our hearts inwardly from worldly cares nor according to our Sauiours counsell to shut our Closet dores then to shut the doore of our hearts against earthly distractions and to keepe a narrow watch ouer them that none may enter at vnawares and distract vs in this holy exercise Neither must we onely take care to exclude at this time such wicked thoughts and such carking and carnall cares as are alwayes vnlawfull but euen those which are at other times honest and necessary about our ordinary imployments and duties of our callings yea those likewise which are religious and spirituall if they be vnseasonable and nothing pertinent to the present purpose nor any way suteable to the matter we haue in hand seeing though in respect of their matter they be good and holy yet they are cunningly thrust into our hearts and minds by the tempter who can transforme himselfe into an Angell of light in an ill manner vnseasonably and vnprofitably and to a worse end namely to distract our present Meditations and that by thinking on two things at once of a diuers nature we should receiue benefit by neither nor brings our thoughts vnto any good issue In which regard we are not vtterly to banish such things out of our hearts but onely to shut them out for the time and to let them stand at the doore like suters till we haue dispatched with those vnto whom for the present we haue giuen hearing lest rushing in vncalled and speaking altogether after a tumultuous manner nothing be dispatched through this disorder whereas by seasonable admittance in due course and conferring with one after another all may be brought to good effect Secondly as we must clense our hearts from these incumbrances so we must decke and adorne them with the ornaments of vertue that they may be fit to entertaine so high and holy a Ghest but especially we must decke them with humility in which he so chiefly delighteth that he will not onely be content to conferre with vs for a little while but will Esa 57. 15. euen dwell and keepe residence with vs if wee be of an humble spirit And therefore when we approch into Gods presence to performe this duty let vs thinke and consider of his glorious greatnesse and awfull Maiestie and of our owne basenesse and vilenesse weakenesse and vnworthinesse saying in our soules with Abraham Behold I haue taken vpon mee to speake Gen. 18. 27. vnto the Lord which am but dust and ashes O let not the Lord be angry and I will speake And without this humility we cannot profitably performe this duty for as one saith None can contemplate the wisedome of God who Contemplari Dei sapientiam non possunt qui sibi videntur esse sapientes c. Greg. in Moral lib. 18. are wise in their owne conceits because they are by so much distant from his light by how much they come short of humility in themselues For whilest the swelling of pride increaseth in their minds it closeth the sight of contemplation and thinking themselues inlightened aboue all others they are depriued of the light of vertue Finally wee must prepare our hearts for Meditation by sharpening our appetites and whetting our stomackes after this spirituall repast and food of our soules by considering seriously of those arguments by which formerly it hath beene commended vnto vs. For as it is a singular helpe to our bodily nourishment when wee come to our meate with an hungry appetite and that food doth vs but little good which wee feed vpon with lothing satiety so also is it in the nourishment of our soules for if wee receiue our food with a good stomacke we shall the better feed vpon it retaine and disgest it whereas if we come vnto it with a cloyed appetite wee shall soone cast it vp againe and neuer disgest nor conuert it to any spirituall nourishment Lastly there is some preparation also required in respect of our bodies for as we must take heed that they bee not too much pampered with excessiue diet seeing this fulnesse and fatnesse of body causeth emptinesse and leanenesse in the soule dulleth the minde drowneth the spirits and oppresseth the heart so must we on the other side beware that the body and minde bee not wearied and the spirits spent with former studies and labours so as they are wholly disabled that they cannot as fit instruments performe any good seruice to the soule in this spirituall exercise as being rather disposed to rest and sleepe then to take any profitable paines in this laborious imployment §. Sect. 3 Of the subiect matter of our Meditations And thus hauing prepared our persons the next thing to bee done is to prouide fit matter whereupon wee may meditate without which our Meditations are alwayes vnprofitable and oftentimes hurtfull and pernicious In which respect the greatest part of men doe pittifully faile for though all are willing to meditate the mind delighting in its owne motion and in discoursing vpon those subiects which it most esteemeth and vpon which the heart is wholly fixed yet few make choice of such matter as may be fit for their soules nourishment but some meditate mischiefe in their hearts thinking vpon the readiest meanes how they may atchieue it with least danger some how they may satisfie their carnall desires with worldly riches pleasures and preferments and raise themselues by other mens ruines some meditate vpon naturall things with naturall mindes neuer drawing them to spirituall vse some on domesticall matters how they may best contriue their businesse or on ciuill affaires and high points of state yea many men spend a great part of their Meditations about matters meerely concerning other men and nothing at all appertaining vnto them Vpon which and a thousand such like subiects we may spend our spirits weare out our bodies and weary our minds and yet bee neuer the holier in this life nor happier in the life to come But the matter of these Christian Meditations whereof we intreate ought to be wholly spirituall and diuine either in respect of the things themselues or at least the vse which we are to make of them And thus the whole Scriptures and euery part and parcell of them may be the subiect matter of our Meditations when wee seriously consider of the right and naturall sense and meaning of them and draw them vnto vse either for instruction admonition reproofe consolation or the reformation and amendment of our sinfull liues In which kind of Meditations whoso exercise themselues they are by the Psalmist pronounced blessed But besides the text of holy Scriptures Psal 1. 1 2. any point of the doctrine of diuinity contained in them may
our seeming wisedome be not foolishnesse and that wee mistake not the stained cloth of our imperfect obedience for the pure white linnen of perfect sanctity and so grosly abuse our selues for if a man thinketh Gal. 6. 3. himselfe to be something when he is nothing he is deceiued and coozeneth himselfe of his owne saluation With which deceit it is easie to be ouertaken with proud Iusticiaries by reason of our selfe-love if wee doe not often and seriously examine our selues according to the perfect rule of Gods Law and in this cleere Looking-glasse behold our blemishes and the manifold wants and imperfections of our best actions Furthermore the necessity of this examination heereby appeareth in that the neglect thereof is the cause of all sinne For what is the reason why men rush headlong into all manner of grosse and notorious wickednesse Why they blaspheme Gods holy Name for no worldly aduantage but vpon meere vanity Why they displease God and disable themselues vnto all duties of his seruice by surfetting and drunkennesse without any gaine yea to the discredit of their persons and ruining of their estates Why they commit filthinesse and vncleannesse thereby weakning their bodies and shortning their liues and why they continue in these and many such sinnes with impenitency and hardnesse of heart Surely not so much through the ignorance of their mindes or because their iudgements are not conuinced that these are grieuous sinnes which for the present draw Gods fearefull plagues vpon them and will heereafter be punished with euerlasting death For they heare these things daily sounding in their eares in the Ministery of the Word and see fearefull examples and presidents continually of them in others who haue liued in the like wickednesse But because though they haue sight and knowledge yet they haue no vse of it the deuill hauing so hud-winkt and blind folded the eyes of their minde that they neuer examine their state nor consider with themselues what they doe whither they are a going nor what will be the issue and end of these things And so like hooded Hawkes are carried quietly by the deuill into all wicked courses which leade them to destruction §. Sect. 4 The former point prooued by the Scriptures Esa 1. 3. And this is manifest by the Scriptures which in many places shew that men commit many of their sinnes and liue in them without repentance because they examine not their estate nor enter into due consideration what they doe Thus it is said that the cause of the Israelites vngratitude and rebellion against God was because they did not consider either Gods goodnesse and bounty nor their owne wickednesse and the manifold euils which thereby they brought vpon themselues That the cause why many of them followed drunkennesse and sported themselues in this sinne with all sensuall delight was because they regarded not the worke of Esa 5. 11 12. the Lord neither considered the operation of his hands That they forsooke the Lord and worshipped stockes and stones the works of their owne hands Esa 44. 19. because none considered in their hearts the vanity of Idols and that themselues had made them of the same tree wherof they had burned a part and conuerted other parts of it to other vses That the cause of Babylons insolency pride wherby they tyrānized ouer Gods people was because they did not cōsider that God had made them only scourges rods to correct his people which hauing done he would cast thē into the fire which things Esa 47. 7. 57. 11. they did not lay to heart nor remember the latter end namely their destructiō and the deliuerance of Gods people And as neglect of this consideration is the cause of sinne so also it exposeth vs to fearefull punishments for if we will not iudge our selues we shall be iudged of the Lord if we forget his Iudgements and neuer thinke of them hee will rub our memories and helpe vs to recouer our lost wits by whipping vs like Bedlems and making vs sensible by smart who were insensible of reason Thus the Lord saith that the whole Land was made desolate because no man laid it to Ier. 12. 11. heart And thus he threatneth the Israelites that because they did not remember and consider his former mercies and their owne sinnes and vnworthinesse therefore he would recompence their wayes vpon their head and Ezek. 16. 43. make them to know him by his Iudgements when as his mercies would not make them acknowledge him Lastly this may shew vs how necessary this examination is seeing it must of necessity bee done either in this world or the world to come For all shall render a reckoning of all that they haue done in the flesh and therefore if wee doe not examine and iudge our selues heere God will examine and condemne vs heereafter If we doe not call our selues to account in this life when as finding our selues short in our reckonings we haue time to sue through the Mediation of Christ for the pardon of our debts and to procure a generall acquittance and discharge we shal be accountant to Gods Iustice at the day of Iudgement when the Day of grace and saluation being past there will bee no place for procuring of pardon but being much indebted and hauing nothing to pay we shall be cast into the prison of outer darkenesse without hope of mercy or deliuerance from that endlesse misery Which fearefull Iudgement and condemnation if we would auoyd let vs heere whilst the Day of saluation lasteth examine iudge and condemne our selues that wee may turne from our sinnes by vnfained repentance and so hauing Christ to be both our Aduocate and Iudge we shall then escape Gods seuere and strict Iudgement seeing he will answere for vs and our examination and iudgement being already dispatched in this life nothing shall then remaine but that he our Iudge should pronounce the sentence of absolution and enter vs into the full fruition of that heauenly happinesse and euerlasting ioyes of his Kingdome which by his death and merits he hath purchased for vs. CAP. XXV Of the fourth priuate meanes of a godly life which is walking daily with God §. Sect. 1 That we are alwayes in Gods presence THe fourth priuate meanes of a godly life is with Enoch to walke with God that is to set our selues in his presence alwayes Gen. 5. 22. remembring that he is with vs hearing all our words and beholding all our actions yea euen the very secret thoughts of our hearts And that not as an idle spectatour but as a righteous Iudge who is both able and willing to reward vs bountifully if wee doe well and to punish vs seuerely if wee doe euill Wherein wee haue holy Dauid for our example who professeth that hee Psal 16. 8. did set the Lord alwayes before him Which that wee may imitate let our iudgements first be thorowly informed in this truth that howsoeuer God keepeth his chiefe
