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A13547 The parable of the sovver and of the seed Declaring in foure seuerall grounds, among other things: 1. How farre an hypocrite may goe in the way towards heauen, and wherein the sound Christian goeth beyond him. And 2. In the last and best ground, largely discourseth of a good heart, describing it by very many signes of it, digested into a familiar method: which of it selfe is an entire treatise. And also, 3. From the constant fruit of the good ground, iustifieth the doctrine of the perseuerance of saints: oppugneth the fifth article of the late Arminians; and shortly and plainly answereth their most colourable arguments and euasions. By Thomas Taylor, late fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge, and preacher of the Word of God, at Reding in Bark-shire. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1621 (1621) STC 23840; ESTC S118185 284,009 494

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bee heard pitied nor ended Lastly an euill heart can heare but not pray before-hand and so loseth all the power of the Word and the blessing which depends on prayer for Paul planteth Apollos watereth but God giueth the increase 1. Cor. 3.6 And Pauls preaching was fruitfull to Lydia because the Lord opened her heart Act. 16.14 The second meanes whereby true Religion is maintained are the Sabbaths and assemblies In respect whereof a good heart hath many markes and qualities 1. It knowes God hath appoynted both a certaine time and place for the publike exercise of Religion both for the preseruation of his worship which else would speedily run to ruine as also that the Church might be knowne and discerned as a City on the top of a Mountaine by the meeting of his people and that such as forsake it might iustly and inexcusably be damned it being so visible and sensible among them Now this being a morall and perpetuall Commandement written in Tables of stone a good heart dares not bring the guilt of violating it vpon it selfe by forgetting what God would haue vs remember or profaning what hee commands to keepe holy or vnhallowing the time or place which he hath blessed to holy vses Leuit. 19.30 Yee shall keepe my Sabbaths and reuerence my Sanctuary I am the Lord. 2. It knowes that the strict keeping of the Sabbath is a fashioning of vs to Gods Image who did all his worke in the six dayes and rested the seuenth To the Image of Adams holinesse in his innocency who obserued the seuenth day holy vnto God And to the image of the second Adam The Lord of the Sabbath who most absolutely kept the Sabbath fulfilling all righteousnesse And the good hart though it cannot attaine this perfection yet striues to recouer this Image 3. It knowes that as it is the Pale and preseruatiue of Religion and the heart of the Commandements as it is placed betweene the two Tables so it is the triall of Religion Whence it is vsuall in Scripture to put keeping of the Sabbath for the whole worship of God and the Prophets mentioning the decay of all Religion say the Sabbaths are polluted Lam. 1.7 and that hee that is an ordinary Sabbath-breaker is a man of no religion without God in the world The Iewes could say If this man were of God he would keepe the Sabbath Ioh. 9.16 And enemies and hinderers of sanctifying the Sabbath are called vnbeleeuers vagabonds and wicked fellowes Act. 17.2 5. 4. It knowes that fearfull iudgements linger and waite vpon that person or people that negligently or wilfully profane Gods holy Sabbath Neh. 13.18 Did not your fathers thus and our God brought all this plague vpon vs Yet ye increase the wrath in breaking the Sabbath Ezek. 20.13 God thinkes on such to powre out indignation vpon them Which is a fire that cannot be quenched Ier. 17. vlt. The bodily death for the breach of the Ceremoniall part did figure the death of the soule for the breach of the Morall part See Exod. 31.14 and 35.2 5. It knowes that God showres downe blessings spirituall and temporall of this life and a better on the heads of conscionable obseruers of the Sabbath Esa. 56.2 5. Blessed is the man that doth this that keepeth the Sabbath and pollutes it not Chap. 58.13 14. If thou make the Sabbath a delight thou shalt delight in the Lord that is in the sweetnesse of his Word and Ordinances thou shalt mount on the high places of the earth that is be exalted aboue all people in true honour and be fed with the heritage of Iacob that is enioy all the good things of the promised Land of heauenly Canaan Here are blessings internall externall eternall 6. It knowes that the carefull sanctifying of a Sabbath heere is the beginning of that euerlasting Sabbath hereafter when we shall be gathered vnto the Congregation of the first borne written in heauen and enter into that eternall Rest of which this is a shadow which who so begins not here God hath sworne he shall neuer enter into his rest Hence a good heart first remembers the Sabbath day to sanctifie it It will all the weeke prepare for the Sabbath and doe all his owne worke in the sixe dayes as God did his that hee may rest on the seuenth It will remoue all things that may hinder the sanctifying of it either in himselfe or in his family that all worldly businesse may bee buried for that day as Iacob buried his Idols before he went to Bethel the House of God It will remember it is a day of rest from all bodily labour which necessity or holinesse command not for Adam himselfe in innocency could not both keepe the Sabbath and walke in his vocation And that it is a Day of holy rest not of idlenesse a Sabbath of the Lord. If God had liked idlenesse saith Athanasius he would not haue commanded so many things to be done nor all the parts of his worship to bee doubled on the Sabbath as Numb 28.9 10. nor so many duties of it as the longest day is short enough for them Therefore euery good heart will rest from all his speciall calling and waite on the generall Master or seruant young or old the buyer and seller Neh. 10.31 All Carryers and Porters Ier. 17.21 Beare no burthen on the Sabbath day no not the Husband-man in haruest Exod. 34.21 Yea the Prince himselfe is not exempted but must be among them Ezek. 46.9 Secondly a good heart will keepe the whole Sabbath day which is the seuenth in respect of the sixe following namely the first day of the weeke as the Iewish was the seuenth in respect of the sixe going before namely the last of the weeke If thou hirest a seruant or labourer to worke a day doest thou not meane a whole day When God allowes thee sixe dayes are they not whole and is not the seuenth so too When God rested the seuenth day was it not the whole Therefore a good heart thinks not it hath sufficiently kept a Sabbath to heare Seruice or a Sermon in the fore-noone or after-noone and all day else doe what hee list No it will giue him the morning and giue him the euening too Psal. 92.2 It selfe would not accept of another the labour of one or two houres for a dayes worke and dares not offer it to God but will keepe the whole Sabbath either in Gods House or it owne in duties publike or priuate Ier. 17.22 Ye shall doe no worke but sanctifie my Sabbath Thirdly a good heart will make the whole man keepe the Sabbath For as man stands of two parts body and soule so the sanctifying of the Sabbath is twofold inward and outward which a godly heart is carefull not to diuorce and therefore 1. Preserues the outward man from seruile workes of the calling but specially from committing sinne which is the most seruile worke and most contrary to the sanctification of the
Sabbath the Lord cannot abide the Sabbaths when the hands are full of blood Esa. 1.13 But the Sabbath that he chuseth is to loose the bands of wickednesse 2. It bindes the tongue to holy speeches If euery idle word must bee answered for much more idle speeches on the Sabbath which is a double sinne A good heart must not speake his owne words nor a vaine word Esa. 58.13 It cannot giue reines to the tongue to direct worldly busines to make reckonings to prattle of other mens businesse to busie it selfe in the world or worldly affaires to talke of newes as the Athenians or sports and pleasures nor things lawfull on other dayes A good heart out of a better store will speake of better things 3. It watcheth ouer the inner man rests his affections in Sabbath-duties and makes it his delight suffers not his thoughts to roue Esa. 58.13 Thou shal● not thinke thy owne will For the Lord requires the whole heart soule strength and minde Luk. 10.27 In one word A good heart will care to occupy his mind mouth tongue eare hand and foot as God would haue them Fourthly it will not onely keepe the Sabbath strictly it selfe but see it kept of all within his power A Magistrate of a good heart will compell all within the gates of the City thereunto Ier. 17. ●0 Heare ye Kings ●eare no burthens that is suffer not others A good Magistrate would set no Fat 's on the Sabbath nor Racks by suffering others nor buy and sell by suffering others nor drinke and sweare or play away the Sabbath by suffering others all whose sinnes become his by his conniuence Neh. 13.15 A father of a good heart will command and compell all his children as Abraham He will not suffer them to play and sport when they should be at diuine seruice but where he is taught they shall bee when he prayes they shall when he heares they shall and to him they shall giue account of their hearing A Master of a good heart will see his seruant serue his Master in heauen as he serues him the sixe dayes He cannot send him on errands and trifling businesse running and riding to serue his owne turne and leaue God vnserued but as hee will not haue him neglect his affaires in the sixe dayes so not Gods seruice on the seuenth but keepe him in to the duties of that Day Obiect We cannot keepe in our seruants and children that Day Ans. 1. You can finde meanes other dayes to hold them to your owne businesse 2. If they will haue liberty this Day giue it them for all the rest for Dauid would not haue a wicked person in his house Psal. 101.4 5. but hee that is a seruant of God shall be my seruant Fifthly a good heart holds it selfe bound to ioyne with the Assemblies of Gods people to frequent the House of God and serue and seeke him to come on that Day to Church the Schoole of God to heare and learne his will and the Market of God to make prouision for the soule for all the weeke following It dares not forsake the fellowship as some Heb. 10.25 It mournes when vrgent occasion absenteth it lookes toward the Temple hungers and earnestly desires the fruition of such a blessing Psalm 42.2 It esteemes one day in Gods House aboue a thousand elsewhere Psal. 84.10 such sweetnesse it tasteth in his Ordinances Word and Sacraments Lastly being sensible of Gods presence according to the promise where two or three are gathered together in his Name it comes not but first puts off his shooes because this is holy ground and lookes to his feete Eccles. 4.17 that is prepares his affections to come with feare and reuerence with ioy and cheerfulnesse heed and watchfulnesse faith and holinesse before that great Presence Now an euill heart first neuer prepares for the Sabbath though it will not bee vnprouided for a market-Market-day yea it can dispatch his businesse to set it selfe loose for any lust The Iewes had a preparation to the Sabbath and Ioseph of Arimathea came the day before the Sabbath and begged the body of our Lord and buried it before the Sabbath to free himselfe from the action and care of it Secondly it can defraud the Lord of his Day or the greatest part of it and holds it selfe loose after euening exercise to what it list as if himselfe would giue his seruant leaue after that time to cast off his seruice Thirdly it makes no conscience of profaning the Lords Sabbath many wayes 1. Doing his owne will not the Lords his owne worke not the worke of the Sabbath selling wares within the shop and without running vp and downe with them and other workes of the calling whereas the Commandement is Thou shalt doe no manner of worke 2. Turning the Lords Rest into idlenesse as the fruitlesse spending of it both within dores and abroad in many vaine exercises 3. Profanely turning it into the plaine seruice of the diuell by Ales gaming drinking and accursed riots in exercises heathenish and hellish Is it a sinne to open a shop window and none to game swill and sweare Is the Sabbath appoynted to cleanse thy soule from sinne and darest thou most soule and moyle thy selfe that day aboue other 4. Iangling away the day in company with idle chat any words are ready but of God and to God or if alone holding profane and vnsauory thoughts free enough to driue out the meditation of God his Word and workes 5. Profaning it in their children or seruants whom they suffer to bee vaine and idle or force them not to Gods seruice or which is worst force them by commandement or example to pollute it for some Masters and fathers are like Pharaoh who laid the heauiest taskes on the Lords Day aboue all the weeke and then increased the burthens when Israel spake of going to serue the Lord. Fourthly an euill heart can easily withdraw it selfe from the Assemblies as seeing no beauty no presence of God without all reuerence of the Sanctuary whereas the Iewes might not tarry at home from the Synagogue nay some Fathers say probably that Christ himselfe came still to the Synagogues that he might obserue the Law which hee came to fulfill But this wilfull excommunication without repentance goes before casting out of the great Congregation in heauen Lastly it can vpbraid others for precise and curious who are strict keepers of the Sabbath and cannot go with their neighbours drinking reuelling and vsing profane pastime It can obiect great and learned and rich and noble that like not such precisenesse in keeping the Sabbath But we haue God going before vs in precept and his owne example sanctifying the Sabbath If we follow example he is most vn-erring and aboue them all in wisedome nobility c. The third meanes wherby true Religion is maintained are Ministers and Pastors In respect of whom a good heart hath many eminent markes and excellent qualities For
demonstrate that the people of God and his dearest Saints were farre from a life led in pleasure Iacob professed Few and euill haue my dayes been that is full of affliction And Moses chose to suffer affliction with the people of God when hee was of age saith the Text he refused the pleasures of Pharaohs Court and the treasures of Egypt The like of the Apostles and other Saints But especially if we will be conformable to our Head Did he spend his dayes or nights in pleasure Yea was not his life painfull and sorrowfull c Doe wee euer reade of him that he laughed but that hee wept wee often reade The ordinary estate and condition of Gods people is to suffer aduersity Heb. 11.25 The way to heauen is all strawed with crosses By many afflictions we must enter into heauen Act. 14.22 And all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus must suffer persecutions 2. Tim. 3.12 And wee must acknowledge the bitter things laid on the brests of the world to be of God to weane vs from the loue and pleasure of it II. The second Generall proposed is Markes of a man in whom pleasures preuaile aboue the Word And they are seuen 1. An vnder-valuing of better pleasures as of Gods House in earth or in heauen when men account of no such pleasure as that they enioy in earth and earthly things This marke is giuen 2. Pet. 2.13 They shall receiue the wages of vnrighteousnesse as those who account it pleasure to liue deliciously for a season that is when men as Epicures place their felicity in present pleasures which is indeed the life fitter for brutes whose soule if it be not their sense riseth not beyond their sense then for men who are not onely reasonable but Christians Yet many such there are in the world as 1. When men are heauie to the Temple which argues no pleasure in Gods presence nor in the presence of Christ who walkes in the midst of the seuen golden Candlesticks Reuel 1. Nor in the presence of the Spirit who blowes especially there nor in the presence of the Angels who desire and stoupe downe to see the things handled 1. Pet. 1.12 nor of the Saints who are said to meet the Lord in Sion Psal. 84.7 Now where could a good heart with more pleasure rest it selfe than in Gods resting place in Christs society in the way of the Spirit in the Ministery of Angels and fellowship of Saints Did not the Prophet count one day in Gods house better than a thousand else-where And did he not professe Psa. 26.8 Lord I haue loued the habitation of thy House and the place where thine honour dwelleth And was it not prophesied of all Beleeuers that they should assemble as Doues fly to their windowes and as clouds driuen by the winde Esa. 60.8 2. When the delight is more in temporall food than in spirituall and a man can bee more ioyfull at his owne table than at Gods Whereas Dauid found nothing so sweet to his taste as the Word preferred it before his daily food yea before his sleepe Psal. 119.148 Will not euery man say that to taste how good God is is the best taste yet most men taste more sweetnesse in the white of an egge than in him 3. When men haue more delight in the diuels bookes than in Gods and can be more iolly in tossing and shaking the cards and dice than in turning and reading Gods Booke Or to speake of more lawfull recreations than they If a man take more pleasure in any recreation than in better exercises his pleasure is sinfull and choking 4. When men take more pleasure in their speciall calling than in their generall in gathering money than in gathering grace in worldly riches more than in heauenly now it is choking Dauid esteemed the Word aboue thousands of gold and siluer The wise Merchant esteemed the Pearle aboue all his estate And a good heart as Paul esteemes all things dung and losse for Christ. And according to the estimate of things is the pleasure and delight in them 5. When men preferre an empty ioy aboue fulnesse of ioy the pleasures of Gods left hand before those of his right Psalm 16.11 a drop of pleasure before a riuer and a drop of life in misery before the Well of Life in mercy and glory Psalm 36.8 9. 