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A66610 Totum hominis, or, The whole duty of a Christian, consisting in faith and good life abridged in certain sermons expounding Paul's prayer for the Thessalonians, Epist. 2, Chap. 1, Vers. 11, 12 / by the late reverend and worthy Mr. Samuel Wales ... Wales, Samuel.; Wharton, Philip Wharton, Baron, 1613-1696.; Wharton, Thomas, Sir. 1681 (1681) Wing W296; ESTC R41158 76,673 232

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outward man in themselves or others ever to be exercised in one good work or other in a word when they endeavour seriously that their practise may answer their teaching and profession They dishonour it by barrenness fruitlesness careless neglect of good works when they place religion only or principally in knowing or talking profess piety but express it not in their practise or do not constantly shew forth mercy and equity in all their actions so that the very wicked can tax them for the want of these things 5. They honour it by bridling and moderating affections manifesting Christian meekness when occasions of being provoked are offered equanimity confidence and joy in God when he takes away good things or brings evil upon them They dishonour it by suffering passions now stirred by some adverse and ingrateful occurrences to overflow the banks and break out into unseemly excess when they can keep no mean or measure in their anger are fearful above measure altogether heartless at the approaching of danger grieve immoderately for losses and crosses For worldlings seeing the children of God so impotent impatient timorous dejected think within themselves surely there is no such joy in these mens religion no such power in faith as Preachers would perswade us 6. They honour it by union and harmony of hearts and tongues when they sweetly conspire and are knit together in judgement and affection as the boards and curtains of the Sanctuary by rings and tenons minding speaking the same thing walking by the same rule They blemish it by mutual jars vvars dissentions especially in matters of Religion 7. Lastly they honour it by constancy in religion vvhen they are called to suffer great things for it holding on in the way of life when showres of persecution falling threaten to drown them willing and chearful forgoing the dearest things for the Gospel They dishonour it by spiritual cowardife and apostasie starting back from the truth because of the Cross shrinking away from the love profession practice of godliness lest they should be troubled and persecuted This makes men think Religion is worth nothing for which they that know and have professed it will lose nothing this makes men say these love the world and the things of the world as well as others for they will yield to any thing rather than part with living liberty life This instruction thus confirmed and opened ferveth first to reprove many that desire to be counted and called Christians but answer not their stile Some notwithstanding all our preaching are unexpert in the word of righteousness in the art of godliness grow not in knowledge but stand at a stay like dwarfes and dwel perpetualiy upon that a. b. c. of Religion which they learned long ago Some of good age and long standing have begun to totter and turn after seducing spirits which promise to open unto them a new way that they may find rest and peace to their souls wherein they may walk without a Conscience Some for fear of worldly troubles let good causes fall to the ground But above all others this point thunders against those who by their disordered lives bring shame not only upon themselves but upon Christianity in general It s to be lamented that some by idleness in their callings pride unthriftiness undutifulness to Governours unfaithfulness in dealings slipperiness in promises rigor in standing upon and prosecuting their own right to the utmost discords and such like gross faults appearing in their lives give the wicked occasion of condemning our whole brotherhood 1 Pet. 2.17 and make Religion ashamed that ever she knew them yea blush and hide her face if they do but look at her or challenge any acquaintance with her And do we serve our Religion thus Beloved in which we hope to be saved Do we look she should comfort us plead for us lead us to heavenly glory and yet we deal with her as Judas did with Jesus that is daily deliver her up to be mocked scourged crucified pierced by the spears and arrows of ungodly mens venomous tongues Do we not fear lest if we continue to be a shame to our fathers house exposing it to infamy and obloquie in the world we be cast out at length as bastards and bond slaves lest if we be a shame to the Gospel the Author of the Gospel be ashamed of us in that great day Secondly Vse 2 all that call upon the Name of Christ and are called after his Name must hence be spurred and stirred up to answer their calling especially by an holy and unblameable life Brethren let us study every man in his place to be an ornament and credit to Religion Whatsoever things tend to the honouring of our holy profession let us think on them and do them embrace and follow after them whatsoever things we know or justly suspect will disparage and bring an aspersion upon our calling avoid abhor them Away with the works of darkness let them not be seen among us they are most unseemly unseasonable in Christians What a shame is it that those who are called to so great and glorious things should live like the base scullions of the Devil ought we not to walk in the fear of our God because of the reproach of our