as well as others out of that huge multitude and cursed crue to be his owne children by adoption and grace how then should this inflame our desires to glorifie so gracious a Father and to carry our selues in all things as beseemeth his children But if the meere Loue of God will not worke this in vs let vs consider further that the Lord hath propounded this end to the decree of our election that we should glorifie him by our Holinesse and vnblameablenesse according to that of the Apostle He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and Eph. 1. 4. 1. Pet. 2. 9. without blame before him in loue and therefore vnlesse we thinke that God infinite in wisedome and power can faile of his end we can haue no hope that we are elected to happinesse vnlesse we attaine vnto some measure of Holinesse He hath predestinated vs that we should be conformed to the image of his Sonne as in glory and blessednesse in the world Act. 14. 22. to come so in this life both in his sanctity and suffrings and therefore as we must not thinke that we can by the broad way of carnall pleasures attaine to Christs heauenly happinesse and to be crowned with him before wee haue suffred with him so much lesse let vs imagine 2. Tim. 2. 12. that we shall euer come into his ioyes if wee doe not follow him in that path of righteousnesse which he hath beaten before vs seeing the Apostle hath plainely told vs that without Holinesse we shall neuer see God Heb. 12. 14. So that the consideration of our election ought to be a strong motiue to perswade vs vnto a godly life both that we may glorifie God by our holy conuersation who hath beene so gracious and good vnto vs and that we may be assured that he will glorifie vs by attayning vnto that end of Holinesse for which we were elected Whereof it is that the Apostle hauing largely intreated of the doctrine of Gods predestination doth out of this doctrine inforce this vse that we should offer Rom. 12. 1. vp our selues a liuely and holy Sacrifice acceptable vnto him by our reasonable seruing of him And the Apostle Peter perswading vs to make our election 2. Pet. 1. 10. sure could prescribe no other course for the obtayning of this assurance then by ioyning one vertue and grace with another and bringing forth the fruits of them all by doing these things that is seruing and glorifying God who hath chosen vs in the duties of a godly life §. Sect. 4 The fourth reason taken from the benefit of our creation The second fruit and effect of Gods Loue and cause or meanes of our saluation and happinesse is our creation by his Almighty Word and preseruation being thus made by his powerfull prouidence Concerning the former whereas God might haue left vs without a being which is to be esteemed amongst the greatest euils he created vs of nothing or which is all one of the dust of the earth which came of nothing by sole vertue of his powerfull Word and whereas hee might haue made vs the vilest and basest of the creatures which creepe vpon the earth yea worse then they euen wicked deuils ordayned to condemnation he created vs according to his owne image in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse indued vs with an immortall and reasonable soule and made vs Lords ouer all the rest of the creatures vpon the earth and onely inferiour to himselfe that wee might bee ruled and gouerned by him and by our seruice glorifie him who hath created vs and giuen vs our being The which if it be rightly considered is an vnspeakeable benefit as being the ground of all that follow it Neither could wee euer attaine vnto well-being vnlesse we had first a being nor vnto our finall end eternall saluation vnlesse wee had found an entrance and passage vnto it by our creation In lieu of which great benefit God requireth nothing at our hands but that by our seruice we glorifie him for which end he gaue vs our being Not that his glory needs our seruice seeing it is in it selfe absolute infinite but out of the same loue which moued him first to make vs that hee might honour vs in this life by vsing vs as instruments to manifest his glory and might hereby take occasion to glorifie vs in the world to come by crowning our seruice of his meere grace with heauenly ioy happines The which also is a most effectuall reason to perswade vs that we deuote and consecrate our selues vnto Gods seruice in all duties of a godly life seeing hee is our Lord and Maker who hath created vs vnto good workes that wee should walke in them to the glory Ephe. 2. 10. of him that hath giuen vs our being and that to this end that wee should for euer bee partakers with him in glory For what can bee more iust then to giue euery one his owne that hee who soweth his owne seede in his owne ground should reape the fruit of his labours that he who buildeth a house should haue the benefit of dwelling in it that he who planteth a Vineyard should eate of the grapes and drinke of the wine and that he who lendeth any thing vnto another should haue his owne repaide vnto him And how much more iust then and equall is it that the Lord who hath not fashioned and framed vs of pre-existent matter but of nothing hath created our soules and bodies should haue them wholy deuoted and Ephe. 4. 24. consecrated to his seruice which was the end for which he made vs and gaue vs our being vnto which end if wee attaine not it is a signe that we neuer thinke of the end for which we came into the world or imagine that wee were sent by God hither that we should serue our owne lusts and in fulfilling them the diuell himselfe and not that wee should serue him who hath right vnto vs by this great benefit of our creation Yea if we doe not spend our time in Gods seruice we fayle of the mayne end for which wee came into the world and so spend all our life and strength in vaine But though we faile of our end which is by seruing and glorifying God to attaine vnto happinesse which also is Gods end reuealed in his Word yet we shall neuer frustrate the end of his secret counsailes which is either to glorify his mercy in vs if we feare and serue him or his Iustice if we neglect his seruice and yeeld obedience to sin and Satan For the Lord being the summum bonum and supreme end of all things hath as the Wise man speaketh made Pro. 16. 4. all things for himselfe euen the wicked forthe day of euill §. Sect. 5 The fifth reason taken from the benefit of our preseruation The benefit of our preseruation and gouernement doth also iustly challenge this seruice at our
others like those of whom the Apostle Peter speaketh yet were wee like them our selues seruants of 2. Pet. 2. 19. corruption For of whom a man is ouercome of the same hee is brought in bondage Finally wee were slaues to our owne sinfull lusts vile affections and turbulent passions as wrath pride ambition couetousnesse and voluptuousnesse which were the most cruell Lords that euer tyrannized ouer any seeing they kept such a narrow watch ouer vs that they gaue vs not so much as a breathing time of liberty but forced vs to drudge night and day not only in the sight of others but when wee were retyred into the most secret corners because they held in miserable bondage our soules as well as our bodies our iudgements wills and affections so as wee liked and pleased our selues in our thraldome and had no desire to come out of it But our Sauiour hath freed vs from these enemies also by mortifying our sinnes and crucifying our corruptions by vertue of his death applyed vnto vs by his holy Spirit And lastly we had no right to any of the creatures hauing by sinne lost our dominion ouer them but our Sauiour and his holy Spirit by giuing vs the liberties and priuiledges of sonnes hath restored vs to our right so that they are all become good and pure vnto vs being sanctified by the Word and 1. Tim. 4. 4 5. Tit. 1. 15. prayer But this royall priuiledge of Christian liberty belongeth not to all but onely to the faithfull who desire to serue and please God in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse Neither can wee euer attaine vnto any assurance that wee haue right and title vnto it till wee feele it effectuall in vs for our sanctification For all those who are by Christ freed from Gods wrath and reconciled vnto him haue heereby a desire wrought in them to serue and please him and will not willingly for any worldly hire prouoke his displeasure They that are freed from the curse of the Law by the Crosse of Christ will crucifie their owne lusts and not runne such a course as will againe make them accursed They that are deliuered out of the hands of their spirituall enemies doe worship and serue Luk. 1. 74. their Lord and Sauiour in holinesse and righteousnesse and being redeemed Tit. 2. 14. that they may be his peculiar people they become zealous of good workes They that are freed from sinne in respect of the guilt and punishment are also in some measure freed from the corruption of it so as it doeth not Rom. 6. 12. raigne and rule in their mortall bodies that they should obey it in the lusts thereof but being freed from sinne they become the seruants of righteousnesse The Vers 19. which should bee a forcible argument to mooue vs vnto the duties of a godly life seeing heereby wee may be assured of this royall priuiledge of Christian liberty according to that of our Sauiour If yee continue in my Ioh. 8. 31 32. Word then are ye my Disciples indeed and ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Whereas if wee neglect them and still liue in sinne yeelding obedience vnto our owne carnall lusts wee lose the benefit and comfort of this priuiledge and haue iust cause to feare that as yet wee remaine in that miserable bondage of the deuill the world and our owne lusts CAP. XLV Of foure other mayne priuiledges wherewith God crowneth the godly both in this life and the life to come §. Sect. 1 The sixth mayne priuiledge is that God bestoweth vpon the godly the spirit of prayer and supplication THe sixth mayne priuiledge which God vouchsafeth to the godly is that he bestoweth vpon them the Spirit of prayer Zach. 12. 10. Rom. 8. 26 27. and supplication and both heareth and granteth all the suites which they make vnto him For hee powreth vpon the house of Dauid and the inhabitants of Ierusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication as he hath promised and whereas naturally we know not how to pray nor what to pray for as we ought the Spirit helpeth our infirmities and maketh intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be vttered And hee that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the minde of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God Yea he not onely by his Spirit teacheth vs how to pray and what to aske but hath also bound himselfe by his gracious and free promises that hee will heare all our suites made in the name of his Sonne and indited by his Spirit according to that of our Sauiour Aske and you shall haue seeke and you shall Mat. 7 7. Iob. 16. 23. 1. Ioh. 5. 14 15. Psal 50. 15. finde knocke and it shall bee opened vnto you And againe Verily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my Name hee will giue it you Now what an high and holy priuiledge is this to haue alwayes free accesse vnto God in all our wants and necessities who is alone able to helpe vs and will also doe it because of his promise To haue a deare and able friend into whose bosome wee may with boldnesse and comfort powre out all our complaints who is ready to pitty and ease vs To haue a key alwayes in our keeping which through Christ will open vnto vs the treasury of Gods graces where wee may relieue our wants and store our selues with all things needfull for his glory and our owne spirituall good and euerlasting saluation Finally to conuerse with the supreme and glorious King of heauen and earth in a familiar manner and to talke with him as a man talketh with his friend For as the Lord speaketh to the Israelites What nation is so great who hath God so nigh vnto them as the Lord Deut. 4. 7. our God is in all things that we call vpon him for But this priuiledge is peculiar vnto them who serue the Lord by obseruing his will according to that of our Sauiour If ye abide in me and my words abide in you aske what Iob. 15. 7. you will and it shall be done vnto you and not vnto wicked men who turne Pro. 15. 8. away their eare from hearing the Law and neglect the duties of Gods seruice whose sacrifices and prayers are abominable as before I haue shewed 28. 9. and shall not bee heard or granted of God as hee telleth the rebellious Iewes When you spread foorth your hands I will hide mine eyes from you yea Psa 1. 15. Pro. 1. 28. Zach. 7. 11 12 13. when you make many prayers I will not heare And therefore let this also effectually mooue vs to serue the Lord in the duties of a godly life that wee may be partakers of this rich and royall priuiledge hauing not onely the Spirit of God as our Counseller to draw all our suites and Petitions in such manner and forme as