2. Marke When men make light account of Gods Call in respect of the call of their pleasures let them be otherwise neuer so lawfull now they are sinfull Gods Commandements must stand by while their pleasures command them 1. Sam. 15.3 Saul had an expresse Commandement to smite Amalek and haue no compassion on man woman infant suckling Oxe or Sheepe But it pleaseth Saul to haue compassion on the King and the fat beasts A good booty Hee shall enrich himselfe with the Kings ransome and such a large prey will spare his owne beasts at least serue him for sacrifice a long time Lots wife had an expresse charge and menace on paine of death not to looke behind her But the care of her house and goods with the loue of her friends made her forget the Commandement to her owne destruction God commands not to sweare at all but passe the ordinary speech by yea and nay Yet men ordinarily sweare and accustome themselues to breake the Commandement Why for it is their pleasure and custome and they cannot leaue it God commands to doe no seruile worke on the Sabbath day nor to meddle with the duties of the calling no manner of worke Oh but now it would pleasure my neighbour and aduantage my selfe to serue a customer Now a man is at the command of his owne pleasure and Gods Law must stand aside God commands not to runne easily out of our calling on the weeke-day or if any time be to be spared to redeeme it to the generall But games or sports or drinking-company calls day by day now farwell the Commandement Gods Booke and counsell farwell both callings nothing can call so forcibly as his play and pastime nothing so necessary nothing so pleasing What other is the cause of all adulteries slanders reuenges railings murthers and effeminate contentions among men but that they are as slaues to their owne lusts and the command of them and Gods Commandements can take no place 3. Marke When a man will not bee at so much charge for God for good duties and his owne saluation as for his pleasures and lusts When men can waste and riot out abundance of money in feasting gaming excesse of apparell but to maintaine Gods Worship to feast or cloath the poore seruants of Christ they haue no will or desire nay their hawkes and dogs are more chargeable to many than God himselfe his seruice and all the poore members of Iesus Christ. Let pastime call there are pounds and pieces ready But let the poore call let the Law and good order call for them there are not pence wrung out let Preachers
Day of the Lord the euill seruant saith My Master deferres his comming and dares not say from his heart Come Lord Iesus come quickly VI. Markes of a good heart in respect of good duties It considereth first that it is Gods new workmanship created to good workes Eph. 2.10 and that Christs redeemed ones are a peculiar people zealous of good workes Tit. 2.14 that it is a note of a Disciple of Christ to bring forth good fruits Ioh. 15.8 and without them it cannot be a good Tree nor can haue his calling adoption or ingraffing into Christ sealed vp vnto him Secondly that it is to the praise and glory of God to be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse Phil. 1.11 Thirdly that it becomes the Gospell and adornes it to shine as lights in the midst of a crooked generation Phil. 2.15 And that the practice of obedience is the most seemely and best garment of a Christian therefore 1. Tim. 2.20 euen women professing the feare of God must apparell themselues with good workes Fourthly that according to our seed-time shall be our Haruest and according to the proportion of the fruits of grace shall be the fruition of glory Hee that gaines fiue or ten talents shall rule so many Cities Therefore it is most carefull and diligent in good duties and not onely to doe them but to doe them well in these seuen circumstances 1. Wisely obseruing these Rules of wisedome in doing good First hee makes the tree good or else it yeelds no good fruit Hee lookes to his faith and iustification thereby that they be fruits of faith without which they are sinne and cannot please God Heb. 11.6 To doe the workes of God a man must first beleeue in him whom God hath sent Ioh. 6.28.29 Secondly he will not doe them without light and direction knowing the light necessary as for naturall and ciuill actions so for diuine also The Word is the light and lanthorne and all actions of Christian obedience is but the holding forth of the Word without which he shall heare that expostulation Who required these things at your hands Thirdly knowing that all duties done too late are hopelesse fruitlesse it will wisely know the season of doing good it will walke while day is worke in Summer sowe in seed-time apprehend meanes offered and good opportunities It will seeke God while hee may be found and enter with the wise Virgins while the dore is open and prouide oyle in time The grace of a good action is the seasonablenesse of it God himselfe for our example hath an appointed time that is a fit season for all his worke Eccles. 3.1 Fourthly knowing that a bad end spoiles the best action it doth not things to be seene of men but for the glory of God and the honour of his Gospell for the testification of his faith obedience thankfulnesse for the edification of his brethren and prouoking of others to loue and good workes Heb. 10.24 Fiftly knowing the difficulty of good things it armeth and prepareth it selfe against difficulties as the heat of persecution discouragement of Superiours coldnesse of times scornes of men c. It fore-casteth the cost charge the losse and danger and accounts not his life deare so he may finish his course with ioy 2. A good heart doth good duties humbly first with repentance without which all are reiected Act. 26.20 Paul taught repentance and turning to God and then to doe workes worthy amendment of life Secondly it can accomplish nothing as it would but supplies the defect of the action with abundance of affection Psal. 119.5 Oh that my wayes were directed to keepe thy statutes It pleaseth it selfe in nothing It reioyceth not in any performance but craueth Gods gracious acceptance Thirdly it dreames not of any perfection it hath attained but sets perfection before it and runnes toward it Phil. 3.13 but with dayly sence and strife against imperfection It complaines of his best actions is ashamed of his wants in them and is neuer quiet till it get a couer for them It cries with Dauid O enter not into iudgement with thy seruant O Lord. It tenders them all in the perfect merit of Christs obedience without which all our righteousnesse is as a filthy clout 3. A good heart doth good duties heartily or cheerfully Exod. 25.2 All the obedience of a good heart is from the heart Rom. 6.17 Ye haue obeyed from the heart the forme of doctrine deliuered It cannot content it selfe in doing a good worke out of this good manner of doing first because it knowes the beginning of acceptable obedience must be the heart which must quicken all our duties or else they are dead secondly if seruants must doe to their Masters euery thing heartily much more the seruants of God to their Master in heauen Thirdly the Lord obserues which is eye-seruice and which is heart-seruice he reiects compulsed worship and accepts onely free-will offerings and complaines if any piece of the heart bee wanting as in many Kings of Israel 4. A good heart doth good duties abundantly an heart purged by Christ bringeth forth more fruit Iohn 15.2 for herein is the Father glorified verse 8. 1. Cor. 15.58 abounding in the worke of the Lord. To this it striues for these reasons First because it is ready prest and forward to good and kept in a preparednesse for euery good worke it growes full of goodnesse both in gracious incitations and gracious actions Secondly it not onely takes but seekes occasions of doing good and so growes rich in good workes Thirdly the more it doth the more easie they be and so come off quicker He that doth them quicke riseth apace Fourthly it is as busie and as glad to set forward Gods glory in and by others as by himselfe and so in all companies and occasions makes himselfe a gainer 5. A good heart doth good duties vniuersally first it diuorceth not the two Tables but aimeth at the seruice of God in holinesse and righteousnesse secondly it will fulfill all righteousnesse as taught by the doctrine of grace which calls on vs for all duties of piety righteousnesse and sobriety Tit. 2.12 The loue of God produceth workes of piety which are sacrifices of praises and prayer the calues of the lips morning and euening and on all occasions And because sacrifice is abominable without iudgement and iustice Prou. 21.3 it is carefull to giue euery man his right and will serue God in seruing man And because mercy from God and mercy to man are ioyned together it delights in all occasions of mercy the workes whereof are so many odours of sweet smell Phil. 4.18 Thirdly it attends to all duties both of the generall calling and speciall is carefull that one duty destroy not but set forward another and is still in the exercise of whatsoeuer is honest iust of any praise or vertue A good heart like a good seruant will doe
vnderstand for so Beza translateth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and proues both out of the Syriake and out of the opposition of this ground to the next which receiues the Word with ioy that it were more conueniently read and translated which attend not than vnderstand not Vse 1. Lectio haec saith Gregory non indiget expositione sed admonitione Christ hath expounded this to our hand and therefore this needs not an Interpreter so much as a Practiser Thus then I proceed If the worst ground of all heareth the Word and those Hearers which shall be deepest in damnation are Hearers of the Word what shall then become of them that will not heare What haruest can they expect who will suffer no seed to be sowne in their fields Or what earth is that that is let lie vnsteared and vnsowne but some barren Common or some dry Heath and Wildernesse which brings nothing but thornes and briers whose end is to be burned What shall we say to our Popish Recusants who runne from the Church and stop their eares against the Word as if Religion and deuotion stood onely in flying the Scriptures the rule of all Religion Were they here present to heare mee I would tell them 1. That if they were of God they would heare his Word but as Christ said to the Iewes Yee are not of God because ye heare not his Word 2. If they were the sheepe of Christ they would heare his voice Ioh. 10.27 But Christs marke is worne off and they beare the marke of Antichrist 3. Were they of Christs kindred and acquaintance they would heare his Word Luk. 8.20 My mother and brethren are they which heare the Word of God and keepe it 4. Were they not wedded to that Man of sinne they would not so sinne against their owne soules Prou. 8.35 Hee that sinnes against me saith Wisedome hates his owne soule and all that hate me loue death 5. Were they heires of blessing they would not runne from the blessing of them that are Hearers of the Word and doers of it and so wrap themselues in that curse Act. 3.23 It shall be that euery person who will not heare that Prophet shall be destroyed from his people 6. Were their Religion of God they would not thrust away his Word with both hands contrary to the man of God Psalm 119.48 who lifted vp both his hands to the Word of God as if hee would pull it to him with both hands Were their Religion any other but a mystery of darknesse it would brooke the light which whosoeuer feareth or flyeth hee is an euill doer Were it any other but an heape or packe of Idolatry it would abide the triall of the Word But Dagon must downe before the Arke Euery contrary flies and expels the contrary Gods Word is the breath of Christs mouth which must blast wither the kingdome of Antichrist and therefore all the kingdome of Antichrist hates and shunnes it as the theefe the gallowes set vp for his execution Againe what shall we say to the despisers of Gods Word Many there are who make light account of a Sermon they had rather heare an Enterlude than a Sermon A game at Maw or Irish is as good an employment They can passe a day and a night at these sports with farre lesse tediousnesse than one houre at a Sermon To these I say 1. You shall bee arraigned at Christs Barre for despising the Lord Iesus himselfe Luk. 10.16 He that despiseth you despiseth me 2. You shall be cast and condemned to the most wofull damnation that euer befell the most notorious sinners in the world Beleeue not me but ●esus Christ himselfe Math. 10.14 15. He that shal not heare the words of his messengers it shall be easier for Sodom and Gomorrah in that day of Iudgement than for that man Oh woe worth thee that thou art a despiser Christ hath read the sentence of thy damnation already and vnlesse thou repent hee hath with strong asseueration adiudged thee to an heauier load of curses than shall be laid on Sodom and Gomorrah those filthy sinners which were burnt with fire and brimstone for their crying sinnes See the greatnesse of thy sinne in this grieuous punishment and if thou wilt not be deeper in hell than filthy Sodomites beware of despising the Word Heb. 12.25 Obiect If I escape so long I shall care the lesse Answ. No but for the present thou art as a condemned man bound and hampred with the plagues of God and especially that great plague that thou seest them not Deut. 28.15 If thou wilt not heare my voice then cursed shalt thou be in the City and in the field in the fruit of thy body and of thy ground in thy comming in and thy going out These and more than these awaite thee in euery corner Againe Gods curse is vpon thy soule euidently thou diddest neuer taste of the Kings Supper thou neuer knewest the felicity of Gods people thou art a leading with a guard of diuels to thine execution hast thine eyes couered as with a napkin of errour and ignorance as a felon ready to be turned off and thinkest thou thy selfe in good case all this while Lastly what may wee say to Persecutors of the Word and the Preachers of it such as would if they could with a sword slay those that seeke to saue them Like the Hearers at Nazareth who would kill Christ himselfe Luk. 4.28 Eliah shall bee counted a troubler of the State Daniel shall be watched and accused in the matter of his God Amos shall bee accused to the King as one whose words the whole Land is not able to beare 1. What need wee say more than they proclaime against themselues For who be they that stand against the Gospell and Preachers of it but Swearers Libertines Gamesters Drunkards Ruffians Couetous Adulterous and in their whole courses enemies to Righteousnesse that they must needs bee good men and deare to God that are encountred with such aduersaries 2. That Word which thou persecutest and wouldest driue out of thy conscience or wilt not heare the same shall pursue thee and follow thee as an Hue and Cry and thou shalt heare it and condemne thy selfe because thou couldest not endure it should condemne thy sinnes 3. The time comes wherein if thou timely repent not thou shalt see and say thou tookest the wrong end of the staffe and didst kicke against hard prickes and thy conscience shall conuince thee that what thou didst against Christs seruants and Gospell whatsoeuer thy pretence now be thou didst it against Christ himselfe who will pay thee home with thy owne coyne Iulian that cursed Apostate finding himselfe at last too weake cryed out Vicisti Galilaee vicisti Christ was far enough out of his reach he persecuted his seruants and Professors but his conscience now tels him it was against Christ who is too strong for him Writing against Christians he alleaged many things that they