enemies that we may give no occasion to the adversary to speak reproachfully Let us oh let us strive to be such manner of persons for holy conversation and godliness that our very lives may proclaim to all men tha● our hearts hopes countrey portion is above not in this world that in our words and works wicked Men may smell the fragransie and behold the majesty and glory of Religion to their astonishment and be compelled to say these are kindly Christians indeed worthy the Name they bear the seed which the Lord hath blessed Esa 61.9 Consider I pray you for I would gladly strike this nail a little further 1. That profession separated from sutable practice is a great Enemy of Christs Kingdom Unreformed Protestants must be content to be ranked among adversaries as well as Turks and Pagans and its hard to tell which is most dangerous For 1. these fight only from without the City of God and who can look for any better from them who profess hatred and enmity against the Church Those living within the bounds and bowels of the Church put weapons into the hand both of forrain and domestick loes secretly encourage strengthen arm them against Religion while they seem to be Friends 2. Neither should external enemies have any power to hurt the Church if the sins of those that are in the Church did not provoke the Lord to become her Enemy to pull down her wall and give her into the hands of the uncircumcised 3. The bad lives of Christians are a great hindrance of the Churches increase For when the Men of the world see them as earthly midded as covetous as contentious and in a word in many things as blame worthy as themselves they
Totum Hominis OR THE WHOLE DUTY OF A CHRISTIAN Consisting in Faith and good Life Abridged in certain Sermons expounding PAVL'S Prayer for the Thessalonians Epist 2. Chap. 1. Vers 11 12. By the late Reverend and Worthy Mr. SAMVEL WALES Minister of the Gospel at Morley in York-shire 1627. The Second Edition With the occasion of Re-printing it AS ALSO A Prefatory Epistle from the Lord WHARTON and Sir THOMAS WHARTON his Brother to their Children LONDON Printed by T. B. for Benjamin Alsop at the Angel and Bible in the Poultry over against the Counter 1681. THe Reader is to take notice of the Providence by which the ensuing Treatise and the Epistle before it came to be reprinted so many years after the first Impression and the Reason thereof which was as followeth The Lord Wharton in Sept. 1674 being at Leedes and looking on the Pictures in the room where he dined among the rest there was one of Mr. Wales the Author of both A Gentleman there present spoke highly in his commendation he having been a neighbouring Minister in those parts of great worth and esteem and said he he dedicated a Book to your Lordship which I think I have in my Closet my Lord not remembring any thing of the said Book or Epistle was desirous to see it and finding in the ●●●●●le so honourable a character of his Lordships Father he begged the said book Afterwards finding also the Treatise it self so useful he communicated the same to his onely Brother Sir Thomas Wharton who both of them thought fit to cause the said Treatise and Epistle to be reprinted both in respect of the memory of their ever honoured Father and for the usefulness of the Treatise it self and they also thought fit to add a few lines of their own to their Children collecting from that word in the Epistle of the worthy and reverend Author That the Domestical Precedent of such a Father was for Admonition and Instruction of the said Lord Wharton that surely it was and they hope and pray it may be no less admonishing and instructive to all those who come but of the loines of the same holy and worthy Progenitor PHILIP Lord WHARTON and Sir THOMAS WHARTON his only Brother wish Grace and Peace unto their Children and their Childrens Children from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ through the Sanctification of the Holy Ghost Dear Children YOU have been acquainted with the Original of the ensuing Discourse and the occasion of its Revival at this time Your especial concernment in it is from the Character and Account given of the Life and Death of your Grand-Father our Father in the Epistle Dedicatory prefixed unto it and although we had not the advantage of knowing him our selves so as then to have had a sense of the things spoken of him he being taken away in our tender Age yet we have a full assurance of the Truth of the Testimony given in the Epistle following unto his Zeal Wisdome and Piety The known Reputation and Integrity of the Reverend Author of that Epistle with the time of his Writing of it being after the Death of our Father and its Direction to one of us then a Child from whom he could expect no Countenance nor Reward do exempt his Testimony from the common Condition of such Epistles and Dedications even when Written by other good men On this Account we do in the first place commend the Treatise it self unto your diligent perusal and do leave it as a pledge of our concernment for you in the things contained therein For being not designed nor contrived by us nor the Author for any such end the Tender of it being made unto you from that hand of Providence whereof ye have heard it ought to be had of you in especial regard It is a Treasure in and unto a Family to have such a Person as your Grand-father is here truly represented to have been on the Roll of its Progenitors And we have been taught that where Soveraign Grace hath made an entrance into any Family especially in a principal Root of it it doth not utterly forsake that