the world hath been from the beginning the Gen. 3. 15. portion of all Gods Saints and seruants whom it hath pursued with deadly malice because they haue been beloued of God Yea aboue all others did it most hate and maligne our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ and therefore we must not thinke much if it pursueth vs with the like malice For as he hath told vs The seruant is not greater then his Lord If they haue Joh. 15. 19 20. persecuted me they will also persecute you Fourthly the worlds hatred needeth not to discourage vs in the wayes of godlinesse seeing it is vnto vs a comfortable euidence that we are not of the world for then it would loue his owne but that we are the true Disciples of Iesus Christ whom he hath chosen out of the world Yea contrariwise if the world should loue vs we had iust cause to suspect our selues seeing loue ariseth out of likenes neither could we be so much in the worlds fauour vnlesse we too much fauoured it Fifthly the worlds hatred cannot discourage vs if wee consider that it is abundantly recompenced with the loue of God and of his Saints and blessed Angels For the worlds malice can but bring some temporary trouble ioyned with much inward and spirituall comfort but in the fauour of the Lord is life and blessednesse And therefore Psal 30. 5. as no wise man who is highly in the fauour of his Prince his chiefe Nobles and the best of the people will greatly care for the hatred of base gally-slaues and the abiects of the Land especially when the fauour of both will not stand together so if we be truly wise for our owne good we will not if we be assured of Gods loue and all his faithfull seruants regard much the hatred of the world which can loue none but those whom God hateth Finally this hatred of the world for righteousnesse sake will not dismay vs if we alwayes remember that it shall be rewarded with euerlasting happinesse according to that of our Sauiour Blessed are Luk. 6. 22 23. yee when men shall hate you and when they shall separate you from their company and shall reproch you and cast out your name as euill for the Sonne of mans sake reioyce yee in that day and leape for ioy for behold your reward is great in heauen for in the like manner did their fathers to the Prophets §. Sect. 3 That the former poynt ought to be held with diuers cautions But yet some cautions must be heere obserued as first that howsoeuer we are not to loue the world nor to maintaine neere and inward familiarity Rom. 12. 18. with Gods enemies yet in respect of our priuate carriage we must behaue our selues innocently and iustly towards them and as the Apostle speaketh as much as in vs lyeth haue peace with all men Secondly we must so hate their sinnes their worldlinesse and prophanesse as that in the meane time we loue their persons performing vnto them all ciuill and religious duties whereby we may gaine them to Christ and bee meanes as much as in vs lyeth of their conuersion and saluation Thirdly that vnder colour of hating the world we doe not carry our selues cynically and harshly peeuishly and contentiously with those which remaine still professed worldlings but goe forward in the practice of all holy duties with all meeknesse of conuersation opposing them in nothing but when they oppose vs in piety and righteousnesse For the world is ready to hate vs too much already for our profession and practice of Gods true Religion though by our peruerse behauiour and rigid stiffenesse euen about things indifferent we doe not giue it any cause to hate our persons And therefore let vs auoyd their errour who when they haue taken vpon them the profession of Christian Religion thinke themselues bound to professe open enmity against all those who are contrary minded and that they best approue their Christianity when as the fire of dissension by their tart behauiour is kindled betweene them because Christ came to Math. 10. 34. Luk. 12. 49. bring a sword and fire vpon the earth and to set at variance euen those which are of a mans family For in many other places wee are earnestly exhorted to vse all meeknesse and loue that we may win them by our conuersation who are without vnlesse it be in the cause of God and the defence of his truth And therefore that place of our Sauiour is not to bee vnderstood so much of the doings of the faithfull whereby standing vpon tearmes of hostility they should prouoke the enemies of the Gospell against them but rather of their sufferings and persecutions which for Christs sake and the Gospell they should indure at the hands of the wicked though they behaued themselues as meekly and mildly as innocently and louingly as the cause of God and defence of his truth would suffer them Or if at all of their doings and oppositions against prophane worldlings yet not in such things wherein they might lawfully agree but in matters weighty and important as concerning Gods glory and their owne saluation and not in spleene and spite or priuate reuenge but when they haue lawfull authority to suppresse their fury curbe in their malice or by an open war according to the Law of God and Nations proclaymed against them Finally we must take heed that we doe not esteeme all them as worldlings who goe not as farre as wee in the profession of Religion and the practize of holy duties for there are Christians of all sizes and ages and as well babes as growne men in Gods family But those onely are to be ranked in this number of worldly opposites who are professed enemies of Christian Religion or onely haue the name of Christians but are in truth grosse idolaters or wickedly prophane who in their liues deny the power of that truth which they outwardly professe maligning and hating all those who loue and feare God euen for their godlinesse sake and displaying their banners of impiety against all grace and goodnesse Neither doe I thinke that formall Christians who liue ciuilly amongst vs professing Christianity and ioyning with vs in the publique exercises of Religion are to be reckoned amongst these worldlings who oppose vs and whom we oppose though wee cannot obserue in them any signes of sound conuersion or of the sincerity and power of godlinesse seeing our Sauiour himselfe is sayd to haue loued the yong man who yet had not so farre proceeded in the course Marke 10. 21. of Christianity but prophane persons lewd liuers notorious blasphemers professed scorners and malicious opposers against the Professors and practisers of Gods true Religion §. Sect. 4 Of the false iudgement of the world shewed in their bitter censures of the godly And thus we may incourage our selues in the duties of a godly life against the hatred of the world and wicked men Let vs in the next place consider
our persecutions we may well suffer with greater patience and comfort if we consider that they are not punishments for our sinnes from all which Christ hath fully freed vs but the trials of our faith which being approued shall be crowned with euerlasting ioy and happinesse In which regard we haue cause greatly to reioyce as the Apostle Peter speaketh 1. Pet. 1. 6 7. though now for a season if need be we are in heauinesse through manifold tentations that the triall of our faith being much more precious then the gold that perisheth though it be tryed with fire might be found vnto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ So the Apostle Iames My Iam. 1. 2 12. brethren count it all ioy when ye fall into diuers tentations of which hee afterwards rendreth this reason Because blessed is the man that indureth tentation for when he is tryed he shall receiue the Crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that loue him And indeed what a wonderfull priuiledge is this and what great cause doth it minister vnto vs of comfort and reioycing when we consider that the Lord hath vouchsafed vnto vs this great honour to suffer afflictions for his owne glory and the furthering and assuring of our saluation when as he might haue iustly inflicted them and farre greater vpon vs for our sinnes and to the burthen of our sufferings haue deseruedly added the vncomfortable waight of shame and infamie All which blessed priuiledges we shall lose and run into the contrary mischiefes and euen hellish condemnation if we shrinke from our profession and holy practice for feare of persecution and refuse to suffer for his sake who hath suffered so much for vs. For he that loueth his life shall Ioh. 12. 25. lose it and hee that hateth his life in this world shall keepe it vnto life eternall And againe If any man come to me saith our Sauiour and hate not his father Luk. 14. 26 27. and mother and wife and children and brethren and sisters and his owne life also namely when they come in comparison with Christ and when the loue of both cannot stand together hee cannot be my Disciple And whosoeuer doth not heare his crosse and come vnto me cannot be my Disciple §. Sect. 3 That our Sauiour hath foretold these persecutions Secondly let vs consider that our Sauiour Christ hath long agoe foretold that whosoeuer wil be his Disciples must suffer in this world troubles and persecutions and that those who will attaine vnto heauenly happinesse must trauaile vnto it by that afflicted way which himselfe and all his seruants haue gone before them If any man saith he will come after mee Luk. 9. 23 24 25 let him deny himselfe and take vp his Crosse daily and follow me For whosoeuer Mat. 16. 24 25. will saue his life shall lose it and whosoeuer will lose his life for my sake shall saue it Now what is a man aduantaged if he gaine the whole world and lose himselfe or be cast away So the Apostles first offered the Crosse vnto them who Act. 14. 22. would afterwards weare the Crowne and haue told vs before-hand that by many tribulations we must enter into the Kingdome of God And that whosoeuer 2. Tim. 3. 12. Luk. 14. 