pauement They are not terrified by denunciation of all the iudgements of God which are their owne portion not comforted with promises though they falsly conceiue them their owne but as the froward Iewes Math. 11.17 are like froward children whether they be piped or mourned vnto they be all one moued with neither 4. See we in our Text a great many who grow vp by the Word and by their delight and diligence are furnished with a great measure of knowledge that they can fruitfully conferre of the Scriptures they can try Doctrines by Scripture and iudge betweene truth and falsehood yea they are growne vp to a glorious profession with much zeale and forwardnesse and not onely so but to such a reformation as they seeme throughly sanctified make much of Ministers and be at cost to any good purpose and as forward as any and yet with more than all this be bad ground and reprobate Alas what then shall become of a multitude of our carelesse and forgetfull Hearers of our brutish and senslesse Hearers who are resolued to remaine so What of those barren hearts whose fallow grounds the Lord hath plowed vp sowed on them the seeds of eternall life watered them with continuall dewes of heauen and lookes for the fruits of obedience but reapes onely tares and cursed fruits of ignorance wilfulnesse opposition of sincerity scorne of his faithfull Ministers and contemning of his grace offered vnto them Oh my brethren if euer you were serious in any thing concerning your good thinke seriously of this one poynt And if God euer made me able to speake to your hearts Oh that I could carry this poynt in and reach the hearts of you all Or rather let the Lord who made your hearts take this his owne honour and speake so as they may heare That numbers of you come short of these bad Hearers and that multitudes of Reprobates in the Day of the Lord shall rise vp in iudgement to condemne many of vs who neuer receiue the Word so readily so hungrily so painfully so ioyfully so fruitfully as they haue done That numbers of cursed caitiffes shall be able to say more for their owne saluation then numbers of vs They shall be able to say Lord wee haue stept many a mile to heare thy Word wee haue carefully attended marked remembred meditated conferred and applyed it It was our ioy and delight to gaine the knowledge of holy things and to our knowledge we ioyned zeale forwardnesse and reformation We professed thy Name suffered many things for our profession loued thy House reuerenced thy Ministers and would haue parted with our eyes to haue done them good Also we were liberall to the poore Saints and to other good purposes Canst thou say thus much for thy selfe If thou canst not thou commest behinde a Cast-away If thou canst thou art not yet before a Reprobate And if hee that cannot say more shall neuer come to heauen how shall he come there that cannot say halfe so much Why should we not hence shame our selues that Reprobates and such as heauen shall be shut against are so far before vs Can we haue comfort or hope in such an estate as is outstripped by hopelesse and damned hypocrites Obiect What doe you meane to driue vs all to despaire Is this the way to reach vs the assurance of our saluation to which you so often call vs Can we be assured by such a desperate and vncomfortable Doctrine Answ. 1. This Doctrine seemes harsh and vncomfortable to such as faine would presume of a good estate but haue no good cause or ground Such as would hang like Meteors in the aire betweene hope and doubt leauing the assurance and good euidence to such as care for it are by this Doctrine discarded and disappointed And yet not driuen to despaire by it because God hath appointed a meanes to draw them out of the danger and despaire of their present estate by Iesus Christ and the sincere embracing of the meanes of saluation and assurance 2. This Doctrine directly intends the most assured comfort and consolation of Gods children which will hold out in the day of triall because it enforceth the Christian to soundnesse in his course and to run his race of Christianity not as at vncertaintie 1. Cor. 9.26 which is indeed most vncomfortable It forceth him to diligence in prouing himselfe and suffers him not to stay where bad Hearers doe but to goe further euen so farre as they cannot come Vse 2. Seeing many shall seeke so diligently to enter and shall not be able Luk. 13.24 let vs seriously examine our selues and proue whether wee goe beyond the scantling of Reprobates in hearing Wee see how many great things they attaine vnto who by them neuer attaine to eternall life and many hope to attaine eternall life who neuer attained such gifts as many wicked men haue But for our assurance of saluation let vs sift our hearts to the bottome and gage these hollow vessels and not content ourselues in any of these gifts till we can say in truth Heerein I goe beyond a Reprobate neuer could hypocrite attaine this Here for our better furtherance in so waighty a businesse I will enter into a more speciall examination of these foure things 1. Of desires 2. Of illumination 3. Of ioy 4. Of growth by the Word In the triall whereof wee shall the better iudge of our owne soundnesse I. Examine thy desires after God and his Word in these particulars 1. In the ground of them Then onely are they gracious and acceptable first when thou hast proued and discerned that the doctrine is of God and yeeldest not to it in any other respect but as to the authority of God And secondly when thou hast prized the thing desired aboue all that may be compared with it and so taking thy heart from all other things bestowed it onely on it as the chiefe good This an hypocrite cannot doe He may attaine a desire but it is altogether vngrounded This stony ground desires and receiues the seed immediately indeed too hastily the desire being an heritage hastily gotten Either out of simplenesse and leuity and lightnesse in beleeuing as Prou. 14.15 The foole beleeues euery thing and they yeeld presently without any good warrant Or out of policy and warinesse for indirect and present respects they so consent to the truth as that they are as ready to consent to errour if it be deliuered with any shew or vrged on them by superiours The winde driues not the clouds about more vsually then are these windy Professors with winds of doctrine This therefore thou must doe in the first place Looke that thy desire bee thus soundly grounded It was the commendation of the Bereans that they receiued the Word with all readines but so as they searched the Scriptures and knew them to be so And let vs doe in our way to heauen as Peter in his way to Macedonia Act. 16.10 After he saw a vision
is necessarily required moisture of grace as to the fruits of earth moisture in the earth But what moisture is in a stone A stone indeed may be moyst on the outside in moyst weather The walls and Marbles seeme to weepe and drops stand on them in rainy seasons not because moisture is in them but moisture offers it selfe vnto them but they hold it not so as they remaine as hard and dry within as euer before So with this stony heart where hardnes of heart raigneth no moisture of Grace no relenting or giuing within Indeed in foule weather when the storme of God is risen an inuincible hard heart as hard as a Marble may seeme soft Pharaoh yeelds and giues againe on the outside You may see drops of water standing in Esaus eyes who wept when the blessing was gone Iudas seemes moystened with repentance Balaam melts a little and wisheth to die well Foelix moulders a little and trembles But we must distinguish this from sound moysture of grace 1. These be flashes and sudden motions and as seldome as the weeping of walls 2. This moysture comes not from an heart softened but from slauish feare or present smart euen from the present disposition of the weather from without 3. So soone as faire weather comes againe the stones are as dry as euer they were so these returne to their former lusts so soone as the foule weather is ouer as Pharaoh Foelix c. Vse 1. Doest thou heare the Word preached without any great fruit Then lay the blame where indeed it is Some impute it to the difficulty of the Word Others to the fault of the Minister who pleaseth them not either in the matter or manner But it were far more commendable for thee to impute thy vnprofitablenesse to the hardnesse of thine owne heart and so take thy sinne home to thy selfe so did the Apostle Paul Rom. 7.14 when he perceiued that the Law of God was not so efficacious to him as he desired he accused not the Law but maintayned it to be spirituall but himselfe as sold vnder sinne He condemned himselfe not the Word so doe thou for the Gospell is the power of God to saluation it is spirit and life and mighty in operation If it worke not so mightily on thy hart then see thy hardnesse bewaile it let godly sorrow and griefe daily dropping make this stone hollow till it haue broken it Vse 2. That of the Apostle Hebr. 3.7 To day if ye will heare his voyce harden not your hearts All the seed cast vpon an hard heart is lost as if a man should sowe on a rocke where is no place for root or moysture Beware of an hard heart there is no curse to that almost no sinne to that Better that all thy field were couered ouer with stones than thy hart should Nay it were better for thee to be a dead stone than a liuing stone Now the markes to know an hard heart are these 1. When Gods Word makes no impression or gets not within the heart to renew or reforme the man though sometimes it may scratch the outside and restraine him When the Law is threatened hee either blesseth himselfe or turneth his eare from it or applies it to others not himselfe And the Gospell enters not because the Law hath not pierced nor been as a needle to make way Let all the mercies of the Gospell be shewed to the wicked he will not repent nor learne to doe well 2. Neglect or light ouer-passing the workes of Gods Mercy or Iustice vpon himselfe or others For mercies when the goodnesse of God leades him not to repentance Rom. 2.4 5. Our Lord makes this a cause euen in his owne Disciples in whom the sin raigned not that they forgat the matter of the loaues because their hearts were hardened Mark 6.52 For the Iudgements of God his workes of Iustice doe moue somewhat more than Mercies but nothing to amendment Pharaoh when iudgement puts him to a plunge could say I haue sinned here is a little scratch on his heart as on a Stethy but the hardnes recoyles the stroke that should breake the heart to pieces so as after all the strokes of God there is no reformation 3. Vnfeelingnesse of hardnesse and vnwillingnes to feele it no mislike of it no desire to vnderstand the danger of it When men desire to sit quiet in sin and nothing so offends them as to heare their sinne disgraced when they turne their backes and stop their eares Zech. 7.11 Being as loth to bee drawne to a Sermon powerfull against sinne as Israel to come neere the Mountaine Whereas a soft heart is most sensible of much hardnesse in it and counts no burthen comparable thereto 4. For the maintaining their estate credit and fauour in the world or their lusts and pleasures to oppose and dislike such Doctrines courses and persons as haue the Word on their sides Pharaoh must not seeme to be ouercome by such meane people and therefore seeing euidently the Lord stand for them he obdured himselfe The Scribes and Pharises conuinced in their conscience of the truth of Christs Doctrine and the innocency of his person did out of hardnesse of heart euer oppose both his Doctrine and Person because they must maintaine their credit in the world and vphold their pompe and glory against him though hee had truth and equity and innocency on his side The like of all hardened persecutors of the poore Saints 5. Out of resolution of following a mans owne present course whatsoeuer perswasions or Doctrines he heareth to the contrary to fly occasions and companies which might touch or worke vpon his conscience Some cannot abide to heare strict Preachers that allow them no vnlawfull liberty no not affoord them a looke on the forbidden fruit Others cannot endure the society of a faithfull friend that will truly tell them of thēselues No such string must be touched This argues a soule or soyle settled in hardnesse 6. Habits and customable sins which make the heart as a path-way A soft heart smites it selfe for once sinning and for small sinning Dauids heart smote him for cutting off the lap of Sauls garment How would it haue smote him for cutting off his head But custome of sinne hardeneth exceedingly Heb. 3.13 Take heede lest any be hardened through the deceitfulnes of sin And by hindring repentance it holds men in the trade of sinne Hardnesse and the heart that cannot repent are ioyned together Rom. 2.5 Vse 3. As euer thou wouldest heare the Word to saluation labour for a soft and melting heart such as good Iosias had whose soule melted to heare the words of the Law read The greatest blessing heere below is an heart flexible and bowed to the obedience of God And hereunto consider these Motiues 1. That it is a note of a child of God to haue his natiue hardnesse mollified and his naturall stubbornnesse corrected and altered by the Spirit of sanctification 2. Thes. 2.13
shall be great Vse 1. See hereby the nature and end of persecution it tries who are sound and puts a difference betweene such as peaceable and calme estate cannot distinguish In a faire and calme day Apples and Peares on a tree seeme all sound and good but a blustering storme or tempest makes difference betweene those that are sound and such as for want of moysture fall off iust so it is in the stormes of the Church Persecution is like a mighty winde which discerneth betweene wheat and chaffe that before lay quiet together in the same floore it shakes not the wheat but blowes away the chaffe And as the furnace consumes the drosse but refines the gold so doth the furnace of affliction We are now all shuffled together the hypocrite with the sincere-hearted Christian but to end this poynt with our Sauiours instance as the heate of the Sunne and summer discouers barren dry and stony soyle frō good ground so the scorching beames of persecution shall discouer barren husky and empty hypocrites from good and fruitfull Hearers And thou art that indeed thou art in triall A man in peace may personate and disguise himselfe as Ieroboams wife going to the Prophet seeme another but affliction for the Word will vncase him Peter was not the man in triall hee vaunted to be when he would dye with Christ. And the winter-weather of affliction for the Gospell will discouer who be the Swallowes that will take their summer in the Church but in the winter of it take them to their wings Vse 2. Let vs not take offence when wee see forward Professors offended at Christ and shrinke in triall but make account that some such must forsake vs. For all are not of the Church that are in the Church Some are tyed onely by a thred of externall profession to the members that are not vnited to the Head by the band of faith these must fall off and wither Let Hymeneus and Philetus two great lights fall away lose their shine in the firmament of the Church yet the foundation of God abideth sure And if we see some shrinke before the wetting and in dayes of peace and protection of the Gospell white-liuer'd and ready to deny their profession at the breath of a silly Damosell that the frowne of a Superiour a word of reproch a feare of change shakes off their leafie profession let vs not maruell if many of them would deny Christ in triall rather than dye with him Vse 3. Let him that standeth take heede lest hee fall And the rather because 1. Our nature is prone to defection or backsliding 2. Neuer was there more defection either in Doctrine or manners then at this day 3. When wee see others slide backe we are too soone moued and offended So as the best need continuall exhortation and admonition to beware they fall not away from the grace of God Else would not our Lord haue still beaten on this poynt with his Disciples who for all his warning of them when it came to the poynt forsooke him and fled Now the meanes to vphold vs in tryall from falling are these 1. Meditate much and often of such Scriptures as foretell persecution for the Name of Christ and call to minde the examples of such as haue valiantly endured the losse of temporals and ioyfully suffered the spoyling of their goods the forgoing of liberty and life for Christ c. Especially reade diligently the whole 11. Chapter to the Hebrewes 2. Cast the costs of thy profession Thinke it not enough to heare and receiue immediatly and reioyce yea and beleeue and grow But know thou must not onely beleeue but suffer for his sake The seed that is immediatly receiued must endure an hard and sharpe winter before it can come vp kindly He that forecasts onely the pleasure and ioy of his Religion and not the sorrow losses and crosses of it is like the foolish builder that thinkes hee can finish a building with so little charge as will scarce serue to lay the foundation Paul knew and made account that bonds and imprisonment abode him euery where and so must thou 3. Labour for soundnesse of iudgement and sincerity in affection in receiuing the Gospell A sound iudgement in matters of faith to beleeue firmely and distinctly the truth of Religion must goe before vndanted confession 2. Cor. 4.13 I beleeued and therefore I spake Rom. 10.10 Wee must beleeue with the heart vnto righteousnesse before wee can confesse with the mouth to saluation This is the rooting and stablishing in faith which shall abide Then for the second sincere affection is onely blessed with continuance when we bestow the chiefe affection of our heart vpon it euen our principall loue and our chiefe ioy and delight For this is a cause why this bad ground failes not so much the dislike of Religion as the liking of other things better and the not receiuing of truth in the loue of it is a cause why many are giuen vp to beleeue lies 4. Purge thy heart from the raigne of corrupt lusts Weed out sinfull desires labour in mortification and selfe-denyall get further power to dye vnto sinne get out of the loue of the world and the things in it resolue against selfe-loue that in case of confession thy life may not be deare vnto thee Else shall not all thy wisedome or ciuility or learning keepe thee from backsliding For if the Apostles themselues who professed they had left all to follow Christ yet shrunke in tryall how shall they stand that come with hearts thrust full of the world and earthly desires 5. Labour to finde full contentment in the good things of the Gospell Thinke it full happinesse to enioy naked Christ. Esteeme peace of conscience aboue all worldly peace Account the fauour of God the ioy of the holy Ghost the sweet hope of the pleasures of Gods right hand and the treasures of a better world worth all thou canst giue in exchange and aboue all that may be compared with them This will make thee with the wise Merchant fell out thy selfe and forgoe all for the Pearle and goe away reioycing 6. Examine thy heart how it stands affected in lesser trials now in the peace of the Church If it shrinke in smaller trials I must not looke to trust it in greater If now it will not endure the threat of a Superiour the feare of losse the dread of dis-fauour If it now shrinke from good men because of their troubles and sufferings which are their crowne if thou canst ioyne with the times in disgracing men fearing God assure thy selfe if greater trials come thou shalt be giuen vp to greater delusion and Apostasie 7. Because to stand in persecution is a worke aboue naturall strength and ascribed to the holy Ghost to stablish men to this triall and strengthen them to all patience with ioyfulnesse Col. 1.10 We must pray the Lord not to leaue vs in tentation but preserue