Family at least in some of its branches unless the Covenant whereby it is administred be generally neglected or refused On this Occasion it is not improper for us to add what we each of us know and can with much comfort Witness of the holy and exemplary Lives and Conversations of our dear Mother and of each of our Wives from whom ye have respectively issued on which Account as the Apostle said of Timothy that he called to remembrance the unfeigned Faith that dwelt in his Grand-mother Lois and his Mother Eunice we can truly say the like of your Grand-mother and respective Mothers and we should rejoyce in nothing more than with the like Confidence to add with the same Apostle concerning you all that we are perswaded the same Faith dwells in you also as we hope we can say of some of you It becomes not us to speak any thing unto you of our selves nor of our endeavours to transmit this Priviledge unforfeited unto you It is sufficient for us which we must abide by that we have not been wanting in any means of Instruction which we thought might conduce unto your good and advantage You that are our own Children immediately are most of you in that State for Age and understanding as wherein you must answer for your selves We therefore leave it in charge with you that there be not an Intercision of the Administration of the priviledge and grace of Gods Covenant in and towards our Family by your Default Your Lot is fallen into Times of great Advantage on the account of the Light of the Knowledge of the Gospel and of great Disadvantage from the abounding of various Temptations in them it requires more then ordinary Diligence so to deport your selves that you neither suffer for abused mercies nor fall into a Course of sin upon urgent opportunities Remember also in point of Honour and Interest that no Families are more contemptible in the World than those who degenerate from pious Ancestors for in that case it is which God himself hath given that express Rule They that honour me I will honour and they that despise me shall be lightly esteemed It is but a little while that we shall be present with you neither have we much more to do for your advantage than we have done Our principal Design now is to leave an abiding sense with you of this our present Advice We are not altogether ignorant of what hath been said by others and of what yet may be said in the way of Advice to Children by Parents who have a Care of their Temporal and Eternal good The substance of all that can be spoken in this Case is comprized in the last words of David to Solomon his Son And thou Solomon my Son know thou the God of thy Father and serve him with a perfect heart and a willing
covenant of life and peace wherein he promised to be a Father and Husband to them removing evils conferring all good things in this and the future life So much is comprised in these few words I will be their God Thirdly Reason 3 they chuse and avouch him to be their God to whom they give themselves and yeild all hearty and willing service duty and obedience as becomes good children and subjects First Vse 1 this serves to controll the sawciness and presumption of wicked men who being the seed of the old serpent and children of the wicked one will needs usurp and intrude into the proper right of the righteous that is challenge God to be their God their Father It can hardly be told how dishonourable intollerable a wrong these men offer to the Lord they most indignly debase his excellent Majesty making him a favourer Patron father of naughtiness the companion of Satan which is most vile impiety yea blasphemy should a known strumpet still in all places be calling the King her Husband would it not be counted impudency worthy to be severely punished by the judges Let such hear the Lord himself if yet they will believe him forbidding him to be so bold with his Name What hast thou to do to take my Covenant in thy mouth Yea plainly telling tthem to their faces they are not his people not under mercy that he is not their God It 's true even the vilest men in the world have relation to him and dependence on him as a Creator and Conserver but no man can truly call God his by Covenant till he find in himself 1. A sweet mourning in secret for that he hath done him so much wrong and still can serve him no better 2. A sensibleness of his dishonour 3. An earnest striving to give God his heart in all worship Secondly Vse 2 this Doctrine nay comfort the Godly Fear not nor be dismayed thou faithful Christian if he be thy God who is the God of salvation and justifier of repentant sinners thou canst not be condemned if he be thine who is greater than all sin shall not hurt thee nor Satan pluck thee out of his hands If God be thine he will keep and care for thee thou art sure of consolation in calamity Esa 43.2 3. preservation in perils supply of all wants his wisdome shall be thy watch his providence thy portion his power thy pillar sustaining thee in heaviest afflictions If God be thine his promises are thine all those Texts which declare what God is or will be to his are as surely thine as if thy name were expressed in them his Christ is thine his kingdome is thine all are thine If friends fail as the brooks in summer kinsfolks grow unkind and old acquaintance stand afar off like strangers if parents or dear yoke-fellows take their leave and drop down into the dust of death if earthly stays and comforts like riches in Solomon take themselves to their wings and fly away grieve not thou as others that have no hope but sing and exult in spirit seeing God who is instead of all things