27 28 c. will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution And therefore our Sauiour Christ seriously aduiseth vs that before we take vpon vs the profession of Christianity we first sit downe and cast vp our accounts examining our selues whether we can be content to suffer with him that wee may afterwards raigne with him and to indure afflictions and persecutions in this world that wee may eternally triumph with him in glory and happinesse in the world to come Now what more faire dealing could be vsed then to tell vs before-hand what we must trust to and before hee entertaine vs into his seruice to acquaint vs thorowly with our worke which he requireth of vs before we can receiue our wages which wee expect from him If indeed hee had allured vs to serue him by promising that we should inioy pleasures riches and honours in the world and that for his sake wee should bee well accepted and fauoured of all men wee should haue had great cause of discouragement when wee should come so farre short of our hopes and finde nothing in the world but crosses and afflictions paines for pleasures pouerty for riches and for glory shame and disgrace for then seeing his promises faile in things that concerne this life we had cause to doubt of those that respect the life to come But now contrariwise seeing he hath foretold that we must in this world suffer troubles and persecutions and be hated of all men for his Name sake and that afterwards when by our patient suffering we haue approued our saith and loue towards him he will crowne these his graces in vs with ioy and happinesse in the life to come our afflictions and persecutions should not daunt and dismay vs yea rather wee should reioyce in them as the infallible signes of our future hopes for hauing found Christs Word verified in the first part of his predictions respecting our afflictions and persecutions we may vndoubtedly expect that we shall finde it also true in that part which concerneth our crowne of victory and heauenly ioyes which after our momentany sufferings we shall euerlastingly possesse according to the gracious promises which he hath made vnto vs. §. Sect. 4 That worldly persecutions cannot greatly hurt vs. Thirdly let vs incourage our selues against these persecutions because they cannot greatly hurt vs for first they are either light and easie if they be long and tedious or short and momentany if they be sharpe and grieuous For God hath graciously so composed and framed our natures that their frailty and weakenesse cannot hold out to beare any heauy burthens and hath made them mortall and of such short continuance that their afflictions and grieuances must needs be short and momentany Secondly the greatest persecutions which rage and malice can raise against vs can but reach vnto the body and onely extend to the time of this life but cannot at all hurt the soule nor hinder our happinesse in the life to come In which respect our Sauiour incourageth vs against these persecutions Feare not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soule but Mat. 10. 28. rather feare him who is able to destroy both body and soule in hell Thirdly these persecutions cannot much hurt vs because our gracious God keepeth and preserueth vs so as we cannot faint and fall and pulleth out their sting so as they shall neuer be able to giue vnto vs any mortall wounds And therefore as the Apostle Peter exhorteth Let them that suffer according 1. Pet. 4. 19. to the will of God commit the keeping of their soules to him in well-doing as vnto a faithfull
life seeing they are but light and momentany in respect of that eternall weight of Glory which they shall 2. Cor. 4. 17. cause vnto vs. Let vs consider that though the Lord deferreth long to execute his Iudgements yet those that abuse this patience and long-suffring shall not escape in the end and the longer that vengeance hath beene delayed the more fearefull and intolerable will it be when it is inflicted For though God commeth slowly yet he payeth surely and the longer that he is fetching his stroke the more heauily will it light vpon those who doe not preuent it by their repentance Finally let vs know that wicked men when they seeme most to flourish in the world doe not euen in this life escape vnpunished For if they be not haunted with those hellish furies the terrours and torments of a selfe-accusing conscience which giueth them inwardly many a cold pang when they smile and laugh in the face and outward appearance they are not free from more dangerous and desperate punishments though they bee lesse sensible and smarting euen the deadly lethargie of carnall security and that scarce cureable disease of a feared conscience and hardnesse of heart Neither ought wee to be any more discouraged because God seemeth wholy to deferre the bestowing of his rewards vpon those that serue him vnto another life and because in the meane time godlinesse bringeth little gaine and the seruice of God small profit in the world For suppose that this were so yet the riches and eternity of the reward will when it is bestowed abundantly recompence our short forbearance And therefore if the most couetous vsurers can with patience forbeare the sight and fruition of their gold which notwithstanding is that dearely-beloued idoll vpon which their hearts are fixed and can satisfie both their eyes and mindes with the sight and perusall of their bonds which assure them that at the yeeres end they shall receiue it with some aduantage though it be but tenne in the hundred why should not we with ioy and comfort performe seruice vnto God though he should wholy deferre the rewards which he hath promised euen vnto the end of our liues seeing wee haue a most sure Pay-master who hath couenanted to giue in lieu of our forbearance an hundred for tenne yea a thousand for one and hath committed to our keeping infallible bonds and euidences sealed with the blood of Christ and ratified with his oath with the daily reviewing wherof we may continually reuiue and refresh our drooping and fainting soules But if wee be so sensuall that wee onely minde things present and preferre small possessions before the greatest possibilities richest reuersions let vs further know that euen in this life God rewardeth his seruants with gifts of incomparable greater value then those which worldlings can most bragge off For besides that the godly are in respect of outward things at Gods finding who will neuer suffer them to want such a conuenient competencie as in his infinite Wisdome he knoweth to be fittest for them and though he giueth not vnto them such superfluity and abundance as many worldlings doe possesse because he knoweth that it would rather be a burthen to presse them downe vnto the earth then a benefit to further them in the way to heauenly happinesse yet he giueth them sufficiencie and contentation of minde which the other want in their greatest plenty Besides all this I say he bestoweth vpon them all the Royall priuiledges whereof I haue already spoken especially the assurance of his loue and their saluation with all other spirituall graces peace of Conscience and ioy in the Holy Ghost as before I haue shewed more at large §. Sect. 3 The third scandal arising from hypocrites The last scandall offence wherof I will speake by which men are hindred from entring into proceeding in the duties of a godly life ariseth from those that make profession of Christianity and sincerity whether they be priuate persons or publique as the Ministers of the Word and Sacraments The first is that which is giuen by hypocrites who making profession of the true Religion doe in their liues deny the power thereof falling into many grosse and grieuous sinnes especially such as are committed against the second Table as vniustice and vncharitablenesse fraud and deceit cruelty and oppression pride and couetousnesse falsifying of their couenants and promises And also by such as professe the truth in sincerity and vprightnesse of heart and yet through humane frailty and infirmity are sometimes ouer-taken of these and such like sinnes Both which cast before the feete of those who are vnregenerate such stumbling blockes of offence that they are thereby brought out of loue with Gods true Religion presuming that there is little good in it when as they discerne no better fruits of it in their liues and so hate not onely such professours but also their profession for their sakes resoluing with themselues that they will neuer be of their religion which is so disgraced in the world by the euill conuersation of these seeming forward men Yea not onely those which are without are wholy hindred from entring into the course of Christianity but those also that are already entred are hereby so discountenanced and disheartned that they proceed in the waies of godlinesse with much discomfort and discouragement For they are not onely hindred from making any profession of Religion more then others when they see it thus infamed lest hereby they might seeme like vnto them and so bring vpon themselues the disgrace and reproch of hypocrites but also out of the same respects shunne the practice of all Christian duties which haue at least any appearance of Piety as hearing the Word with any extraordinary diligence and deuotion Holy communication Christian admonition strict obseruation and sanctification of the Lords day prayer in their families and such like because they would not incurre among worldlings the suspition of being hypocrites For the auoyding of which scandall and impediment let all those in the feare of the Lord be admonished which call vpon the Name of Christ to depart from iniquity and that as they shine more then others in the Light 2. Tim. 2. 19. of an holy profession so also that they approue this Light to be diuine and heauenly by the kindely and liuely heate of a charitable conuersation and glorifie God and adorne their profession by bringing forth the fruits of it not onely in their piety towards him but in their works of righteousnesse and charity towards their neighbours Let them take heed that they presume not to take Gods holy couenant into their Psal 50. 16. mouthes when as they hate to be reformed nor to weare Gods liuery of a sincere profession to dishonour him by their infamous liues and that they doe not by giuing iust cause of offence as much as in them lieth destroy those for whom Christ hath died and so cause his precious blood to be shed
consider first that this is a shamefull and horrible abuse of Gods mercy and goodnesse which hee will neuer let goe vnpunished to take occasion thereby the more to offend and diplease him by wilfull continuing in sinne and neglecting the duties of his seruice To prouoke God to wrath because he is patient and long-suffering and to sinne against him because hee is good and gracious and ready to forgiue And finally to neglect all duties of his seruice because he is such a bountifull Master that he giueth of his free grace and mercy rich wages and rewards without all merit and desert For these should rather be arguments to inflame our loue towards him and to make vs so much the more zealous of his glory and fearefull to offend so gracious a God according to that of the Psalmist There is mercy or forgiuenesse with thee that thou mayest bee feared Or if through Psal 130. 4. frailty and infirmity we haue contrary to our purpose and resolution been ouertaken of any sinne this patience and loue of God should be a strong motiue to make vs to rise out of it by vnfained repentance according to that of the Apostle Despisest thou the riches of his goodnesse and forbearance and long-suffering not knowing that the goodnesse of God leadeth thee to repentance Secondly let vs consider that as the Lord is infinite in mercy and compassion so hee is no lesse infinite in iustice and truth that as he is mercifull Exod. 34. 6 7. and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodnesse and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiuing iniquity to ansgression and sinne so also hee is iust in all his wayes and holy in all his workes and will by no meanes cleare the Psal 145. 17. guilty visiting the iniquity of the fathers vpon the children vnto the third and fourth generation that as he is a mercifull Sauiour so also a iust God and Esa 45. 21. Psal 11. 7. a righteous Lord who loueth righteousnesse and will not let sinne goe vnpunished but will iudge euery man according to his works and that he is a terrible 2. Cor. 5. 10. Iudge especially to those who abuse his mercy and long-suffering And therefore let vs not disioyne these things which cannot be seuered nor imagine such a mercy in God as will not stand with his Iustice which were to mayme the Diuine nature and to pull as it were one of his hands from him which outragious violence offered vnto his holy Maiesty hee will neuer suffer to goe vnpunished Let vs with Dauid so acknowledge that hee is good as that wee doe not deny that Psal 25. 8. Psal ●01 1. hee is also vpright and in our songs so sing of his mercy as that wee doe not disioyne his Iudgement from it Let vs remember that in God and in all his workes mercy and truth doe meete together righteousnesse Psal 8● 10. and peace doe kisse each other Let vs not say His mercy is great he will Ecclus 5. 6 7. be pacified for the multitude of my sinnes for mercy and wrath come from him and his indignation resteth vpon sinners Neither let vs presuming on Gods mercy and patience make any tarrying to turne vnto the Lord nor put it off from day to day for suddenly shall the wrath of the Lord come foorth and in thy security thou shalt be destroyed and perish in the day of vengeance Thus the Apostle telleth vs that if we despise the riches of Gods goodnesse and forbearance Rom. 2. 