in the fire and the hammer vpon it it may bee wrought to some fashion till it be cold againe so Pharaoh sometime will confesse his sinne and acknowledge Gods righteousnesse and begge Prayers of Moses but onely so long as the plague is vpon him Sometime some naturall motion or some spirituall motion may stirre them and for a flash they are earnestly resolued for Heauen so the yong man comes hastily and heares gladly but not purposing to doe all that is required goes away heauily The hypocrite in all these motions is like Ephraim whose goodnesse was as the morning dew suddenly dried vp Hos. 6.4 The Word comes into a bottomlesse heart wherein is a bottomlesse gulfe of guile and deceit and all is lost at length But the godly man by the Words dwelling plentifully in his heart attaines the commendation pronounced vpon the Church of Thyatria Reuel 2.19 I knowe thy works thy faith c. that they be more at last than at first He hath on him a marke of one that is planted by the Lord in the House of the Lord he is more fruitfull in his age more fat and fresh dayly and exceeds his former times in feracity and fruitfulnesse in good works and graces In a word whereas all other things are common to all the Heauens the Earth the Creatures yea the Ministery of the Word Sacraments Prayer and many common graces wrought by them this alone is the speciall right of Beleeuers incommunicable with hypocrites to haue the Word of God euerlastingly fixed in their hearts Esa. 8.16 Seale vp the Law among my Disciples now a seale is a meanes of secrecy from them whom the matter concernes not and of assurance to them whom the businesse concernes This is the second reason 3. The best of Gods Word is after the hearing Our Parable compares hearing of the Word to sowing now the best of sowing is long after in the reaping Elsewhere it is compared to food and the best of eating is after eating in the nourishment and strength For let men eate and drinke with great appetite good taste and much pleasure yet if after the eating bad humors in the stomake suffer it not to stay or not to digest if it doe stay it doth much hurt in stead of nourishing So in the state of the Soule where many wicked humors resist the worke of the Word heard But to shew in speciall that the Word is best after the hearing consider 1. That it frameth a man to the life of faith and vpholdeth that life It is a means to make a man good and continue his goodnesse Because it both storeth a man with graces and preserues him from vngracious courses through all his life which those that make no vse of the Word beyond the hearing are wrapped in Prou. 2.10 When wisdome enters into thy heart then shall counsell preserue thee and vnderstanding shall keepe thee that is both in the good way and from the euill way so Psalm 119.11 I haue hid thy Word in my heart that I might not sinne against thee 2. The Word kept in the heart makes a man a notable patterne of piety to others and a fruitfull Christian vpholding him in a readinesse to euery good word and worke If the heart keepe knowledge the mouth will speake of wisdome Psalm 49.3 He is fit and ready to counsell exhort rebuke and comfort others For the Word of God which is able to make the man of God ready and absolute to euery good worke is much more able to fitte priuate Christians thereunto 3. Our greatest businesse is behinde to which the Word kept in the soule can onely fit vs as namely to fit our accounts to store our lampes with oyle to hold on our repentance and finish the good worke begunne with perseuerance 4. Our greatest sufferings and trials are behinde dayes of sicknesse the day of temptation the day of death wherein Sathan will bee most furious and raging and the day of Iudgement Now as Dauid said of himselfe If thy Word had not been my comfort I had perished in my trouble so if the Word be not thy sword in the day of temptation if it be not thy health in sicknesse thy life in death if it pleade not for thee in iudgement thou art euerlastingly lost because thou hast wilfully lost thy part and portion of that blessed Word 5. Our marke is still before vs euen that euerlasting happinesse and great saluation which the Word of God faithfully retained in the heart not onely reuealeth but putteth vs in possession of Thus as the pillar of the cloud and of the fire neuer left Israel till they came into Canaan no more doth the Word of God cease to be our constant direction for our motion or station till it hath set vs into that heauenly Canaan no nor then it being a surer pillar then that of the cloude for as the Prophet saith O Lord thy Word endureth for euer in Heauen Psalm 119.89 that is although neuer so many things in earth seeme to cloude and crosse the gracious promises that thou hast made to thy children yet in Heauen shall they taste the sweetnesse of thy Word more then euer they did in earth when they shall enioy all the fruits of that eternall loue and decree which they beleeued in this world Besides that the same Word of God which now the Saints lay vp in their hearts is the Law and Charter of heauen by which being fully conformed to the obedience of it we shall walke eternally before God in the perfection of that obedience which is heere begun And thus it is our eternall direction in heauen also Vse 1. To reproue many Hearers who are affected in the act and time of hearing or while the Doctrine is deliuering but presently lose the matter the motion affection and all Some come as our Sauiours Hearers Math. 22.22 When they heard they maruelled and left him and went their way we heare no more of them Many heare desirously as with open and erect eares but both being open it goes in at one and out at the other it stayes not for after-vse but a little present admiration as in those Hearers of our Sauiour Others heare and the Word smites them workes a little on their conscience wounds them and tells them as Nathan did Dauid Thou art the man Now were a fit season to worke with God but they goe away other distractions meet them at home the motion dies and they are as men sea-sicke while the Word tumbles them and makes their conscience wamble within them but are all well againe so soone as euer they come to land Others heare with soft hearts and the Word comming home they begin to melt can resolue into teares so mellow seemes the ground they see their vnworthinesse of the promises and how lyable they be to all the threatnings which they conceiue their owne portion But as the metals are onely soft and pliable while they are
one calls an holy Alchemy to draw gold out of lead heauen out of earth grace out of nature 4. Consider that the right vse of peace and plenty is to grow vp in the feare of God in peace of conscience and the comforts of the holy Ghost so the Church vsed her rest and peace Act. 9.31 And that the more outward blessings the Lord affoordeth and in them more time and meanes to serue him the more seruice he lookes for And how absurd is it that while thou takest the Lords wages thou shouldest doe the worlds worke or thine owne businesse altogether 5. In our freer and more ioyfull vse of the creatures of God let vs carry an holy ielousie and suspition ouer our selues lest sinne creepe in and so wee dishonour God Iob when his sonnes feasted together sanctified them and sacrificed according to the number of them all saying It may be that my sons haue offended Do thou the like for thy selfe mingle none of thy ioy with sinne for then it must end in woe Are choked with cares Now wee come in speciall to treate of the three kindes of thornes which choke the Word and make it fruitlesse as they are laid downe in the Text. The first of them are cares called by Matthew cares of this world And this is to distinguish them from the cares of heauen and of that better world which are euery where commended to vs Mat. 6.33 Seeke first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse 1. Cor. 7.32 The vnmarried careth for the things of the Lord and how he may please the Lord. And for a man thus to place his cares and desires is to walke with God and begin his heauen before-hand euery where commanded as the following and pursuing of his true felicity Our Parable speaketh of another sort of noysome and thorny cares for the things of this world which are not allowed vs. Heere sundry pertinent questions come to be resolued Quest. 1. Whether no worldly care bee allowed vs seeing the Apostle saith Phil. 4.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be carefull for nothing Answ. The Apostle doth not command vs to bee idle or carelesse in the doing of our callings wherein euery one must carefully abide Adam in innocency must haue a care of dressing the Garden and all the sonnes of Adam after the fall must eate their bread in the sweat of their browes Else a man liues inordinately and ought not to eate Yea the Apostle himselfe confesseth 2. Cor. 11.28 that hee was cumbred daily and had the care of all the Churches Neither doth hee forbid a necessary care for the things of this life to the sustentation both of our selues and others belonging to vs. For it is not onely lawfull but necessary for euery Christian to haue a care not onely of his vocation but of his condition and state of life in this world how hee and his may comfortably and with the honour of God and the Gospell passe thorow the world And hee that hath not a prouident care for his family hath denyed the faith 1. Tim. 5.8 Such are a generation of debosht and vile persons who cast all care away and let the world slide let wife and children shift for themselues let debts and charge come on them worse than the most vnnaturall brutes they cast off all calling and cares and with them all piety honesty and humanity it selfe Thus we see both a diligent and a prouident care commanded As a man in a iourney takes gold siluer meate and drinke to set him forward in his way his care is not for these chiefly but to finish his iourney so we that are Christians may take with vs the things of earth by the way but must not set our care or affection on them onely so farre as they serue for heauen Quest. 2. How farre are these cares lawfull Answ. Cares of the world are twofold The one a care of diligence called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is an honest study and warrantable care well confined and kept within bounds of moderation The other a care of diffidence called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a doubtfull and diffident care arising out of distrustfulnesse of God and feare of wants and so suffers not it selfe to be bounded within the rules of Piety and Christian moderation That is commendable this damnable Quest. 3. How shall I know these vnbounded and distrustfull cares Answ. 1. They are cutting and distracting cares 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the cares of a mans vocation or condition or both diuide and distract his minde torment him make him vnquiet within himselfe and with others at boord in bed euery where so Salomon describeth this man Eccles. 2.23 All his dayes are sorrowes and his trauell griefe hee taketh no rest in the night And chap. 4.8 There is a man and there is not a second there is no end of his trauell c. 2. He loads himselfe with vnnecessary and impertinent cares For in the duties of vocation are two things 1. The care and labour of the worke of the calling 2. The care of the successe and euent The former is ours the latter is Gods A sober and moderate care doth the duty but leaues the care of successe vnto God But this care enters vpon Gods right and troubles it selfe about the euent of his businesse and successe of his labours and cannot rest in Gods issue neither before nor after it is manifested 3 There is a distrustfull feare of future need which by carking and cutting care they would preuent Though they haue food and raiment yet are they not content but repine and vexe themselues because they know not how themselues their wiues and children shall be maintained heereafter yea and toyle themselues out of their skinnes and bring vntimely gray haires on their heads for the next age and next generation Obiect May we not lay vp for our selues and our children Answ. 1. Not with distrustfull care nor with choking thorny care which eates out better cares 2. Though a Christian may enioy abundance if God cast it vpon him yet may hee not seeke abundance aboue that which is necessary for his person nature and estate Hee must bee content with daily bread and pray for no more nay the King himselfe must not seeke superfluities Deut. 17.16 Obiect May we not care for the morrow as our Sauiour implies Math. 6. vlt Answ. Christ had a bag for his prouision and for his Disciples Ioseph prouided for the seuen yeeres of famine and the Church for the great dearth Act. 11.28 29. So may men in their youth prouide for age while strength lasteth and sight and sences are good alwayes remembring not diffidently not distrustfully or to crosse the practice of faith whereby we should daily depend on his hand and prouidence who renewes our dayes and times vpon vs. For to this care our Sauiour opposeth trust and confidence in God vers 30. 4. If a man by indirect and vnlawfull meanes
riches to the soule or the soyle where the seed of Gods Word hath been cast As corne can hardly prosper where the one growes as hardly can the Word where the other growes vp with it 1. Tim. 6.17 Timothy must charge rich men concerning the dangers of riches so vehement a charge needed not if they were without danger Math. 19.23 Verily I say vnto you that a rich man shall hardly enter into the Kingdome of God which our Sauiour would not haue so asseuered if the way to heauen had layne so open and smooth for riches as their Masters thinke And he obserued in his preaching that the poore receiued the Gospell Math. 11.6 Rich men had other matters to doe and greater things in their eyes 1. Cor. 1.26 Brethren you see your calling Not many mighty not many rich are called but God hath chosen the poore and base things c. Quest. Cannot a man be rich and godly or may not riches sort with saluation If a rich man cannot enter into the Kingdome of heauen who then can be saued say the Disciples Answ. 1. Riches are good blessings in themselues and of themselues hinder not For the promises of them are made to those that feare God Psal. 112.2 Riches and treasure shall be in their house And as simplicity basenesse pouerty saues none so wealth power wisdome condemne none in themselues 2. The prophesie is that the rich shall come to the people of God and ioyne with the Church Esa. 60.11 Psal. 22.29 3. The Lord acknowledgeth of many rich men that their riches are a crowne on their heads by the many good workes they doe thereby Prou. 14.24 Some there are whose wealth lifts them not vp in pride but exalts them in workes of mercy As a crowne is an ornament to the head so riches commend the wisedome and piety and faith and charity of a godly man They cannot make a man good or euill wise or foolish but onely manifest a wise man or a foole So in Eccles. 