remaineth thy God for ever and ever Rejoyce in the Lord ye righteous and be thankful for your happiness for blessed are the people whose God is Jehovah This is indeed true felicity to him that hath God for his God no good shall be wanting no evil mortal nothing can make him miserable Thirdly Vse 3 the faithful are here instructed 1. To rest on the Lord with full confidence of heart to appropriate him particularly to themselves boldly to challenge an interest in him When God hath pleased of his rich grace to become mine giving himself to me how can it be presumption to make claim to him as mine and say as holy ones have ever said The Lord is my God from this hold which indeed is the foundation of all our comfort the Devil and the Pope would drive us but we must maintain our title and never suffer our selves to be beaten from it especialy in the evil day in distresses and agonies of conscience imitating our Lord and Master who when his Fathers hand so pressed him that to his own feeling he had forsaken him yet cryed My God my God why hast thou sorsaken me 2. To go boldly to him in praier seeking and asking of him all things needful speak to him with confidence of acceptance and audience if he be our God he will deny us nothing Should we fear being welcome to our own I am the Lord their God and will hear them saith God in the Prophet Zachary 3. With erect and undismayed spirits to profess and confess his name before the sons of men If we call him ours and here the Apostle tells us he is not ashamed to be so called Heb. 11 2● shall we be ashamed of him deny him in the world if we do are we not well worthy to have our liveries taken from us and to be turned out of his service or discarded in the day of his glorious appearing 4. To be careful of honouring pleasing obeying him Ye shall do my judgements saith the Lord to the people in Leviticus and keep mine ordinances to walk therein Why I am the Lord your God Levit. 18.4 We will serve the Lord for he is our God Josh 24.18 say the people in Joshua For shame never profess thy self to be Gods never call God thine while thou makest no conscience of obeying him Art thou a willing servant of sin more ready to do what thy lusts lead unto than what God commands Sin is thy God Dost thou bestow upon the world the profits and pleasures of it that love fear joy delight strength time which God challengeth and the godly consecrate to him The world is thy God Are thy waies such as agree far better with the will of the Devil than with the holy will of God Dost thou not take far more care and pains for fulfilling the mind of the flesh and Satan than doing what God requireth and accepteth The Devil is thy God See now thou hast chosen and made strange gods to thy self other Lords have dominion over thee the God that formeth thee hast thou rejected for no man can serve two masters Lastly Vse 4 hence the Sons of men are admonished to take heed of persecuting that is wronging the godly by word or work for they belong to one that is higher than the highest the mighty maker of all things is their master and hath undertaken to be their Protector he that toucheth them toucheth the Lord who hath linked himself to them in an eternal league of amity If God be theirs he will certainly take their parts declare himself an enemy of their enemies smite the proudest that afflict them Make God thy Foe draw him into the Field against thee and see how thou speedest The last and largest branch of our general division now followeth Resolution which is the matter of the Apostles prayer
Wherein two things are to be considered 1. The things craved in the rest of the 11 ver 2. The end for which he desired and would have God to bestow them ver 12. The things craved for the Thessalonians the blessings for which Paul prayeth unto God in their behalf are two for he intreateth the Lord 1. That he would make them worthy of their calling 2 That he would fulfil all the good pleasure of his goodness c. whereof the first is principal the other subordinate a means conducing and subservient to the former Let us begin with the former and first seek out the sense of the words Interpretaiton By calling many understand the glory of Gods kingdome to which the faithful are called I see no need of flying to so far-fetcht a Metorymya we may well enough take it in the usual sense either for that gracious and saving benefit of God bestowed on the Elect which commonly we call effectual calling or for the state and profession of Christianity to which they are brought by Gods calling them out of their natural condition and then the meaning of the other words will be this We pray that the Lord will enable you to walk as becometh those that are the called of God to direct and strengthen you that in nothing you may discredit but in all things to the very end honour your Christian-calling Hence we may deduce three conclusions The first Doct. 1 True Christians of themselves would shame their calling The faithful if God do not guide and uphold them are in danger to blemish their profession For prayer to God for any thing importeth and presupposeth our indigency and want of the thing prayed for or else impotency to retain what we have obtained to perform what is required The Apostles petition implies as much as if he had said though you have received a good portion of Gods grace unless he continue to be your strength and stay you will fall to such courses as are unworthy your holy calling Sam. 12.14 David a Prophet endued with a large measure of the spirit of sanctification how did he discredit his religion by his adultery