4 5 6 which should leade vs to repentance we shall after our hardnesse and impenitent heart treasure vp vnto our selues wrath against the day of wrath and reuelation of the righteous iudgement of God who will render vnto euery man according to his deeds And the Lord threatneth that if any man hearing the words of his curse against sinners doe blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shall haue peace though I walke in the imagination of my heart to adde drunkennesse to thirst that he will not spare him but that his anger and iealousie shall smoake against that man and all the curses that are written in the booke of the Law shall Deut. 29. 19 20. lie vpon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from vnder heauen Let vs remember what the Apostle teacheth vs namely that no outragious sinners continuing in their wickednesse without repentance shall inherit the Kingdome of Christ and of God and therefore exhorteth that wee suffer no Eph. 5. 5 6. man to deceiue vs with vaine words seeing because of these things commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience Finally let vs consider that though Gods mercies be in themselues infinite and aboue all his workes and all his gracious promises which are in Christ yea and Amen yet they are limited by his infallible truth and appropriated vnto repentant sinners and therefore cannot extend to the presumptuous who take occasion from his mercies to continue impenitently in their sinnes but he will glorifie his iustice in punishing them as hee glorifieth his mercy in pardoning the sinnes of all those who turne vnto him by vnfained repentance And therefore let vs acknowledge with the Psalmist that the Lord is good Psal 73. ● and gracious yet not to all but onely to Israel euen to such as are of a cleane heart and that as the eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares open to heare their cry so the face of the Lord is against them that do euill to cut off the Psal 34. 15 16. remembrance of them from of the earth Let vs not presume vpon Gods mercy whilst we continue impenitently in our sins but let vs stand in awe of Gods Iustice and Iudgements and sin not and offer first the sacrifice of righteousnesse Psal 4. 4 5. and then put our trust in the Lord. Those likewise who presuming vpon the all-sufficiencie of Christs death merits and satisfaction doe take occasion thereby to continue in their sinnes without repentance and to neglect the duties of a godly life may easily remooue this dangerous impediment out of their way if they will but seriously consider that this is a most fearefull abuse of his inestimable loue who hath done so much for vs when as we vse his helpe to vphold vs in our sinnes and his death and merits as a pillow whereon we may sleepe more securely in our wickednesse Whereas he came not to ratifie and confirme but to dissolue and abolish 1. Ioh. 3. 8. the workes of the deuill And gaue himselfe for vs not onely to free vs from all sinne in respect of the guilt and punishment but also to purge Tit. 2. 14. vs from all iniquity and that being his peculiar people we should bee zealous of good workes He hath redeemed vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies Luk. 1. 74 75. that wee may serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse
left to doubting Finally that our Sauiour Christ continually maketh intercession for vs pleading the all-sufficiency of his merits and satisfaction for our iustification and saluation So that though we sinne yet this is our comfort that we haue an Aduocate 1. Ioh. 2. 1 2. with the Father to pleade our cause euen Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes §. Sect. 6 That pride is a singular impediment to a godly life Besides these there are diuers other carnall corruptions which are notable impediments vnto a godly life The first wherof is naturall pride whereby we haue an high conceit of our selues and of euery shadow and shew of grace in vs and imagine that we haue so much already that wee need not to labour after more nor to vse any meanes for inriching of our selues with those graces whereof we stand in need An example whereof we haue in the Pharises who thought they saw when as they were blind Ioh. 9. 31. and therefore neglected the light of truth when as the Sunne of righteousnesse did shine vnto them In the Laodiceans who thought that they were rich and had need of nothing when as they were poore and miserable Apoc. 3. 17. blind and naked In the young Iusticiary who thought hee had done all Math. 19. 20. that God required of him and attained vnto perfection when as yet hee had done nothing but still remained the slaue of sinne loaded with corruptions and imperfections And in the Corinthians who proudly conceited that they were rich and raigned as Kings not needing any helpe from the blessed Apostle when as still their lusts raigned in them The which aboue all other corrupt affections hindreth vs from proceeding in the wayes of godlinesse First because God denyeth to giue his graces to such as being proudly conceited of themselues doe not acknowledge that they stand in need of them and consequently would neuer be thankfull for them For he exalteth the humble and pulleth downe the proud he filleth the hungry with good things and sendeth the full empty away Secondly Luk. 1. 52 53. because they thinking that they haue enough already neuer labour after more but neglect all good meanes which God hath ordained for the begetting and increasing of all his graces in vs and hauing scarce set one foot forward in the course of Christianity yet conceiting that they haue almost attained vnto the Goale of perfection that they haue far outstripped all others they stand still as though there were no need of further proceeding Now if we would remooue this impediment wee must mortifie our carnall pride and labour after true humility that hauing a sight of our sinne and misery we may not content our selues but labour to come out of this wretched estate Wee must striue to see and feele our wants and weaknesses that so we may vse all good meanes wherby they may be supplied and we strengthened and the imperfections of our best actions that so we may labour after more perfection Wee must acknowledge our selues wounded and sicke with sinne that Christ may heale and cure vs weake in grace that he may strengthen vs naked that Apoc. 3. 18. he may clothe vs poore that he may inrich vs blind that hee may giue vs sight and lost in our selues that he may saue vs. The second is vniust anger frowardnesse and peeuishnesse which for the time take away the vse of reason and much more the power of Religion making vs vnfit to pray reade or heare the Word of God or to performe any other Christian duty either vnto God our neighbour or our own person and for the time so stifleth and hindereth the operations of Gods Spirit and the holy motions of his Diuine graces dwelling in vs that scarce any semblance or shew of them will appeare either to others or our selues as wee see in the example of holy Dauid who in his cooler thoughts and well tempred affections made some scruple of cutting Sauls garment but being inraged 1. Sam. 25. with fury resolueth on the death not onely of Nabal who had offended him but of his whole family who were innocent and rather on his side then against him For the remoouing of which impediment it is necessary that we doe not giue way vnto this vnruly passion according to the Apostles admonition but that we subdue and keepe it vnder not suffering the Sunne to goe downe on our wrath vsing all good meanes to mortifie Eph. 4. 26. these carnall passions and to attaine vnto the contrary grace of meekenesse and gentlenesse of which I haue written at large in my Treatise of Anger §. Sect. 7 That sloth and lazinesse is a great impediment to a godly life The third corrupt affection is sloth and lazinesse which maketh men loth to take paines in performing the duties of Gods seruice as watchfulnesse Prayer hearing the Word Meditation and the rest For many hauing proceeded thus farre as to approoue these things in their iudgements and haue some desires and faint resolutions to put them in practice yet when they finde that they cannot be done without some paines being of an idle and sluggish disposition they are presently discouraged and hauing found the treasure which is sufficient to make them rich chuse rather to remaine in their spirituall beggery then they will spend any sweat in digging for it Needs then must this be a great impediment to the duties of a godly life when as men are so luskish and lazie that they flie that labour which is required vnto them Needs must such sluggards liue in pouerty seeing it is onely the hand of the diligent that maketh rich And Pro. 22. 13. farre off are they from atchieuing any excellent worke who sit idly still pretending excuses of danger and difficulty and that there is a Lyon without ready to slay them if they goe out into the street which impediment if wee would remooue let vs consider that howsoeuer such men please themselues with idle desires yet they wil nothing profit them vnlesse they shake off their sluggishnesse and vse all diligence in their spirituall businesse So Salomon saith that the soule of the sluggard desireth and hath nothing Pro. 13. 4. but the soule of the diligent shall be made fat Yea such desires if wee rest in them doe hurt rather then helpe vs according to that of Salomon The desire of the slothful killeth him for his hands refuse to labour Secondly let Pro. 21. 25. vs consider that by this sloth we doe not only not get any spiritual riches but also that wee consume that we already seeme to haue For as our Sauiour speaketh in another case He that gathereth not scattereth abroad Mat. 12. 30. in which respect Salomon maketh that man which is slothfull in his worke 〈…〉 er to him that is a great waster Thirdly let vs consider that the Lord Pro. 18. 9. hath appoin 〈…〉 this world to be a
For as the Wise man hath obserued Heauinesse in the heart of man maketh Pro. 12. 25. it stoope needing no other burthen to ouerwhelme it seeing it is pressed downe with its owne waight And againe A merry heart maketh a cheerfull Pro. 15. 13 15. countenance but by sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken All the dayes of the afflicted are euill but he that is of a merry heart hath a continuall feast And in another place A merry heart doth good like a medicine but a broken Prou. 17. 22. spirit dryeth the bones Now that they may shake off this sadnesse and raise their drooping hearts with spirituall ioy let them consider that sorrow and heauinesse in themselues are euill and the fruits of sinne and therefore are not simply acceptable vnto God who delighteth not in the griefe and vexation of his seruants but onely when they are sanctified moderate in their measure seasonable in their time placed vpon a right subiect which can be nothing else but sinne and punishment and directed to a right end Secondly that sanctified ioy is a fruit of the Spirit and pleasing vnto God as being a part of that seruice which hee requireth of vs in the first Table seeing this is one way of hauing God in our hearts when we reioyce in him besides that it is a meanes of all other parts of Gods worship which cannot be well performed without ioy and cheerfulnesse Thirdly let them consider that the Lord promiseth this ioy and gladnesse as a singular priuiledge and a speciall benefit vnto the faithfull and therefore that it is great folly to refuse it when hee offereth it Thus the Prophet saith that in the Church shall bee heard the voyce of ioy and the Ier. 33. 11. voyce of gladnesse the voyce of the Bridegroome and the voyce of the Bride the voyce of them that shall say Praise the Lord of hosts For the Lord is good and his mercy indureth for euer And our Sauiour hath promised that hee will Joh. 16. 22. giue vnto the faithfull such constant and permanent ioy as no man shall be able to take from thē Fourthly that the priuation of this ioy is threatned as a punishment for sinne Thou shalt not goe into the house of feasting to Jer. 16. 8. and 23. 10. sit with them to eate and drinke For thus saith the Lord of hosts the God of Israel Behold I will cause to cease out of this place in your eyes and in your dayes the voyce of mirth and the voyce of gladnesse the voyce of the Bridegroome and the voyce of the Bride And againe I will cause all her mirth to Hos 2. 