7.11 Wisedome is good with an inheritance it is good without it but more eminent with it more conspicuous more vsefull Therefore for resolution of the doubt note 1. That our Sauiour saith not It is impossible for a rich man to bee saued but very hard And the Apostle saith not Not any but Not many 2. Christ speakes not so in respect of the possession or vse of riches but only of the abuse as it is expounded Mark 10.24 when a man trusteth in riches 3. With God saith our Sauiour this is possible who made Iob exceeding rich and fenced all about him that hee had yet so godly withall that there was not another so godly vpon earth as he chap. 1.8 10. And it is Augustines obseruation Seruatur pauper Lazarus sed in sinu Abrahami diuitis Poore Lazarus was saued in the bosome of rich Abraham 4. Riches choke not and condemne not as a cause but as an occasion The cause is not in them that wee are choked by them but in our selues in our corruption and weaknesse who abuse a good thing by which wee might further our saluation not watching against the neglect or contempt of the doctrine of saluation which vsually attends them Now they are as a sword in a mad mans hand and must not be reiected themselues but onely their abuse Quest. How doe riches choke the Word Answ. Three waies Before hearing In hearing After hearing I. Before hearing they choke and hinder from receiuing the Word three wayes 1. Great men haue great employments in their hands and cannot bee at leisure for preaching they may not let their businesse one houre in a weeke Felix hath no leisure now to heare Paul but will take another time And Martha cannot let the time to heare Christ himselfe And hence are those many obiections against weekes Lectures as altogether vnseasonable and indeed needlesse But was not Martha reproued for so slighting the preaching of Christ And what Is not this losse of time as some call it the best redeeming of time When Paul preached to the Gentiles at Antioch the Gentiles desired him to preach the same words the next Sabbath betweene Act. 13.42 Was this commendable in them and is it reproouable in vs Christians 2. Great men haue great spirits What great men and rich men stoupe to so base a thing as preaching and to so base persons as Preachers all whose power is in their tongue Therefore the Apostle will haue rich men charged that they bee not high-minded Riches commonly breede pride and high mindes Pride in a mans selfe breeds contempt of God and his Word as Pharaoh Who is the Lord and the Prophet saith Heare and giue eare and bee not proud Ier. 13.15 3. Great men haue a great happinesse in their hands already and hardly see any want in their condition And as he comes not to the Physician that feeles not himselfe sicke so hee desires no supply of good that feeles not in himselfe the want of it Abundance of outward wealth suffers not the heart to see his want of inward And the good things of Gods Kingdome are not giuen but to them that want them and can prize them To the thirsty Esa. 55.1 II. Riches choke the Word in hearing As thornes spread themselues and occupy the roome where the seed should grow So the inordinate loue of the world stuffes the heart with worldly desires and motions and takes vp the roome from all spirituall Iudas his heart once taken vp for couetousnesse there is no roome left for the gracious admonitions of Christ himselfe The Lord obserues and forewarnes Ezekiel of this choke-weed in his Hearers chap. 33.31 They shall come as people vse to come and sit before thee and heare thy words but they will not doe them nay they will make iests with their mouthes because their hearts goe after couetousnesse Can your thoughts bee carried to heauen and earth at one time When you bring your businesse to Church and suffer your thoughts to range vpon your worke and worke-men wares and returnes Farmes and profits can you carry away any good lesson While you come with a purpose to hold your vsurie iniustice or deceit in word or trading doe you not make a iest of Gods Word condemning these things and you for them Doe wee not reade in the Gospell that whereas Christ was often opposed in his Doctrine he was not mocked but of the couetous Luk. 16.14 III. Riches taken into the heart choke the Word after hearing both in the profession and in the practice of it 1. They hinder the Word in the profession and confession of it It is thought good policy for him to follow Christ that hath nothing to lose for him But take heed none of the Rulers beleeue in him or if they doe with him well let them come with Nicodemus in the night Let the poore receiue the Gospell and be forward Professors but you are a rich
wee would thanke him heartily and looke to our selues carefully Now the Lord in this Text telleth vs of a great deceiuer that aimes to spoyle vs of great things Why then should we not be thankfull to him and take warning Why should we not beleeue him but be willingly cōtinually and senselesly deceiued not so much by the craft of the Aduersary as our own simplicity corruptiō And voluptuous liuing or pleasures The third sort of thornes which choke the Word are pleasures and delights Where two questions offer themselues to our consideration for the opening of the matter Quest. 1. Whether are all pleasures condemned or no Answ. Pleasures are of two kinds some heauenly others earthly In the former there is no danger but we are euery where in Scripture called to them as we shall see hereafter Our Text speakes of the latter Quest. 2. Whether are all earthly pleasures condemned Answ. No for 1. Adam in innocency was furnished aboue all men now liuing with pleasures and delights in that Garden of pleasure 2. Since the Fall the Lord hath still deckt the earth with most delectable flowres in their seuerall beauties and varieties of colours and smells to delight the senses of man And he hath filled the aire with sweet and melodious birds 3. The Lord that could now feed vs with one kinde of meate as Israel in the Wildernesse allowes vs much variety of the creatures for our honest delight And though hee could preserue vs with water yet he allowes vs more pleasant drink and in our feasts giues vs wine in varieties Yea himselfe hath giuen skill to workemen to make curious musicall Instruments to delight men with their sweet musike and harmony 4. Hee hath allowed men according to their estate and place to inioy many worldly pleasures It was the blessing of Assur Gen. 49.20 that hee should giue pleasures for a King that is his Countrey should abound with delicate fruits acceptable and fit for Kings In which phrase we see that Kings haue more right to inioy pleasures than ordinary men and Deut. 33.24 He shall dip his foot in oyle 5. The Lord himselfe appointeth some festiuities and solemne feasts in which a more liberall and delightfull vse of the creatures is requisite as Nehem. 8.10 Goe and eate of the fat and drinke of the sweet for this is a day holy vnto the Lord. 6. The Spirit of God concludeth though some learned otherwise expound it as the Atheists speech brought in by a Prosopopoeia Eccles. 3. vlt. that nothing is better than that a man should reioyce in his affaires for that is his portion And who is worthy to enioy Gods blessings about him in wife children family calling and estate that doth not reioyce in the same So as the thing which our Text and this whole ensuing treatise condemneth is not any lawfull and allowed pleasure of any kinde but that pleasure which choketh the Word of God as thornes doe seed whether vnlawfull pleasures or lawfull pleasures vnlawfully vsed Which I would haue obserued by the way to remoue a scandall cast vpon Religion and godly life that it is altogether vnpleasant and heauie and strips a man of all delight This is not so But first All the wayes of wisedome are wayes of pleasure Prou. 3.17 Secondly godlinesse takes not away any earthly pleasure nor the vse of Gods mercies but orders and moderates and sweetens them Doctr. The preuailing of earthly ioyes and carnall pleasures choketh the Word and hindreth saluation An example we haue in Eue whose pleasure of the eye choked all that Word of God which shee had learned and repeated but euen then to the Serpent And in Herod he heard Iohn gladly reuerenced him and did many things Mark 6.20 but the pleasure of his brothers wife made him cast Iohn in prison yea and behead him too which he added aboue all his sinnes Iudg. 16.17 Samson had vndertaken a most sacred profession of the Nazarites in which he was a most eminent type of Christ. While hee kept the law of his profession not cutting his haire the mighty power of God was with him and for him But that impotent and base lust and sottish attending his pleasure in Delilahs lap how did it make him forget the Law of God and so inslaue him as hee must needs tell her all that was in his heart till God was gone from him 1. Tim. 5.6 11. What made the widowes to breake their faith giuen to Christ but wantonnesse and liuing in pleasures Obiect These are dishonest and vnlawfull pleasures and lusts these must needs choke the Word But doe lawfull pleasures doe so too Answ. Yes wee shall see euen in those that had ●ound godlinesse how euen lawfull pleasures choked the Word and cast them backe in the way of God How the loue of pleasant meate set the loue of good Isaac vpon him whom God hated see Genes 25.28 And Salomon tells vs the danger of prouing the heart with pleasures Eccles. 2.2 they brought him to bee mad with them these were honest and lawfull pleasures but himselfe tells vs that as they entred into the heart so godlinesse decayed For as theeues set vpon true men to rob and bind them so pleasures assaulting good men binde them and rob them yea often wound them onely kill them not And hence it is that in the profession of Religion some are found louers of pleasure more than of God 2. Tim. 3.4 and holding a forme of godlinesse and proclaiming a defiance of vain pleasure are yet so moyled and intangled with them as they grow heauie in good duties and drawne on with the perswasions of these pleasing Orators Had not the Disciples renounced all for Christ Yes Master wee haue forsaken all and followed thee But yet doe wee not see them long who should be superiour and contend for greatnesse one with another and affect pompe and high place euen in the Kingdome of God where the smallest is the greatest Reasons 1. Pleasures make that men cannot attend the Word Some are so carried away with sports that neither weeke-day nor scarce the Sabbath can draw them away to any better duty Their delights are so fastened in their hearts as nothing can fasten on them Their thoughts doe so attend vpon pleasures that all other thoughts tending to the bettering of their estate are vnpleasing 2. They make that men cannot conceiue the Word aright The Word offereth pleasures at Gods right hand which is an obiect of faith But the man trampled on by pleasures becomes sensuall and iudgeth of all things spoken by his corrupt sense and carnall reason For his desire is to heare not what is best but what is sweetest 3. Pleasures where they doe preuaile make men securely contemne the Word They cast the heart on sleepe and make it vnwatchfull against the threats of God Amos 6.1 3. Woe to them that are at ease in Sion that put farre off the euill day and approch to the
and dead all motions and affections stirred by it than to worke in the calling Whence a Father hath well said that It is better to goe to plough on the Sabbath than to goe a dancing Thirdly the season of worldly pleasures is not when God layes an heauie hand on vs or ours when God afflicts the conscience with sence of sin Oh this with many is melancholy and sadnesse now call in carnall company musike gamesters and merry companions whereas now is the time for that counsell Iam. 4.9 to cast our selues into sorrow for sinne Suffer affliction sorrow and weepe let your laughter be turned into mourning and your ioy into heauinesse cast your selues downe before the Lord and he will lift you vp This is to worke with God the other against him So when men are afflicted with sicknesse and God calls to sack-cloth now must neighbours come in and helpe him to passe the time with cards dice drinking swearing and all carnall merriments O miserable comforters Is any among you afflicted let him pray saith Saint Iames Chap. 5.13 Is any sicke let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray c. But these say Let him play and call the Elders of the Parish and let them play with him See how you comfort the sicke Prou. 25.20 As he that takes away garments in a cold season so is hee that sings songs to an heauie heart And see how hee is comforted he thrusts mourning out of his house when his heart remaines the house of mourning Fourthly the season of worldly pleasures is not when Gods iudgements breake out against our brethren Either when iudgement begins at the House of God that it is not well with the Church thus good Vriah refused comfort 2. Sam. 11.11 and Mordecai Hest. 4.1 2. And Nehemiah Chap. 2.1 3. And the sinne of the great men in Iudah Amos 6.6 was They drinke wine in bolles and stretch themselues on Iuory beds and anoynt themselues c. but no man remembreth the afflictions of Ioseph Or when the hand of God lyes heauie vpon our neighbours that are of the same flesh with vs Rom. 12.15 Weepe with them that weepe For we are all one body and one members of another and if one member suffer all ought to suffer by consent These are vnseasonable times for the prosecuting of pleasures and therefore now wee must refraine from them The fifth and last Rule concernes the end of pleasures The goodnesse of a thing is measured by the good end of it and we say All is well that ends well so heere The end then of pleasure must not bee for pleasure for then pleasure were the chiefe end and the chiefe good Nor to take pleasure in pleasure onely wee may take our vse of some pleasures and not powre out our hearts vnto them For this infatuates a man and puts out his reason and sences that he can see no shame he puts himselfe vnto What a shame was it which yet Samson discerned not that hee who would not turne his face from a thousand men at once should now become a slaue to a lewd woman that had vsed him most vilely Nay he that was strong enough to match a Lion is foyled by his lust and sottishly vanquished vnder the feet of an harlot Looke on a man giuen to drinking gaming whoring c. this man will sort himselfe with the basest companions in a Towne rather than sit out euen great Princes loded with Flagons of wine will stretch out their hands to scorners Hos. 7.5 This must not bee the end of our pleasures but 1. To make vs better not worse not more loose or dissolute but more thankfull to God more cheerfull in the duties of our callings more able to pray meditate heare and doe good to our selues and others Therefore when our pleasures make vs heauie and vnfit for good things as the pleasures of Egypt made Israel loth and flow in going forward to Canaan now they are sinfull though not in themselues yet in their end and our vse because they choke as thornes 2. To put vs in minde of such heauenly pleasures as are reserued for the faithfull at Gods right hand as the first fruits in the Law put the Israelites in minde of a full haruest Now we doe but taste before hand how good and gracious the Lord is then wee shall be satisfied with his fulnesse and sweetnesse If hee prouide such things in our Prison what in our Palace 3. So to enioy pleasure for the present as we lay vp more for heereafter and so make them all helpes to the true and lasting pleasure so Dauid from the abundant Table that God had spred for him from his full and ouer-running cups from the oyle wherwith God had anoynted his head gathers strength and resolution to dwel a long time and spend all his dayes in Gods House and seruice Psalm 23. vlt. and Psalm 34.9 10. because the Lord suffers his Saints to want no good thing therefore they are stirred vp to feare the Lord. Attaine this end of pleasure and thou hast attained an endlesse pleasure Reasons thus to carry our selues through pleasures 1. Slaues to pleasure neuer conquer with Christ and therefore shall neuer raigne with him 2. A regenerate heart desires liberty from the slauery of pleasures and counts it a death to bee inthralled to them Rom. 7.24 They goe to God with Rebecca when they feele the struggling of flesh and spirit in themselues and complaine as she of the Twinnes in her wombe 3. Christ came into the world and made choyce of an afflicted way to heauen rather than a faire way of earthly pleasures that we might follow him therein as the safest way to our Countrey So much of the three sorts of bad ground We come now to the fourth which is good Vers. 8. And some fell on good ground and sprang vp and bare fruit an hundreth fold Compared with the 15. verse 15. But that which fell in good ground are they which with an honest and good heart heare the Word and keepe it and bring forth fruit with patience HEre consider as in the former 1. The soyle good ground where first how it comes to bee good secondly how it is knowne to be good namely by hearing with honest and good hearts 2. The successe of the seed in it fruitfulnesse 1. For the measure or plenty an hundreth fold 2. For the continuance or constancy with patience Of these in their order And first how the ground doth come to be good Answ. It is called good non à priori because the Word findes it so but à posteriori because by the Word it is made so Euery mans heart by nature is a stiffe ground a barren and cursed earth The whole imagination of mans heart is onely euill continually Euery man is a beast in his owne vnderstanding Paul himselfe now an elect Vessell is by nature the child of wrath as