murther counterfeit madness Peter an Apostle by lying swearing and forswearing before the enemies of Christ and by dissembling at Antioch The like may be said of Noah Jonah Sampson Solomon for that Solomon was an elect vessel and is a glorious Saint in heaven I no more doubt than that he was the Author of Ecclesiastes for this Book could not be written in the time of his primitive integrity because he speaks precisely of that as a thing past nor of his Apostacie Eccles 2.8 because a soul turned from God would never have taken pains to draw men from all earthly vanities which is the scope of that Book nor breathed out such heavenly precepts as are here found and therefore was written by a true penitent who found God gracious and was received into Abrahams bosome Reasons of this Doctrine Reason 1 may be drawn First from the reliques of original sin the root and source of sins which still hath residency though not regency in the best the old leaven is not perfectly purged out that flesh in which dwells no goodness dwells in those that have most goodness The holiest souls do necessarily though unwillingly carry about in their bosoms an hereditary disease which inclines them to drowsiness Rom. 7.11 and neglect of their holy watch a dangerous deceiver an enemy like to Satan lusting against the spirit rebelling against the Law of their mind sometimes craftily enticing sometimes violently haling to those things that are contrary to their calling Secondly Reason 2 from Satans opposition who thrusts sore at them that he may cast them down from their excellency out of the hatred he bears both to their Souls which will be wounded and to Gods Name which will be blemished by their false Therefore he blows the fire of natural corruption presents objects and by them worketh upon the heart offers wicked company watcheth where they are weakest when most unprovided and accordingly assaults them a thousand wiles he useth all the power and policie of his seven heads and ten horns he applieth to the subverting of them Thirdly from the weakness of the new man True holiness indeed is renewed in them but imperfect their strength is like the strength of a child now beginning to go or a man recovering of a great sickness they neither know believe nor love perfectly and therefore can neither avoid evil nor do good perfectly Look then as he whose sight is dim or joynts and knees feeble may easily slip and fall into the mire so the best Christians being attended with infirmity whil'st they are strangers on earth are in danger by falling to shame their calling further than they are supported by God The point thus confirmed serveth further to admonish the godly of three things First Vse 1 to take notice of our great frailty Alas silly weaklings are we unstable as water reeds shaken with the wind if the rock of Israel be not our arme every morning Esa 33.2 unable to stand against the left blast of Satans mouth the smallest puff of wordly troubles ready enough if left to our selves to fall as foully as fearfully as ever did any and so cause the Church of God the religion of God the calling of Chrstianity to be reproached the best of us the strongest amongst us had we no better keepers than our selves would sin like Peter David Solomon Manasses yea become Judasses Demasses Alexanders terrestial Devils he that believes not this of himself is blind and knows not himself See what small cause we have to be conceited and confident of our own strength Secondly Vse 2 to fear continually to be jealous and suspicious of our felves in regard of our great weakness and with all careful and curious circumspection to watch over our selves that we be not supplanted by sin Blessed is he that in this sort feareth allwaies had Peter feared his own infirmity he had not strayed so grievously No man is nearer downfall than he that is furthest from doubting himself Had we a child or servant whom we knew desperately bent to hurt himself or some other or else in danger either by reason of some disease to fall into fire and water or of a bad disposition to play some lewd shameful pranck whereby our house might be discredited would we not still have an eye to him and command our folks to watch him at every end the case is our own our own traiterous hearts conspire against us night and day to work us woe to lay us naked before the world like Noah uncovered in his tent to seduce us into the dirty-paths of sin that when we have stained our garments we may be the laughing stock of Devils and wicked men Oh look we to our selves that we be not deceived by such a cozening companion no vigilancie can be too great in
no confidence in God 2. No man can doubt that the spirits of just and perfect Men now in Heaven do believe and wait for the redemption of their bodies therefore faith and sight are not so opposed as they cannot stand together 3. If there shall be a word in Heaven then faith but there shall be a word not this written or printed Bible but the substance of that Doctrine which is contained in the Bible and consequently all those Promises which speak of the Eternity of that glorious Estate reserved for Believers in He aven shall be written in their hearts So that if any ask what use shall there be o● Faith when now they enjoy the Lords promised Salvation I Answer they shall believe that God will perpetuat and continue those joys and pleasures that blessed condition to them for ever and ever 4. I suppose this is sound Doctrine which hath hitherto gone for currant among our Divines unless in that late Controversie whether faith or repentance hath precedency