11. cease her feast dayes her new Moones and Sabbaths and all her solemne feasts And therfore who can please himselfe in affecting sorrow and heauinesse which the Lord threateneth as a punishment of sinne Fifthly let them consider that as mourning is a preparation to faith and as it were a sorrowfull seed-time so ioy and reioycing is the effect and fruit the croppe and haruest of it whereby we may try it both in respect of the truth and also the degree of it for whereas there is no reioycing there is no faith little ioy weake faith and fulnesse of ioy fulnesse also of perswasion Neither is it possible that a man can haue assurance of Gods loue the remission of his sinnes and of that inestimable happinesse which is reserued in our heauenly inheritance but that his heart must needs bee filled with ioy and reioycing Although it cannot be denyed but that in the time of our first conuersion and humiliation and in the case of spirituall desertions when God hideth his face and seemeth to withdraw from vs the testimonies of his loue and fauour this ioy is so eclypsed that the warmth and comfort of it is hardly to bee discerned euen as faith it selfe from which it springeth is like a fire raked vnder the ashes and not to bee perceiued by sense and feeling Finally consider that this spirituall ioy maketh vs blessed as not onely being it selfe full of sweetnesse and comfort but also the first beginning and the very entrance into the eternall ioyes of Gods Kingdome wherewith our drooping hearts are so cheered and refreshed that all difficulties become easie all tediousnesse in Gods seruice is taken away and the time that is spent therein seemeth short and pleasant In which respect the Psalmist pronounceth that people blessed Psal 89. 15 16. that know the ioyfull sound because they shall walke cheerfully in the light of Gods countenance reioycing in his name all the day and being exalted in his righteousnesse And therefore let all those who desire to goe forward in the duties of a godly life with comfort and cheerefulnesse labour to haue their hearts replenished with this spirituall ioy and to scatter and dispell as much as in them lieth the foggy mists of sad melancholy and lumpish heauinesse which maketh vs either to stand still in the wayes of godlinesse for want of this ioyfull light or to goe forward in them slowly and with much discomfort and wearinesse And to this end let them labour earnestly to liue the life of faith which draweth from Christ all the cordials of comfort and to bee thereby more and more assured of the remission of their sinnes their reconciliation with God and of the eternall saluation of their soules which will lift vp their hearts with vnspeakeable ioy euen when they are most deiected with worldly afflictions and make them to goe on cheerefully in the duties of Gods seruice when they are fully ascertained of such liberall wages and such an inestimable recompence of heauenly rewards CAP. XVI Three other obiections of the flesh against a godly life propounded and answered §. Sect. 1 That a godly life taketh away no lawfull liberty but rather establisheth it THe fourth obiection which the flesh maketh against a godly life is that it taketh away all our liberty and so checketh and curbeth vs in all our thoughts words and workes within the strict limits of Gods Law that wee haue no freedome like other men to thinke speake or doe such things as are most pleasing vnto vs. To which I answere that it doth not depriue vs of any lawfull liberty but onely restraineth vs from lawlesse licentiousnesse and curbeth in the flesh that it may not run on in exorbitant courses and glut it selfe with sinfull pleasures which alwayes end in griefe and bitternesse Wherein it doth not take away any true liberty but rather freeth vs from the most miserable and grieuous bondage and basest seruitude Ioh. 8. 34. and thraldome vnto Satan sinne and our owne lusts Yea rather by leading of a godly life we are restored vnto that ancient and true liberty in which we were created euen the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God resembling heerein our heauenly Father who though he be most free to doe whatsoeuer pleaseth him yet in respect of
our temporary and momentany seruice with the eternall wages of heauenly happinesse how vngratefull are we if wee think that the short time of our liues is too much to be spēt in his seruice who will reward our soone ending workes with euerlasting wages Let vs consider that seeing the seruice of God is of greatest worth and excellency most profitable and onely necessary it is therefore ridiculous folly not to giue it precedency and the first place but to preferre before it euery base trifle yea things not only of no value but also such as are hurtfull and pernicious as the seruice of Satan the world and our owne lusts for the contemptible wages of earthly vanities Let vs remember that wee haue onely the time present for our imployment for the time past is irreuocable and the time to come vncertaine which if we promise vnto our selues we incroach vpon Gods right seeing he hath giuen vnto vs no promise of it and sinne presumptuously by taking vpon vs to dispose of that which is onely in the hand of God That now is the acceptable time and day 2. Cor. 6. 2. of saluation and we doe not know whether it will last till to morrow which if it be once past can neuer be recouered And therefore whilest it is called Psal 95. 7 8. to day let vs hearken vnto his voyce calling vs to repentance and inuiting vs to serue him and not harden our hearts Let vs seeke the Lord whilest hee Esa 55. 6 7. may be found and call vpon him whilest he is nigh for if he depart in displeasure wee may long seeke him with the Spouse in the Canticles ere wee Cant. 5. shall finde him Let vs consider that the leading of a godly life is necessary to saluation for that time which remaineth after our calling For as the Apostle saith Without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. And what Heb. 12. 14. madnesse then is it to cast a thing of such moment vpon all vncertainties for it is vncertaine whether thou shalt liue one day longer if thou liuest vncertaine whether thou shalt haue the meanes whereby thou maist bee inabled for Gods seruice and vncertaine if thou hast them whether God will giue thee will to vse them or power to profit by them for the obtaining of spirituall life and strength whereby thou maist be inabled to serue him seeing hee may iustly refuse to bee serued by thee in thy decrepit age when thou hast no strength to serue the diuell the world and thine owne lusts because thou hast refused to doe it in thy flourishing youth and chiefe strength To which purpose one saith When the wicked man will he cannot because when he could hee Cum vult improbu● homo non potest quia quādo potuit noluit Ideo per malum velle perd●dit honum posse August in Epist. Iohan. Serm. 36. Chrysan 2 Cor. 11. Homil. 22. would not and so by an ill will hee loseth the power of well-doing But thou wilt obiect as he of whom Chrysostome speaketh That God hath giuen many this priuiledge to confesse him in old age To which I answere with him What then will hee therefore giue it thee Thou wilt say Perhaps he will Why saist thou perhaps Doth it but sometime happen Consider that the matter in deliberation is the saluation or damnation of thy soule And therefore thinke with thy selfe of the contrary and say But what if God will not giue it Doest thou yet say And what if he will giue it God grant he may But sure for all that to lay hold on the time present is both more certaine and more profitable For if thou now beginnest thou art sure to get all that thou desirest whether God grant or deny the former priuiledge whereas if thou delayest euen for this oftentimes thou shalt not receiue it When thou goest to the warres thou doest not say There is no need for mee to dispose of mine estate perhaps I shall returne Neither doest thou say when thou doest deliberate of marriage I will chuse a poore wife for many in so doing haue growne rich beyond all hope And going about to build an house thou doest not say I will lay a rotten foundation for many houses haue stood though their foundations haue been weake And yet when thou hast to deale about the saluation of thy soule thou layest hold on things more rotten and puttest all vpon vncertainties saying It often happeneth it sometimes commeth to passe It is indeed vncertaine wilt thou say but I trust to Gods mercy for he is gracious This I know and acknowledge but know this also that this mercifull God hath suddenly taken away when they least expected it such as thou art who haue posted him off with vaine delayes And what though much time bee granted thee how art thou sure that thou shalt amend and become better c For how doest thou thinke that God will then assist thee seeing thou hast so often refused his helpe when he hath graciously offered it or how canst thou hope of any ability without it Now thou canst not walke in the wayes of godlinesse and how wilt thou be able to doe it hereafter when thou art more inthralled vnto Satan more loaded with the intolerable waight of thy multiplyed sinnes more clogged and hampered fettered and hindred with the strong chaines of thy corruptions which are growne habituall and haue doubled their force with long custome Finally when as thou art more impotent to shake them off and mortifie them by reason of the infirmities of old age Yet say thou couldest then serue God in all Christian duties yet how much time in the meane while hast thou mis-spent not onely without gaine but to thy incomparable losse which if it had been imployed in Gods seruice would haue added much inestimable riches to the euerlasting recompence of heauenly rewards And therefore when as God requireth at our hands that present seruice which is due vnto him let vs not put him off like banquerupts and ill debters with words and promises that wee will pay all hereafter seeing the longer we liue the more we spend on the stocke and lesse able we shall be to make satisfaction But seeing he requireth present and constant seruice not because hee needeth it but that hee may take occasion thereby of crowning our workes with richer rewards let vs not bee so great enemies to our owne preferment as by deferring and scanting our worke to cause the Lord to abate our wages but laying aside euery waight Heb. 12. 1. and the sinne which doth so easily beset vs let vs as the Apostle exhorteth runne with patience the race which is set before vs. §. Sect. 8 The Conclusion of the whole Treatise And thus haue I through the gracious assistance of Gods holy Spirit finished this long worke for which his blessed Name be praised and magnified And haue not onely described the godly life in all the parts
grieued because they no more grieue vs. Let vs after reconciliation desire and indeuour in all things to please thee and chuse rather to displease our selues and all the world then thy Maiesty Let vs confirme our Faith in the assurance of pardon by forgiuing those who haue trespassed against vs and that not in shew onely but in truth and sincerity Let vs not onely forgiue iniuries but also forget them and approue our sincerity in remitting by our readinesse to performe all good duties vnto them that wee may ouercome euill with goodnesse Let vs passe by offences and shew our wisdome in our slownesse to Anger and Reuenge Let vs doe good to those that hurt vs and pray for those that persecute vs. Giue vnto vs not onely the grace of Iustification and the Remission of our sinnes but also of Sanctification and the spirit of fortitude whereby wee may mortifie sinne and be inabled to resist the tentations of the flesh the world and the deuill Let vs not when we are washed with the blood of Christ and freed from the guilt and curse of sinne defile our selues againe nor be intangled in the yoke of bondage but let vs stand fast in the liberty which Christ hath purchased for vs. Let vs not abuse our liberty as an occasion to the flesh and because we are freed from sin sin the more freely but being deliuered out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies let vs worship and serue thee without feare in holinesse and righteousnes before thee all the dayes of our liues Let vs continually watch pray that we doe not enter into tentations seeing our spirituall enemies are euer most busie malicious in assaulting those whom thou hast pulled out of the kingdome of darkenesse and made subiects of thy Kingdome and seruants of thy family Let vs consider our owne weakenesse and our enemies power and let this mooue vs with more feruency to craue thy helpe and assistance Establish vs O Lord by thy free Spirit and so strengthen vs with thy wisdome and power that we may be able to stand against the artificiall and cunning tentations of the deuill Doe not giue vs ouer to the Tempter nor leaue vs to our selues but with the tentation giue an happy issue that we may haue the vpper hand and be preserued from all euill We craue not to be freed from tentation but that wee may not be tempted aboue our power Yea try vs O Lord as much as thou wilt so that being tried wee may be found approued Let vs quench the fiery darts of the deuill with the shield of Faith and not admit of his suggestions but nippe them in the head when they are first offred vnto vs. Leade vs not O Lord into tentation giue vs not ouer to our owne lusts to be hardned with the deceitfulnesse of sinne nor to the world to be carried away with the desires thereof nor to the deuill to be ouercome with his tentations and to be carried away captiue to doe his will Let those weakenesse which we discerne in tentation make vs to rest more entirely vpon thy power Let vs in the sight of them be truely humbled turne them to our good and make vs more carefull in the vse of all good meanes to attaine vnto more strength Let vs not fall away in the time of tentation but enable vs to withstand our enemies in the euill day and hauing finished the fight let vs stand fast and be kept by thy power through faith vnto saluation Let vs alwaies be prepared for the day of battell and put on thy whole armour that wee may be enabled to resist our enemies Let vs not tempt thee by running into tentation and expose our selues to Satans baytes and snares before they be offered vnto vs. Let all our trials and tentations tend to our good and the more inrich vs with Spirituall graces and so further our euerlasting saluation Doe not O Lord punish in vs one sinne by giuing vs ouer to another neither leaue vs to our owne lusts to the hardnesse of our hearts or to a reprobate minde to commit sinne with greedinesse Giue vs thy sanctifying Spirit and enable vs thereby not onely to fight against the flesh but also to subdue and mortifie our earthly members our inordinate affections and euill concupiscence Renew vs by thy Spirit that we may no longer be carnall but Spirituall walking not after the flesh but after the Spirit Let vs not be carried away with the world or ouercome with the tentations either on the right hand or on the left But let vs ouercome the world by Faith Giue vs the Spirit of Wisdome to preserue vs that we be not ensnared with worldly wiles keepe vs from being corrupted with rotten speeches and the inticements and ill counsels of the wicked let vs not stumble at their scandals and offences nor be mis-led by their euill ensamples preserue vs from the contagion of their company and let vs not be conformed to their fashions but notwithstanding all their tentations let vs constantly perseuere in the course of holinesse and righteousnesse Giue vs grace to renounce all worldly lusts ambition couetousnesse and voluptuousnesse Weane our hearts from earthly vanities and let vs vse the world as not abusing it Crucifie vs to the world and the world vnto vs and let vs liue as pilgrims and strangers vpon the earth and Citizens of heauen Let vs minde heauenly things and contemne the things of the world as meere vanities in comparison of Spirituall graces and heauenly glorie Let vs not be ouercome with worldly afflictions but either in whole or in part release vs of them or else arme vs with patience that wee may beare them and indure tentation that so being approued wee may receiue the Crowne of life Tread downe Satan vnder our feet shew thy power in our weakenesse and glorifie thy Name in our victory Perfect the worke of our Sanctification Redemption which is begun in this life not only free vs in part from our corruptions but conforme vs wholy to the glorious Image of thy Son Deliuer vs from euery euill thing and preserue vs vnblameable to thy heauenly Kingdome Let vs shake off security and be vigilant and watchfull let vs aboue all obseruations looke to our hearts Let vs keepe a narrow watch ouer our tongues and senses let vs make a couenant with our eyes and turne them away from beholding vanities Let vs long after our full deliuerance and finall victory ouer our spirituall enemies and seeing we shall not absolutely be freed from sinne and perfectly sanctified in this life let vs earnestly desire to be dissolued to be with Christ that so being fully deliuered from the body of this death wee may performe vnto thee such perfect seruice as thou requirest Confirme our Faith in this assurance that thou wilt heare our prayers and grant our requests seeing thine is the Kingdom whereby thou hast right to giue whatsoeuer we
come out of our naturall ignorance and to haue our minds illightned with the knowledge of God and of those attributes whereby his true feare is wrought in our hearts as his omnipotent power omniscient wisedome omnipresence iustice trueth mercie goodnesse and the rest For there are scarce any that are ignorant of these who are not wholly possessed with carnall securitie neither doth it make them watchfull and fearefull to be compassed about with desperate dangers because liuing in the blindnesse of ignorance and in such palpable darknesse as obscureth all things they want both light and sight to see and apprehend them §. 2 The second remedie is to consider and meditate often on Gods attributes The second meanes and remedie against securitie is not onely to know God and his attributes but also often to meditate and consider of them As still to thinke and remember that hee who seeth all things seeth and beholdeth our most secret actions yea searcheth our very hearts and reines discerning euery turning and winding in this Labyrinth much better then we our selues So Salomon The eyes of the Lord are in euery place beholding the euill and the good Prouerb 15. 3. And Iob I know that thou canst doe euery thing and that no thought can be with-holden from thee Iob 42. 2. And therefore Dauid setteth God continually before him I haue saith he set the Lord alwayes before me because he is at my right hand I shall not be moued Psal 16. 8. and Psal 119. 168. Yea a Deus totus est sen●us totus vi●us totus ●udi●us Pl●● hist 〈◊〉 l. ● c. 7. that he looketh not thus vpon vs afarre off he being in heauen and we on earth but being in all b Sphae●● cuius ●en●●um vbique circ●mf●rentia ●u●quam Emp●●ocles Psal 1●9 8 9. places alike is present with vs and standeth by to see how in all things we carrie our selues and not as an idle speculatour only to gaze on our actions with either liking or dislike of them but as our c Magna tibi custod●a necessaria est qui ante ocules ●udicis v●uis cuncta cernentis Bernard m●d●t c. 6. Iudge who will either acquit and reward vs if we doe well or condemne and punish vs if we doe euill And not such a corrupt Iudge who may be blinded with rewards and taketh more care to weigh the bribe then the cause or a respecter of persons who may easily be mis-led by fauour or friendship or one so weake in authoritie or confined in his iurisdiction to such narrow limits or of such small power and strength that we may appeale from his sentence to an higher Court flee out of his dominions or by our owne wisedome and strength or helpe of our friends deliuer our selues from his iust doome by mayne force But let vs remember that the Iudge who standeth by and looketh vpon our actions is most vpright and vnpartiall who accepteth no mans person and so all-sufficient in himselfe that hee needeth no rewards and supreme Lord of all so that wee cannot giue him any thing which is not his owne alreadie That his dominion lasteth vnto all ages and extendeth vnto all creatures and his presence filleth all places so that If we could ascend into heauen he is there if we should 2. Cor. 5. 10. make our heds in hell he is there if we should take the wings of the morning to flee from his presence and dwell in the vtmost parts of the sea euen there the hand of his power and prouidence would find vs out that his sentence and decrees are much more firme and irreuocable then those of the Medes and Persians and his truth so inuiolable and vnchangeable that what hee hath spoken cannot bee disanulled but shall surely be accomplished That he is so omnipotent in power that all the creatures in heauen and earth cannot resist his will That hee is a God that hateth iniquitie and is a consuming fire to burne vp impenitent Heb. 12. 31. sinners as stubble in which regard it is a fearefull things to fall into the hands of this iust true powerfull and euerliuing God Finally let vs consider that hee who looketh vpon vs and standeth by vs is infinitly good and gracious our deare Father in Iesus Christ who hath bestowed on vs all the benefits which wee enioy in present possession and future hope and therefore that it is great impietie and foule shame to abuse such infinite mercie and inestimable benefits by neglecting his eye and presence and sleeping through carnall securitie quietly in our sinnes without any desire to come out of them by vnfained repentance And if thus considering and meditating on Gods nature and attributes we set him continually before our eyes and ourselues and all our actions in his presence it is not possible that there should be any place to lodge securitie in our hearts For if the eye of the louing and wise Father of the iust Iudge and soueraigne King doe make Children and Subiects to shake off securitie and to carrie themselues in their presence with awfull reuerence and with a desire to approue their words and workes vnto them how much more shall we thus doe if we continually set God before vs the King of Kings the supreme Iudge of men and Angels and our most gracious Father in Iesus Christ §. 3 The third meanes is to cast off all self-confidence The third meanes is to cast of all selfe-confidence and opinion of our owne wisedome and strength as being altogether insufficient to preserue vs from the least dangers Which that wee may doe let vs consider that we are neuer neerer falling then when we rest vpon the broken staffe of our owne strength and neuer further from it then when vtterly despayring of all our owne abilities we cast these brittle reeds out of our hands which doe but trouble vs and hinder our hold and relye our selues vpon the Lord the sure and neuer fayling pillar of our strength And this we see in the example of Dauid who Psal 30. 6 7. in the strength of his prosperitie growing confident that hee could not be moued was presently troubled and foiled But when finding Psal 94. 18. his foot to slip he despaired of standing in his owne strength then the mercie of the Lord did hold him vp But especially let vs wholly denie and reiect our owne worth and merits the opinion our good natures good meanings and intentions yea of the strength of our spirituall graces as though they were sufficient to deserue Gods protection or to vphold and defend vs against all perils For this maketh vs much the lesse to respect God and reuerence his holy Maiestie and to sleepe more deadly in our carnall securitie when wee lodge in the castle of our owne strength and abilities and haue the keyes of our safetie and protection in our owne keeping Whereas if we see and acknowledge our owne insufficiencie our want of wisedome and power