is to please God nor to please man by doing any euill nor by leauing vndone any good it is bound to by the calling it will not be afraid to depart from any good purpose or practice for mens displeasure Againe it can set it selfe naked before Gods presence to whom it desires to stand it desires liuing and dying to be acceptable vnto him 2. Cor. 5.9 A true Israelite hath praise enough to bee praised of God and to be a Iew within and can more satisfie it selfe with Gods allowance than a thousand witnesses Further it dares appeale to God and flie to his Tribunall when men accuse it as Dauid Iudge me according to mine innocency and Moses when Israel would not heare turned to the Lord saying I haue not taken so much as an Asse from them nor hurt any of them Numb 16.15 Lastly if men will condemne him timerously vnheard vnconuinced if all his wary carriage cannot obtaine a right iudgement and sentence then out of sence of innocency and goodnesse of conscience hee can contemne such vniust iudgement and fearelesly expect the Iudgement of God who will make his innocency shine as the light as Dauid against his scoffing and slaunderous Michol 2. Sam. 6.22 It was before the Lord and Paul against the carnall Corinthians 1. Cor. 4.3 I care little to be iudged of any man A good heart cares not for mans allowance if God allow him This is comfort for the seruants of God whether publike or priuate that the testimony of their conscience makes them care no more for the obloquie of profane men than the barking of dogges A little they may be moued sometimes more than needs but much they care not But an euill heart cannot abide the presence of God but flies as Adam and sets him out of sight It dreades the Iudgement of God and trembles like Felix It lookes asquint and dares not stand in a good cause for feare of men as Ioh. 12.43 Many beleeued but durst not confesse for they loued the praise of men And if it cannot be approued of God it is content with Saul to be honoured before the people Fourthly a good heart resteth and reioyceth in God as in the best and onely portion Psalm 73.25 Whom haue I in Heauen but thee or whom in Earth in comparison of thee It holds all other things as moouables vsing them as not vsing them and is onely comfortable that it wants not him in whom is no want It knowes the Lord hath designed his portion and maintaines him out of his owne fulnesse as out of his portion both for his spirituall and temporall estate Hence his ioy in his presence is the greatest and so is his sorrow in his absence stepping aside and clouding his presence now the good heart mournes after him and thirsts for his presence as the Hart for water And as the losse of the whole world is nothing to this so the whole world cannot make it vp nothing but God himselfe satisfieth it And seeing God hath made himselfe his portion he is carefull to make himselfe Gods portion by entring couenant with him as the Israelites Deut. 32.10 But an euill heart affects God in his gifts more than himselfe Professing him the best Benefactor and thanking him for all indeed it mindeth earthly things And his portion is in this life or else hath none Fifthly a good heart aymes at the glory of God in all things In all his parts 1. Corinth 6.20 in his body because it is his and in his spirit because he is a Spirit In all his actions whether naturall as eating drinking 1. Cor. 10.31 or spirituall the parts of his worship He will cleaue to the Word to know and obey it in prayer giues him the glory of hearing and so in confession Iosh. 7.19 and in praises Psalm 50.23 and in beleeuing Rom. 4.20 and a reuerent vse of his Name and Sabbath Yea he will glorifie God what-euer it cost him nothing is so deare to him as to lay it in the scoales with Gods glory And if there be an opportunity he will shew it euen in difficult commandements as Abraham and dangerous as Daniel and costly as Zacheus Whereas an euill heart maketh shewes of glorifying God in spirituall actions but not in naturall or in his actions not in spirit neither God nor his Word get any of his thoughts As for duties of difficulty danger or cost it casts them quite off as Saul and the young man Thus a good heart behaues it selfe toward God II. In respect of Christ it hath fiue other excellent qualities First it preferreth Christ before a thousand worlds All other things all aduantages whatsoeuer are but losse and dung in comparison of Christ Phil. 3.8 The Church esteemes her Welbeloued the chiefe of ten thousand Cant. 5.10 Why what seeth she in Christ aboue other what is thy Well-beloued aboue other well-beloueds Answ. She seeth in him such purity of nature such power of merit such perfection of loue such freedome in promises and such truth in performances as nothing in the World can so affect her Shee seeth him euery way more beautifull then the sonnes of men Psalm 45.3 therefore she sels all for the Pearle as the Disciples left all to follow Christ. But can an euill heart espy such beauty in Christ or can it thus affect him Is not a Pigge better to a Gadaren or a messe of pottage to a profane Esau Who almost preferres not the riches of the world aboue the riches of Christ Nay Christ and his profession are generally esteemed the greatest losse Secondly a good heart reioyceth more in Christ and his loue than in all worldly ioyes Cant. 1.3 We will reioyce and be glad in thee thy loue is better than wine And Dauid will make the Lord his song all the day long Quest. Why what cause of ioy is there in Christ Answ. 1. A good heart seeth in Christ a full redemption from wrath and pardon of sinne therefore reioyceth in God his Sauiour as Mary Luk. 1.46 Esa. 61.10 I will greatly reioyce in the Lord saith the Church for he hath clothed me with garments of saluation 2. It seeth in Christ Gods fauour returned a new couenant and league of friendship made with God himselfe of an heire of wrath made an adopted sonne an heire of God and co-heire with Iesus Christ. 3. It seeth by Christ the Spirit put into his soule sealing vp Gods loue chasing away ignorāce being the Spirit of light working faith and kindling the prayer of faith sending it boldly to the Throne of grace and making it cry Abba Father with assurance that we can but aske and haue and that we are not so ready to knocke as he to open It feeles the vertue of Christs death killing corruptiō and perfecting his sanctification 4. It sees in Christ a blessed future estate of glory prepared for it selfe in which he shall behold the face of God in Heauen and
whatsoeuer his Lord saith as Mary to the seruants Whatsoeuer he saith doe it As a man that is to plant an Orchard will be sure to get of euery good fruit some so a good heart will not know any fruit to be good but will carry some of it Particulars were infinite for workes spirituall and corporall duties to them within and duties to them without workes of iustice and workes of mercy in giuing and in forgiuing of incitation to good and hindering of euill 6. A good heart doth good duties constantly for first grace knits the heart to God that it may sticke to his seruice not looking backe secondly the writing of Gods finger that is the Law is neuer blotted out his workmanship neuer defaced and so what it is once by grace as it desires euer to be so it remaines thirdly it sees Christ before it finishing his worke Ioh. 4.34 and so it is his meate and drinke also to finish his worke fourthly it will not giue vp or cease to doe well for any crosses Iob 2.3 In all this Iob sinned not the loue of God and goodnesse in that heart is like a raging fire and much water cannot quench it fifthly it is loth after the suffering of many things to lose the Crowne promised onely to perseuerance Reu. 2.10 Bee thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee a Crowne of life 7. A good heart doth good duties watchfully before-hand to apprehend occasions as Abraham sate in the doore of his Tent to entertaine passengers and after the doing to reuiew them as God did all the workes of his hands after the Creation to finde either peace and comfort in them if well done or trouble and disquiet in failing It knowes they shall enter into a strict examination of a strict Lord and Master therfore it selfe will first examine them whether they were done sincerely seasonably cheerfully humbly and according to the rules of well-doing Oh the wickednesse of our hearts who yet conceiue better of our selues 1. Some good actions we would doe but hate the light which should direct vs and such as walke in it 2. Some good deeds we would doe at our death but fearfully outstand the opportunities of grace and will know no season Christ mourneth ouer vs as ouer Ierusalem 3. How proud are we of a little glorying of our good works delighting to heare them praised whereas a good heart would dislike euery thing 4. How seldome measure we our actions by the rules of Gods glory good conscience and sincerity of heart but by multitudes and examples of men doing as the most do and for our owne crooked ends 5. Wee content our selues with the deed or action done neuer care with what affection which the Lord most respects as in the widowes two mites and rich mens superfluitie 6. God hath long manured vs but where is our abundant fruit for clusters wee cannot shew berries Can God be content to finde so little where he expects so much and may not hee expect much where he hath giuen so much Shall we neuer come to answere for our meanes which we are so vnanswerable in 7. How many are falne backe from their righteousnesse which shall neuer bee remembred They seemed to begin in the Spirit but are vnstable and peruerted whose latter end is worse than the beginning VII Markes of a good heart in respect of sinne It knoweth first that nothing is properly hated of God but sinne as being directly against his Law and his Image who is a God hating iniquity and as God himselfe is the chiefe and absolute Good so onely sinne is the chiefe and absolute euill Secondly that the proper effect of hatred being reuenge he is not more sure to sinne than God to reuenge one way or other yea vnto the third and fourth generation of them that hate him Thirdly that all and euery sinne is vpon record there is an hand-writing against euery sinner and an obligation in euery sinne binding the sinner who hath not one farthing to pay for an infinite debt or infinite forfeit Col. 2.14 Fourthly that all and euery sinne lies in the way betweene God and vs and separates from him and holds good things from vs shuts heauen curseth the earth and burthens all the creatures Fifthly that it exposeth to all misery within vs without vs both here and hereafter Within vs the destruction of all Gods Image the corruption and guilt of the whole nature all euill inclinations against God and our neighbour especially an euill conscience where sinne lyes at the doore either vexing and galling it or dogging and watching it which is a very hell before hell Without a man all the calamities of this life sicknesse pouerty madnesse shame death and corruption all the proper effects of sinne Gen. 2.17 In the day thou sinnest thou shalt dye the death And hereafter the extreme misery of sinne in all not deliuered by Christ is that eternall death which is the wages of it the vnsupportable curse denounced on all that continue not in all things Deut. 27.26 and to be executed on all Reprobates in the Day of the Lords appearing Math. 25.41 Goe ye cursed c. Hence 1. it sees the misery of sinne and grones vnder the burthen both the sinne of his nature for which Paul cries out of himselfe as a wretched man and Dauid Psal. 51.5 and of his life as the Prodigall who acknowledged himselfe not worthy to be called a sonne and the sinnes against the Gospell vnbeliefe despighting of Christ and his Spirit as the Iewes pricked in their hearts Act. 2.37 2. It truly repents for sinne for which this heart may be called an house of mourning an Hadadrimmon or the valley of mourning In which repentance is first confession against it selfe Psal. 32.5 It will not flatter it selfe but cast the first stone against it selfe and will say more against it selfe then all men can as Dauid hauing numbred the people before the Prophet Gad came cast the stone against himselfe saying I haue exceedingly sinned 2. Sam. 24.10 Secondly confession of all the sinnes it knowes as 1. secret and hid corruptions for the good heart knoweth that God loueth truth in the inner parts which made Dauid complaine of his originall corruption and brooding sinne which none tooke notice of but himselfe and the Apostle Paul of the law of euill rebelling against the law of his minde 2. Small and lesser euils it extenuates no sinne as little esteemes none as Gnats Moats or Mites which Gods Law takes order against It lookes not so much on the matter as on the forme It is burdened and takes notice of the least sinnes omissions failing in good things falling from the first loue c. Thirdly in repentance there is remorse or biting A good heart cannot commit sin without remorse not secret sinnes because it knowes nothing is secret in respect of God with whom it hath to deale
grace farthest from a good heart These are the Notes of a good an honest hart of which I will say to you as the Lord himselfe sometime said of the Israelites Deut. chap. 5. vers 29. Oh that there were such an heart in you to feare your God and keepe his Commandements alwayes that it might bee well with you and with your children for euer Now hauing spoken 1. of the Meanes whereby the heart becomes good 2. of the Marks whereby it is knowne so to be we come in the third place to the Motiues which is the last thing in the description of this last soyle I. Onely such an heart keepes the Word to saluation Fusty vessels are not fit for the precious liquor of sound and sauing knowledge and the graces of the Spirit The Law is spirituall and the place where the Lord layes it is in the spirit and heart of his Elect in whom onely he hath wrought a care to keepe it Psal. 119.11 I haue hid thy Word in my heart that I might not sin against thee The Lord hauing written his Law in Tables made choyce of y e Arke to lay vp the same safe Exo. 25.16 Thou shalt lay in the Arke the Testimony that I shal giue thee Now this Arke must be ouerlaid with pure gold both within and without signifying that the godly heart which must keepe the Word must be sincere within and without and euery other heart but the good and honest will shake the Word out one time or other hence Dauid prayeth Psal. 119.80 Let my heart bee vpright in thy statutes that I be not ashamed II. God esteemeth the goodnesse of our works by the goodnesse of the heart Ier. 17.11 I the Lord try the hearts to giue to euery man according to his work Hence many workes of ciuill men glorious and beautifull to the eyes of men are hatefull to God because they flow from the filthy puddle of a corrupt heart For as an euill action for matter can neuer bee made good by a good intention of the heart so a good action for matter can neuer be good in acceptance from an euill and deceitfull heart If the spring be corrupt so are all the streames Hence also God esteemeth good duties perfect when the heart is sincere because what is wanting in the manner and measure of obedience is supplyed by soundnesse and made vp by the goodnesse of the ●●art and therefore in Scripture vprightnesse and perfection are put one for another The widowes mite was in it selfe very light but putting her heart to it made it ponderous Adde thy heart to thy mite and it shall be accepted as a Talent Hence the Scripture saith God iudgeth not as man we iudge from without God from within we proceed from the effect to the cause hee from the cause to the effect wee iudge the heart by the worke hee the worke by the heart we looke first to the sacrifice and then to Abel hee first hath respect to Abel and then to his sacrifice Hence we see a mite in sincerity accepted and a Talent from hypocrisie reiected III. Without this good and honest heart thou losest all thy labour all thy graces all thy hopes all thy expectation If they come not from a pure heart he that is pure looks with pure eyes reiects them all If thou beleeue not from the heart Rom. 10.10 it is vanishing and temporary If thou liftest not vp pure hands in prayer that is the prayer of a pure heart suppose thou diddest weare thy tongue to the stumps and thy knees horne-hard thou losest all thy labour therefore Paul describeth true worshippers 2. Tim. 2.22 to be such as call on the Lord with a pure heart If thy loue be in word and tongue and not in truth thy heart cannot assure thee that thou art of the truth 1. Ioh. 3.18 19. If thou doest not from the heart obey the forme of doctrine deliuered Rom. 6.17 all thy obedience is lost without recompence without acceptation yea abominable Finally whatsoeuer we doe doe it heartily vnto the Lord and not vnto men Col. 3.23 The kernell of all duties lyeth within in the true disposition of the heart without which all is as an empty shell which when it comes to cracking and opening the hypocrites hope faileth See we not in the Day of Iudgement many shall pretend great matters done in preaching or prophecying in the Name of Christ and casting out diuels in the same frequenting Christs presence Wee saw and heard thee in our str●ets and so expecting some great reward for so great and glorious workes But not being sound at heart all these things are no better esteemed then working of iniquity and recompenced as hatefull sinnes Depart from mee ye workers of iniquity for all the sacrifices of an hypocrite are abominable his very prayers abominable Esa. 1. Bring no more sacrifices but wash you clense you and then come let vs reason together Esa. 58.3 The Iewes vrge God with their fasting and yet are sent away empty IV. A good heart is the essentiall difference or distinction betweene a godly man and an hypocrite whosoeuer wants it shall receiue his portion with hypocrites The Pharises make cleane the out-side A good Christian heares his Master say Thou hypocrite first make the in-side cleane As the hypocrites religion is made but a couer or cloke so he vseth it as a cloke to cast on and off as hee list And as men make their clothes so doth hee his religion so it be some fine stuffe without they care not what base lining they put in But the sound Christian is as the Kings daughter Psal. 45.13 all glorious within like a late fashion of great men lining russet or base Clokes with Taffatie or Veluet cleane thorow or like the hangings of the Sanctuary without course Badgers skinnes within fine linnen embroydered Exod. 26.1 14. The hypocrite desires to seeme either onely or principally the sound Christian desires to be acceptable Saul when hee knew Gods minde in reiecting him yet honour me saith he before the people 1. Sam. 15.30 the sound Christian knowing the minde of God in electing iustifying and sanctifying him endeuours both liuing and dying to be indeed acceptable vnto him An vnfaithfull and euill heart that departs from God hath faire showes goodly greene leaues a kinde of faith ioy profession and will giue God euery thing but a good heart which gift he only calls for which because hee with-holds hee shall neuer speed so well as a sound Christian who can giue nothing but true desires of a changed and sincere heart V. The whole comfort of a Christian vnder God is in a sound honest and good heart As first all inward comfort 2. Cor. 1.12 This is our reioycing euen the testimonie of a good conscience that in all simplicity and godly purenesse we haue had our conuersation This ioy is the ioy of Gods people which the stranger enters not
into and of it our Sauiour saith None shall take it from you It is like a little veine or spring which euer runneth whereas the ioy of an hypocrite which makes a greater show and noise then the other is like a great pond cleare at top muddy at bottome dried vp in Summer when is most need of the waters of comfort Secondly in outward opposition when men who cannot abide sincerity obiect to vs that all is hypocrisie and scorne vs for the things we doe when Ismaels scoffe vs for the blessings sake that from the world we haue small comfort and encouragement in our godly way now wee may finde comfort and peace in the sound constitution of our hearts 2. Sam. 6.21 Dauid being scorned by Michol for dancing before the Arke and called foole for his paines contemned that contempt for he did it in the vprightnes of his heart and would be yet more vile Paul teaching the strictnesse of Christian Religion to bring Christ into the hearts and liues of men was counted an heretike but professed After the way which ye call heresie doe I worship the God of my fathers Apply wee this to our selues A good conscience as a brazen wall feares not the arrowes of scorners and aduersaries Iobs innocencie will beare his aduersaries booke of accusations on his shoulder Thirdly in personall affliction this good heart ministreth great comfort 1. In inward temptation when Satan shall obiect as against Iob that thou art an hypocrite then which no temptation more assaulteth or infesteth the poore Christian looke what way thou canst not hearing not praying not fasting reading or almes can answere it but onely the sincere and inward disposition of an honest heart in all these He is molested with hypocrisie but not subdued by it So when Satan shall obiect the weaknesse of thy faith or the defects of thy obedience and that God cannot accept so broken and sinfull performances nothing can answere this dart but sincerity of heart manifest in true desires and endeuours which God accepteth beholding mercifully what a man hath not what he hath not Sincerity makes light things massie and ponderous where hypocrisie makes talents lighter then feathers So if he obiect thy heauinesse and vntowardnesse in prayer that thou prayest coldly and distractedly the only answere is God regards not the tune of the voyce the phrase of speach the sound of words or eloquence of tongue but the affection of the heart as in Moses Exod. 14.15 and Hanna 1. Sam. 1.17 2. In outward affliction onely a good and honest heart beares a man vp Iob in all his troubles had no other comfort Chap. 27.5 Vntill I dye I will neuer take away mine innocencie from my selfe When Abimelech was threatned for taking Sarah it was happy and comfortable to him that hee could say With a good and an vpright heart I did this Gen. 20.5 What a strength is it when afflictions take a man in his way and while with a good heart he goes about his businesse But if crosses come while a man is wandring or his heart rouing after vanity this disposition adds a sting to the affliction when the heart shall smite it selfe that it suffers as an euill doer Fourthly in respect of perseuerance in good a good heart onely ministreth comfort For as an Apple rotten at core must faile and perish seeme it neuer so beautifull so all graces shall wither that are not soundly fixed in a good and honest heart It is not leaues and showes without but soundnesse of sap and iuice within that makes the tree continue in fruitfulnesse One time or other the Word of God blasts the hypocrite as the fruitlesse Figge-tree and then how soone is it withered Inquire after his graces his zeale forwardnesse diligence ioy faith loue his place cannot be found his place in the profession shall be as empty as Dauids when Saul asked after him He that builds on the sand and in soundnesse of heart settles not himselfe on Christ the corner stone as our Sauiour said of the stately buildings of the Temple so may wee say of this man who held a beautifull place in the Church and shined in many graces See you all these things the time comes when a stone shall not be left on a stone the fall of his house shall be great and of the ruines of his graces wee may say as the Merchants of the riches of Rome Reuel 18.17 In one houre shall so great riches come to desolation But the vpright of heart shall neuer be ashamed Fiftly in the life time the Lord will doe them good that are true of heart Psal. 125.4 Hee will be mercifull to his defects that prepares his heart to seeke him though hee be not clensed according to the purification of the Sanctuary 2. Chron. 30.19 Hee will shew himselfe strong with the vpright heart chap. 16.9 Let them be neuer so weake in themselues Gods strength shall perfect all their weaknesses Let all the world condemne them yet he will iustifie them as true Nathaniels in whom is no guile In a word prosperity is their portion in this life 2. Chron. 31.21 Hezekiah in his workes sought the Lord and prospered Sixtly in his death this comfort shall neuer be shaken out of his heart when death shall sunder his soule and body it shal neuer seuer his heart from the soundnesse of it Hezekiah when sentence of death was passed against him the conscience of his honest and sincere heart comforted him Esa. 38.3 O Lord thou knowest I haue walked with an vpright heart c. At this time it will not comfort a man to haue done neuer so excellent workes but the manner of doing and his true endeuour shall comfort him Lastly in the day of Iudgement onely the good and honest heart shall lift vp the head before the Iudge of the world As a faithfull companion it will goe with vs before the Iudge and plead where no other Proctor can be admitted no other friend can appeare for vs. But how dare an hypocrite who hath nothing but chaffe and straw and stubble stand before the fire of that great Day which nothing but golden soundnesse and sincerity can abide No matter how thou canst gild thy selfe if thou beest not golden the fire shall consume thee But be thou the meanest creature that the whole earth can present before the Iudge with an honest heart that hast been faithfull and sincere in a little in the basest calling and estate that euer was any that Day shall preferre thee aboue hollow-hearted professours Preachers yea Princes For then it shall be better to vse Augustines comparison to be a little small finger that can doe no such seruice in the body if sound than to bee an eye of admirable quicknesse and vse for the guiding of the body if vnsound darke or ready to fall out of the head HAuing thus largely shewed the nature of this soyle of
to be a fruitfull Hearer but must striue to the greatest measure of grace rising if it be possible from thirty to sixty from sixtie to an hundreth fold Phil. 1.9 the Apostle prayes they might be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse as a vessel that cannot hold a drop more which though we cannot attaine yet euery godly man must ayme at it None will denie but that we should doe righteously and doe good workes in this present world But that is not enough vnlesse we be filled with fruits of righteousnesse and be rich in good workes Col. 1.9 the same Apostle for another Church prayes not onely that they may be fruitfull Christians but fruitfull in all good workes and increasing in the knowledge of God yea fulfilled in all knowledge wisedome and spirituall vnderstanding that as a full vessell hath no emptinesse or vacuity in it so no part of a Christians life or conuersation be barren or empty of good fruits 2. Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ comparing Christians to trees which flourish to a goodly stature but herein vnlike them Ordinary trees haue their seasons to grow but these trees of righteousnesse must euer grow euery time and age is their season and most in their age when other decay And againe whereas they may grow to bring a great measure of fruits euery one of one kinde these must not onely bring abundant fruits in measure but in variety euery one tree must be abundant in all the fruits of the Spirit described Gal. 5.22 23. as might be shewed in the particulars Reasons 1. A great measure of grace makes greatly for the glory of God Ioh. 15.8 Herein is the Father glorified that ye bring much fruit Papists thinke there is no vse of good workes vnlesse we say they merit iustifie and saue vs. But they set out of sight Gods glory the mayn end of them to aduance themselues For as it is the praise of the Husbandman when his field Orchard or Garden is fruitfull aboue other mens Euen so we being his husbandry a part of his Garden and Paradise branches of his Vine planted tilled sowne and set by his hand care Word and Spirit doe then commend his husbandry when we are laden with fruits of the Spirit which are to the praise of God 2. Thess. 1.12 The Lord fulfill the worke of faith with power that the Name of God may be glorified 2. The striuing to a great measure of grace conformeth vs 1. to the image of God who is an vnbounded Ocean and an immense Sea of grace and goodnesse and the more fruitfull and full of grace the creature is the liker it is to God and the neerer to his nature 2. to the image of his Word both the Law which requireth perfection of grace and the Gospell which is the wisedome from aboue full of good fruits Iam. 3.17 3. To the image of Iesus Christ making the members like the Head who was full of grace and truth Ioh. 1.14 4. To the image of our first estate in innocencie where was no defect and 5. of that blessed expectation which wee are to frame and aspire vnto in which the Saints already gathered to God haue put off all defects and being full of the glory of Christ doe see him as he is and see him to be like him 3. The being of a Christian stands in truth of grace but the well-being in strength of grace His acceptation is for truth of grace neuer so small but his commendation is in strength and further measure of grace Christ quencheth not but accepteth a small measure of grace but commends grace in great measure Nay where sometime he reproues a small measure of faith O ye of little faith hee magnifies a greater measure O woman great is thy faith and of the Centurion I haue not found so great faith no not in Israel Not loue but louing much is commended Luk. 7.47 Many sinnes were forgiuen her for she loued much It was the great commendation of Stephen that he was full of faith and power Act. 6.8 and of Dorcas that shee was full of good workes and almes which she did Act. 9.36 4. The abundant measure of grace is the maine strength and comfort of a Christian First in tentation for Satan assailes the weakest when and where the weakest so doe seducers and deceiuers Now a strong faith is a strong shield great knowledge as a strong wall and trench great loue of God a strong binder Secondly in persecution or affliction for well-doing strength of faith and patience will make them grow as the Palme and Camomile vnder that burthen which sinketh and oppresseth weaklings Iacob persecuted by Esau flyes to God and by strength of faith and prayer wrestles with God and preuailed with God and men The Canaanitish woman ouercame Christ himselfe by strength of faith Thirdly in death he can be bold fearelesse and ioyfull the conscience testifying of his fruitfull life Faith clasping Christ fast to the soule maketh him depart in peace Fourthly in iudgement it shall hold vp his head when he can bring in an increase of fiue or ten Talents at what time according to the measure of fruits in grace shall bee the measure of glory fiue Talents fiue Cities ten Talents ten Cities 5. A Christian must striue to an hundreth fold measure because he that labours not in addition to his fruits is on the losing hand and at last shall lose them all To sit downe and not perseuere is to lose all his labor He that continueth to the end shall be saued A sound Christian therfore expects not his Sabbath or rest here nor to cease from his labour till he come into heauen which makes him with Paul forget things behinde and presse still forward Phil. 3.13 And the commandement is to finish our saluation with feare and trembling Phil. 2.12 And the end wee say crowneth all Vse 1. To reproue such as stand at a stay in Religion as hauing grace and Religion enough and they need no more Who are to know that they may suspect the truth of that grace which flatters it selfe and conclude those beginnings to bee deceitfull which are not followed with constant increase Againe they mistake true grace which is not so soone attained as they thinke being as a graine of Mustard-seed which neither roots nor growes nor spreads to a tree suddenly but by degrees and is dead further than growing and the Lords Talent which thou must occupie to increase till he come Luk. 19.13 And giue vp thy Trade once thou must needs proue bankerupt and beggerly Lastly euery man would conclude thus in naturall things If he see his corne in the field stand at a stay and neuer shoot forward he will soone conclude hee shall neuer receiue a comfortable haruest of it And if he see his childe stand still at a stature and neuer increase nor grow stronger and bigger hee
dayes Now patience alone keepes the soule at peace and quietnesse waiting for God vnto succour or issue It holds the heart in expectation of the accomplishment of Gods promises and our happinesse in Christ. Though the vision tarrie yet it waites for the appearing of Gods face and the healing of the soule and is not disappointed Fourthly there are enemies without which hazard our fruits How easily and suddenly are wee ouercome of euill and drawne to returne iniurie with iniurie being prouoked follow our owne reuenges But now Christian patience steps in holds the bridle and turnes the course Now the Christian can blesse being cursed and do good for euill and ouercome euill with goodnes which is a singular fruit of grace Fifthly infirmities of brethren with whom wee conuerse were a great meanes to shake off our fruits as Barnabas lost his sincerity for a time by Peters dissimulation if patience did not vphold to discerne and beare the infirmities of the weake Rom. 15.1 2. and not please our selues But this will put an hand to helpe them vnder their burden and from vnder it as 2. Tim. 2.24 The seruant of God must be gentle to all suffering euill men patiently prouing if at any time God will giue them repentance And much more it endures and if it can couers and cures the infirmities of brethren That is the fift reason 6. Patience is necessary in respect of the Haruest of fruits the gathering and full reaping of all the seed sowne And thus the good ground brings forth with patience that is with patient expectation of the full fruits the first fruits whereof are already attained Rom. 8.25 It patiently abides for that it seeth not And in this respect the Apostle saith Wee haue neede of patience Heb. 10.36 that after we haue done the will of God we may receiue the promise And thus we now inherit the promises as did the Saints namely through faith and patience Heb. 6.12 How strong the expecting of the recompence of reward is to vphold the heart vnto fruitfulnesse see in Abraham Heb. 11.10 and in Moses vers 26. And that this Haruest is only promised to patient enduring our Sauiour noteth Mat. 10.22 He that continueth to the end shall be saued And the Crowne is giuen only to the Conquerour not to him that forsakes the field III. The Vse of all now followeth 1. This serues to reprooue the delicacie of our times For generally men professe a faith seuered from patience For what Haue they suffered for Christ or good conscience any thing all their life long Nay they resolue to suffer nothing not a word of disgrace not a frowne of a Superiour not the least trifling losse or inconuenience for Christ but rather farewell Christ and his profession Let these men know 1. that sound grace neuer comes without a sound burden of crosses to bee taken vp dayly 2. Refuse to suffer with Christ refuse to raigne with Christ Reu. 1.9 Iohn a companion in the Kingdome and patience of Iesus Christ neuer expect to be a companion in the Kingdome if not in the patience of Iesus Christ He need no such companions as flie away when hee hath most need of them 3. Refusest thou to suffer a Flea-biting in comparison a blast of words a frowne of bad times now in dayes of the peace of the Gospell what wouldst thou doe in the stings of Scorpions and the fiery trials of former times but shame both thy Lord and thy selfe 4. Didst thou euer look so high as the hope of the high calling Phil. 3.14 or euer poyze the eternall weight of glory 2. Cor. 4.17 that thou wouldst forgo them by auoyding a light moment any affliction not worthy the glory y t shall be reuealed Lastly shal Christ suffer so much for thee wilt thou suffer nothing for him 2. Let this stirre vs vp to get vnto vs so needfull and vsefull a grace as patience is so great a preseruer and continuer of fruitfulnesse and furtherer of saluation And consider some Motiues hereunto 1. The act of suffering for Christ is an higher degree of Christian excellency then beleeuing onely Phil. 1.29 First because it aduanceth the glory of God whose power can make Christians as Salamanders not onely liue but thriue and be glorious in the fire of persecution and suffering The same power is dayly put forth in his seruants by which the three children walked in the midst of the fire and onely their bands were loosed Secondly because it conformeth vs vnto God our Father who in his admirable patience endureth wrongs at mens hands which men and Angels could not put vp vnto Christ our Head while we follow him in his sufferings and by bearing his crosse goe on to the Crowne and to the blessed Spirit of God who for his meekenesse and patience is resembled by the Doue 2. It is a maruailous great strength to a Christian first for the setting and ripening of his fruits for how comes it that sinne wastes in him and corruption abates yea consumes which still raignes and swayes the most or that grace thriues and prospers in him which is scorned and trampled by the most but because he is patient to haue his lusts mortified so are not they he is patient to endure the labour of faith and loue so will not they An heauie Christian when he is to goe about duties of mortification or sanctification is soone discomfited as were the ten spyes there were so many enemies so high walls to scale so many Lions in the way But where patience preuailes it comes in like the two hearty spyes Caleb and Ioshua Tush it is nothing to ouercome these Canaanites why they be but men in Gods displeasure the Land is ours already and what if we abide a brunt or two or endure some difficulty the good Land is worth it Secondly what great strength doth it fortifie our faith withall then which no one nor all graces are more assayled Patience as a shield steps in and beares off such thrusts and blowes and shot as otherwise would foyle Faith vtterly It is a preseruing vertue and is for the conseruation of the soule Heb. 10. vlt. Cyprian in his booke de bono perseuerantiae saith that as Faith is the foundation of Christianity so patience is the roofe and couer that keepes the whole worke whole and dry and therefore is said to hold our soules fast to our selues as Faith holds them to Christ. Hence it is called the Anchor of the soule without which Faith and all graces in the soule as in a ship doe totter and reele as a ship without an anchor Thirdly what great stability affords it to a Christian when it makes him and holds him constant and himselfe in all the changes of his outward condition and externall occurrences Let what stormes can bluster abroad he possesseth his minde at home His heart is settled by patience which frameth his minde to his estate when
Christ is sanctified and seasoned in the shame of Christ for thee 6. He that is ashamed of Christ while he was in his lowest abasement Christ will be ashamed of him in his glory And besides thou that oughtest not to be ashamed of him in his abasement darest thou now in his glory and aduancement 4. Meditate much and often on the comforts of another life and that Christ makes it a signe of blessednesse when wee suffer persecution for well-doing and Math. 5.12 Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen euen so great as the afflictions of this present life are not worthy the glory that shal be reuealed 5. Accustome thy selfe to conquer thy lusts as 1. ignorance which hinders from seeing the excellency of the Gospell 2. pride lest the disgraces of Religion cast thee off as we see in men vnmortified 3. passion and head-strength of naturall corruption which makes men impotent and impatient see Heb. 12.1 4. earthly and couetous desires that thou maiest still be easily weaned from the world the desire and vse of it 6. Labour for the helpes of patience as 1. sound iudgement in the truth allow it a deepe rooting 2. sound faith which ministers boldnesse Psalm 116. I beleeued therefore I spake 3. true hatred of sinne to indure any sorrow rather than sinne and admit the greatest sorrow rather than commit the least sinne So much of the first Doctrine The second is this The blessing of the fruitfull Christian is because hee brings forth fruit with patience hee shall perseuere vnto the end Or Truth of grace is blessed with continuance Wherein this good ground is distinguished from all the three former whose best fruits at last came to nothing Esa. 40.31 They that waite on the Lord shall renew their strength as the Eagle they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not faint Psalm 112.6 The righteous shall neuer be moued Hence the Scripture compares the faithful to trees planted by riuers of water whose moysture being indeficient their leaues fall not off which liuing Water is Christ apprehended by faith of which whosoeuer once drinketh he neuer thirsteth more because there is in him a Fountaine springing vp to eternall life Ioh. 4.41 This Doctrine being both of old and of late opposed we must 1. open the nature of perseuerance which the Aduersaries at this day would obscure and 2. confirme and prooue it by arguments which they would elude The former by a short description of it Perseuerance is a singular or speciall gift of God by which the sauing grace of Christ is so preserued in the heart of the true Beleeuer as that he neither wholly nor finally falls from it but abides vnchangeable in that estate of grace It is a speciall gift of God Ephes. 3.14 16. I bow my knees vnto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ that ye might be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man Phil. 1.6 He that hath begun the good worke will performe it vntill the Day of Christ. Heb. 12.2 He is the author and finisher of our faith Where note the errour of Arminians who denie perseuerance to bee truly and properly called the gift of God but the sole action of man and the proper cause of it the will of man for so they write Voluntas proxima sola est perseuerationis causa physica as if the will doth not therefore perseuere because God maketh it so to doe who is the God of all grace 1. Pet. 5.10 and worketh in vs both to will and to doe Phil. 2.13 By which the sauing grace of Christ is preserued in the heart of the true Beleeuer Where are three things considerable 1. The obiect sauing grace 2. The subiect a true Beleeuer 3. The meanes of perseuerance preseruation of grace 1. The obiect of perseuerance is the sauing grace of Christ for the question is not of seeming graces or common graces as illumination externall reformation temporary faith and the like but of true and sauing faith loue holinesse fruits of election and of effectuall vocation wrought by the Spirit not restraining but renewing Arminians denie that Gods Election is any cause or foundation of perseuerance yea or of calling to saluation they denie any such principle of heauenly life by effectuall vocation they denie that there is any substantiall difference betweene the faith holinesse righteousnesse of them that shall be saued and that temporary which damned Apostates had but onely induration and continuance Quite contrary to the Scripture which tells vs of semen manens 1. Ioh. 3.8 9. seed remaining in vs of an ingraffed word Iam. 1.21 of an oyntment which abideth 1. Ioh. 2.21 of an immortall seed 1. Pet. 1.23 and a fountaine of water springing to eternall life Ioh. 4.14 2. The subiect of perseuerance is the true Beleeuer one truly iustified and sanctified for looke what grace soeuer an hypocrite hath he may and shall lose it totally and finally We doubt not but hypocrites may fall from the whole profession of faith and afterward persecute it as Iulian But the question is of true Beleeuers and all the examples of hypocrites falling away touch not the question 3. The meanes of perseuerance is that sauing grace is preserued in the heart of the true Beleeuer Wee denie not but grace in respect of it selfe as in Adam and in respect of the subiect the Elect is subiect to change and may as easily be quite shaken out of the heart as the grace of creation out of Adams But this sauing grace is preserued not by the Beleeuer himselfe by his owne watch and care though not without it but partly by the priuiledge of spirituall life flowing from Christ who is risen from death and dieth no more partly by the promise of God who is faithfull in his whole couenant Ierem. 32.40 partly by the protection ayde and custody of God whose power preserueth his to saluation 1. Pet. 1.5 partly by Christs intercession and prayer and partly by meanes appointed to preserue that sparke of heauenly life the Word Ministery prayer exhortation c. For these are certaine rules 1. That neither the promise of perseuerance on Gods part nor the assurance of it on mans doe hinder the meanes or make exhortation and prayers vnfruitfull as Arminians teach vs but rather imply and include them Luk. 22.46 Christ had told Peter hee had prayed his faith should not faile but yet exhorts him withall to watch and pray who dare say it was idle though Peter might be certaine of perseuerance Marke the same argumentation in 1. Ioh. 2.27 28. 2. Conditions hinder not the certainty of the promise For the Lord will vphold them to all conditions requisite Hee that makes them perseuere to the end makes them perseuere in the meanes 3. Conditions hinder not the absolute both promise and performance For the same thing may be both absolutely promised because it shall certainly be accomplished and with
3. It excites them to much thankfulnesse when being acquainted with their owne weaknesse and Satans daily assaults they see themselues set into so firme an estate of happinesse as they are armed against the dread of vtter foyling or forsaking Whence Bucer on Ioh. 6. saith Nothing is more profitable than to preach to Beleeuers that it is impossible for them euer to fall from grace Vse 1. Let all this moue vs to the earnest desire of so permanent a condition and so to labour for truth of grace which onely shall continue Content and please thy selfe with no seeming or vnsound grace which shall leaue thee in thy greatest need In earthly things men desire such as are most durable and lay about them for long estates of life or liues or fee-simples And why not heere in so great necessaries and expectations 2. Let this prouoke vs to perseuerance in the state and measure of grace receiued And hereunto let vs consider 1. The end of Redemption to serue the Lord in righteousnesse and holinesse all our dayes Luk. 1.75 2. That righteousnesse departed from is vaine and forgotten Ezek. 18.24 All labour prayers hearing yea all sufferings are lost as the Galatians suffered many things in vaine Chap. 3.4 3. Thou shalt bee iudged as thou art found when the Lord comes the question shall not bee what thou wast once but what thou art As the tree falls so it lies If of straight it bee growne crooked so it shall bee iudged 4. This makes Election sure and is a note of the saued of the Lord to continue to the end Math. 24.13 Glory and immortality is the part onely of such as by continuance in well-doing seeke it Rom. 2.7 And our Sauiour is expresse Luk. 22.28 To you which haue continued with me in tentations haue I appoynted a Kingdome as my Father hath appoynted me a Kingdome The Lord make vs vpright that by continuing in his Word wee may manifest our selues Disciples so following our Lord with patience and perseuerance in holinesse vntill he bring vs vnto an vn-discontinued happinesse purchased by his owne blood Amen Prima perit perit altera altera quarta perennis FINIS THE ALPHABETICAL TABLE OF THE MOST REmarkable poynts inlarged in this Treatise ABuse of things lawfull is damnable as well as the pursuite of things vnlawfull Reasons 3. 164 Abundant measure of grace is the strength of a Christian in a foure-fold afflicted estate 395 Sound Affection to the truth vpholds men from withering 107 Of Affections renewed foure instances 347 Apparell abused how 166 Apostates in dangerous estate three reasons 397 Not to be Ashamed of the afflictions of the Gospell sixe reasons 417 The ayme of euery good hearer must be to bring forth an hundreth fold 392 B Behold what it noteth 16 Booke of nature to be translated into the vse of grace 18 Brutish ignorance after long hearing three reasons 61 C Callings abused how 168 Calling of God without repentance 430 Care of the family abused 169 Cares of the world are great chokers of Gods Word 1. Before hearing two wayes 180 Word 2. In hearing two wayes 181 Word 3. After hearing 182 Foure true Causes of the worlds hatred of God and his truth among many false pretensed ones 134 Church not to be defined by multitude 259 Christ the Author and matter of true wisedome 292 Christians must aspire to the highest pitch and measure of grace for fiue reasons 393 Circumstances necessary to doe good duties well seuen 359 Cleannesse of heart wherein it is 349 Comming to Church Satan euer comes with thee 58 Comforts in persecution three 135 Companions of holy desires sixe 78 Companions of true Illumination foure 82 Companions of sound Ioy 1. Holy affections three 86 Companions of sound Ioy 2. Holy graces fiue 87 Company and society abused 169 Comforts for a Minister who seemeth to lose much labour among a rude people foure 258 Conscience if sound hath 1. Sincerity 2. Tendernes 108 D Dangers in enioying earthly pleasures foure 227 Deceitfulnesse of heart in the matter of repentance in seuen particulars 370 Defects of an euill heart in the matter of his Religion in sixe things 319 Delicacy in Christianity condemned by fiue reasons 411 Holy Desires examined in their 1. ground 2. matter 3. ends 4. companions 76 Sound Desire of the Word tryed by three things 77 Differences between sound knowledge and hypocriticall three 81 Differences betweene Christs sowing and his Ministers 4.19 Despisers of Gods Word in fearfull case two reasons 36 E Earnest of the Spirit what 283 Effects of true Religion fiue 316 Effects of sauing knowledge three 123 Elect how farre they may fall in fiue conclusions 422 Ends to aime at in our pleasures 3. 250 Examination whether we are gotten beyond hypocrites in foure things 75 F Faith especially impugned by Satan many reasons 54 Tēporary Faith is raised on tēporary causes which they be 69 Iustifying Faith necessary to a good heart for 5. reasons 294 Faith gouerneth the whole life fiue instances 296 Forwardnesse to heare the Word of God vrged by 4. reas 5 To Fruitfulnesse in grace foure things required 20 Fruitfulnesse necessary to Christians fiue reasons 388 For our Fruitfulnesse the Lord hath done fiue things 399 Sweet Fruits of patience foure 414 The better the Fruits the more need of patience 415 G God glorified by ioyning of the Crosse to Christian profession foure wayes 129 Gods glory is the ayme of a good heart in all his parts and in all his actions 276 Godly men are most peaceable and yet none more troubled than they foure reasons 299 Godly man keepeth the whole Sabbath with the whole man 332 God esteemeth the goodnesse of our workes by the goodnesse of our hearts 372 Goodnesse of heart is a full Sea of comfort in all afflictions 1. Inward 2. Outward 375 Good ground bringeth forth fruits answerable in kinde to the seed 386 The thing hated in Good men is goodnesse 134 Goodnesse of hearers esteemed by goodnesse of heart for foure reasons 264 Grace if sound groweth still fiue reasons 307 Graces of the Spirit compared to water in 4. things 120 Graces speciall and sauing are wrought by the Word preached fiue 323 Sound Grace is blessed with perseuerance 418 Grounds of perseuerance in grace 6. cleered frō exceptions 424 Growth in Grace tryed in the 1. Root 2. Fruits 3. Measure 4. Affection 5. Continuance 88 In naturall Growth persons are higher but in spirituall they grow lower 91 Growth of hypocrites deceitfull in sundry things 98 Some Ground on which the seed of the Word falleth is good ground fiue reasons 252 True Growth is in all graces sixe instances 307 The good heart onely Growes 311 H Heart called good in two respects 261 An Heart qualified by grace is beyond an euill heart in sixe things 262 The Heart is softened by a threefold moysture 270 A good Heart hath fiue properties in regard of God 272 Hath fiue excellent properties in