weake and vaine vnable to helpe vs in time of trouble and momentany and mutable readie to forsake and leaue vs when we most relye vpon them or though they could do vs some pleasure in being meanes of our freedom from small perils yet they will nothing profit vs if we liue securely in our sinnes for the appeasing of Gods wrath or satisfying his iustice they will doe vs no good when wee shall most need it namely at the day of death or the day of Iudgement Lastly let vs consider that these worldly benefits are not absolutely bestowed on vs to doe with them what we list but are the Lords Talents entrusted vnto vs as his Stewards to be employed for our Masters aduantage and good of our Fellow-seruants So that the more wee haue receiued the more wee are indebted and the greater account we haue to make at the day of Iudgement and to sustaine the greater condemnation if we haue wasted our Masters goods and so come short in our reckonings In which respect our great prosperitie should not nourish in vs pride and securitie but rather humilitie and feare care and watchfulnesse that wee may so take the present comforts of these worldly blessings as that they may not hinder but rather further vs to the euerlasting fruition of heauenly happinesse §. 6 The fift remedie is to shun customable sinning The fift meanes to auoide carnall securitie is to shunne customable sinne and howsoeuer through infirmitie wee sometime flippe into it yet let vs take heed we doe not choose it for our common way and by much vse and often acting of it make it as familiar as if it were our ordinarie Trade and Occupation For custome of sinning doth take Omne peccatum vile est consuetudine fit homini quasi nullum Aug. in aduent Dom. ser 4. c. 10. away all sense of sinne and whereas at the first it seemed notorious and hainous and therefore affrighted the conscience with guilt and horrour after that men haue often committed it it seemeth little or nothing and therefore they continue in it without feare So those that are often flesht in blould and crueltie make no more account of killing a man then of killing a beast those that inure their tongues to oathes and blasphemies vent them as securely and without feare as yea and nay they that haue often stollen their neighbours goods could as securely continue their theft as other men their Trades and Occupations were they not endangered hereby to humane lawes And in a word sinners of all kinds by much custome in sinning doe make this deadly Serpent so tame that they dare without feare put it into their bosomes And by iniuring themselues to drinke of this mortall poison by degrees they make it so familiar to their stomackes that they are not sensible of any hurt it doth them Yea by much acquaintance sinne which at first terrified the conscience like an enemie becommeth their play-fellow and they account it but a recreation of their youth and euen a sport to doe euill herein like through their impietie vnto little children in their simplicitie who securely play at the Cockatrice hole as the Prophet speaketh to another purpose Esa 11. 8. In which regard let vs carefully take heed that wee be not hardned Heb. 3. 13. with the deceitfulnesse of sinne which though it bee a malitious enemie by much conuersing with vs will so insinuate that wee shall securely entertaine it as a welcome Guest Let vs in respect of our great frailtie take occasion by our former falls to become more carefull and fearefull that we doe not fall againe auoiding all meanes of sinne which draw and entice vs to it or if we be ouertaken let vs not lye in it still lest we fall into this sleepe of securitie but let vs rise out of it presently by renewed repentance And as soone as wee feele our selfe stung with this poisonous Viper let vs without delay applie the antidotes and remedies which are fit to cure the wound for else this poison will disperse it into all the parts of our heart and soule and so bring vs into this deadly sleepe of carnall securitie in which we shall perish without sense or feeling §. 7 The sixt remedie is to make precious account of Gods grace and forbearance The sixt meanes is that we make precious account of Gods grace and forbearance his patience and long suffering and labour to haue our hearts so affected with them as that they may bee wrought to Gods loue and feare whereby we shall be made carefull and watchfull that we doe not displease this gratious and good God who so loueth vs and whom we so loue or if through frailtie wee haue incurred his displeasure that we doe with vnwearied diligence seeke his face and fauour by renewing our repentance For we may be assured that wee shall not lose our labour seeing he is so patient and slow to wrath that he will receiue vs to grace if we turne vnto him And contrariwise let vs take heed of abusing this patience and long-suffering of God by taking occasion and incouragement thereby to continue impenitently in our sinnes seeing hereby wee shall become so secure and hardhearted in our sinfull courses that whereas before we refused or Rom. 2. 4 5. delayed to repent now repentance will refuse vs so as either it will neuer come into our thoughts or else not be able to pierce into our hearts they will be so hardned through Gods righteous Iudgement for our grosse abuse of his grace and goodnesse §. 8 The seuenth remedie is to shunne presumption The seuenth meanes is carefully to take heed that we doe not presumptuously abuse Gods mercies as an occasion and encouragement Psal 130. 4. vnto sinne but contrariwise feare and reuerence him the more by how much we find him more louing and gratious according to that of the Psalmist There is forgiuenesse with thee that thou mayest bee feared For there is nothing more that doth beget and nourish this carnall securitie as the miserable experience of former Ages and our owne times doth lamentably prooue then this conceit that God is so mercifull that he will pardon all our sinnes whensoeuer we turne from them by repentance although it bee euen at the houre of our death And consequently nothing would more weaken and cause it to languish then if we plucke this weapon from it and turne the edge and point of it against it selfe taking occasion thereby the more to loue God who is so gratious and out of this loue the more to feare his displeasure To which end let vs alwaies consider that the Lord is no lesse infinite in iustice then in mercie and that he is as readie to glorifie himselfe in manifesting the one by punishing of presumptuous and impenitent sinners as the other in sparing and forgiuing those that turne vnto him by vnfained repentance That those whom he cannot allure and draw vnto him with
when wee shall attaine to heauenly happinesse there shall we enioy perfect securitie when the Gates of the new Ierusalem shall be shut and made sure with strong barres there shall be full reioycing and exsulting with great ioy And therefore let vs not by a false securitie which is an abortiue brat and borne before the time expose our selues to greater danger especially to the hazard and losse of that heauenly securitie which shall bee disturbed with no trouble but let vs stay our time and watch till the Bridegroome doth come and open the dore for vs to enter into the wedding Chamber and now prepare our selues to fight against our spirituall Enemies that hauing gotten the victorie in this life wee may triumph ouer them with ioy peace and endlesse securitie in the life to come §. 9 The ninth remedie is to meditate often on the last iudgement The ninth meanes to shun carnall securitie is often to meditate on the day of Iudgement the all-seeing Wisedome omnipotent Power Siue Comedam siue bibam siue aliud aliquid faciam semper vox illa terribilis auribus meis insonare videtur Surgite mortui venite ad iudicium Hieron in Matth. Matth. 24. 46 47 48 51. and the exact Iustice of our Iudge the greatnesse of our reckonings and strictnesse of that account which will then bee required and will be impossible for vs to set euen if wee seldome or neuer thinke of them here but passe our time in sloth and securitie Let vs remember how happy their condition will bee who like faithfull seruants haue beene carefull to performe their dutie watching daily for the comming of their Lord when they shall be reputed blessed and bee made Ruler of their Masters substance and the miserable plight of those who haue not expected his comming nor prepared for it but haue spent their dayes in riot and pleasure in oppression and crueltie when comming suddenly hee shall take them at vnawares cut them off and giue them their portion with Hypocrites where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth Let vs thinke with what ioy wee shall heare that happy sentence Well done good and faithfull seruant Matth. 25. 21 26 27 30. thou hast beene faithfull ouer a few things I will make thee Ruler ouer many things enter thou into the ioy of thy Lord and with what tormenting griefe and bitter anguish those who haue beene vnprofitable and vnfruitfull shall heare that fearefull saying Thou wicked and slothfull seruant c. Take the talent from him and giue it vnto him that hath ten talents c. And cast the vnprofitable seruant into outer darknesse there shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth Let vs consider with what cheerfulnesse and ioy wee shall meete the Bridegroome the Lord of glorie and happinesse if wee haue watched for his comming and are found in readinesse hauing our Lamps of Faith and a godly life cleerly burning when wee shall enter with him into the bridall Chamber of eternall blessednesse to bee feasted with vnspeakable Matth. 25. 1 2 c. pleasures and to solace our selues perpetually in his loue and with what terror and dismayednesse they shall be possessed who by his comming shall be awakned out of their sleepe of carnall securitie and being vnreadie shall be shut out of dores and when they desire to enter shall heare that fearefull and dreadfull speech Goe your wayes I know you not Finally let vs remember with what inestimable ioy and reioycing we shall heare that happy sentence Come yee blessed Children of my Father inherit the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the World and with what horror and howling the Wicked shall heare their last doome Depart from mee yee cursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the Deuill and his angels And withall let vs set before vs the execution of this righteous sentence which shall be not the momentanie or onely long continuance of these rewards and punishments but eternall life and happinesse to the godly and Matth. 5. 46. faithfull and euerlasting death and condemnation to the wicked and vnbeleeuers §. 10 The last remedie is frequent and feruent prayer for Gods blessing vpon all the former meanes The last meanes which sanctifieth and giueth efficacie vnto all the rest is frequent and feruent prayer that it will please the Watch-man of Israel who neither slumbreth nor sleepeth to watch ouer vs and to preserue vs in watchfulnesse that we fall not into this sleepe of carnall securitie or being readie to slumber that hee will awaken and rowse vs vp with the good motions of his Word and Spirit And when wee feele our hearts enclining to hardnesse by their neglect or slothfull cold and sluggish vse of the meanes of our saluation wee must with the Church expostulate with God and crie out vnto him O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy wayes and hardned our Esa 63. 17. hearts from thy feare And earnestly desire him with Dauid that hee will create in vs a cleane heart and renew a right spirit in vs and that Psal 51. 10. according to his promise he will take the stonie hearts out of our bodies Ezeeh. 11. 19. and giue vs hearts of flesh which will tremble at his Word and feare him for his Mercies and Iudgements Finally let vs pray vnto him that he will giue vs grace with all care and good conscience to vse the meanes before spoken of and so blesse them vnto vs by his holy Spirit as that they may be effectuall for our preseruation from carnall securitie for the suppling and softning of our hearts for the replenishing of them with his true feare and for the stirring of vs vp to Christian watchfulnesse that we may be in readinesse against the day of the appearing of our Bridegroome our LORD and SAVIOVR IESVS CHRIST and so may enter into that dore of heauenly happinesse and communicate with him in those vnspeakable and euerlasting ioyes which with his precious death and bloodshed hee hath purchased for vs. OF SPIRITVALL AND CHRISTIAN SECVRITIE THE SECOND BOOKE CHAP. I. Wherein spirituall securitie is defined and the definition explaned §. 1 That all securitie is not to be condemned but that it is in some kind commendable and to be desired HAuing spoken of that Securitie which is naturall in all the kinds of it it now in Non quaelibet securitas est laudabilis sed qua●do deponit a●iquis curam p●out deb●t Th. Aquin. 2. 2. quaest 129. art 7. the last place remayneth that we briefly intreate of that Securitie which is supernaturall diuine and holy For as all Securitie is not commendable but onely when a man as he ought layeth aside all care so on the other side all Securitie is not to bee condemned but when hee assumeth it as hee ought not namely such a Securitie as is built on an ill foundation and vpon false and deceitfull grounds which as it proceedeth from euill causes so