it have received some affront Faith is the root foundation original of holiness Doth the root wither when the tree and branches flourish more than ever 5. In the day of Judgment the Lord shall pronounce all the sins of the righteous eternally forgiven the sentence of absolution remission shall be openly and fully declared and confirmed as Divines teach Shall they nor believe what Christ speaketh 6. Why may we not say that as the godly in this world believe things past as the creation the incarnation death resurection of Christ so shall they in the life to come These arguments sway me to this opinion as most probable that Faith in God is an eternal gift abiding in the Heavens the some Operations of it shall cease in Heaven whereof there shall be no number The matter is not of such weight that I would contend with any man about it Let the Prophet judge and instruct him better if he orr who in points of this nature suspecteth his own judgment as much as any other and is more desirous to learn than to teach Lastly from this instruction its easie to gather that we must seek unto and rest upon God as well for the finishing as beginning of our salvation Should the beginning be Gods work the accomplishment ours so wise an Apostle would not have spent nor by his own example taught us to spend so many prayers for it This is to be marked as meeting with the Papists they will have God lay the foundation of mans salvation by Predestination redemption free remission of sins but afterwards they will not be much beholden to him they can now perfect the building themselves for they can merit increase of justice and eternal life so that in effect they say to God as a man sometimes to his neighbour when he would have this or that work done do but set me in and I shall do well enough But that doctrine which suffereth us not with the Apostle to pray while we live Lord accomplish in us weak and worthless Vessels by thine own power the work of faith and all the good pleasure of thy goodness is not from heaven but from men and the Devil Hitherto we have unsolded the special requests which the Apostle made unto God for the Thessalonians There now remaineth only the end why or for which he thus intercedeth with God and moveth him for the forenamed blessings and its double 1. Principal respecting Christ 2. Subordinate respecting the Thessalonians themselves The former is set down in these words that the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you that is that Christ himself by this means may be honoured in you and by you in this present world As if he should say I do the rather beg these things for you because they mainly tend to the promoting of the glory of Christ among the sons of men which thing I am sure your souls earnestly wish and desire Observe from these words to instructions First Doct. 1 that the scope of Christians must be the glorifying of Christ The Apostle testifieth of himself in another place that he desired nothing more than that Christ might be magnified in his frail body Phil. 1.20 whether by life or death and professeth that he made this the only end of his life the mark at which he aimed in his whole Ministry all his actions and passions to bring glory to Christ For so I expound those words for to me to live is Christ and generally of all true believers he saith elsewhere Whether we live we live unto the Lord or whether we die we die unto the Lord. And good reason For First Reas 1 Christ is the Author both of their being and conservation From him they have life and sustentation natural and spiritual For by him all things were created Col. 1.16 do subsist and are upholden by the word of his power he gives unto every Mun that comes into the World a reasonable soul he quickens sanctifies the elect Feeds them with his own flesh and bloud 1 Cor. 1.2 2 Co. 5.17 presenteth stablisheth enableth to every good word and work holds them in his hand supports them by his grace as the High Priest the ruines of Israel on his shoulders without him we have nothing can do nothing would return to nothing Therefore nothing is more meet than that Christians should wholly addict themselves to his glory Secondly Reas 2 consider the several relations of Christ unto Christians Is he not their Husband Must not all Wives give honour to their Husbands Is he not their King yea the King of glory are not subjects bound to honour their King Is he not their Lord and Master ought nor servants to count their masters worthy all honour Lastly he is their dear Redeemer who willingly disrobed and emptied himself of his regal glory and put on the homely mantle of humane flesh that he might ransom them with the price of his own bloud Therefore they owe themselves wholly to him and stand obliged to glorifie him in soul and body whose they are both in soul and body For to this end saith the Apostle Christ died for them 1 Co. 6.20 that they should not henceforth live to themselves but to him that died for them Hence the living Creatures are brought in saying with a loud voice worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive honour glory and blessing Thirdly Reas 3 it s no small honour which through Christ is already put upon them and from Christ they expect far greater in the next life They are now partakers of a glorious adoption a glorious shining righteousness glorious graces glorious joys they are called to glory and wait for a richly glorious inheritance an eternal weight of glory to be conferred upon them by Christ Now shall not those that have and look to receive so great glory from Christ endeavour so to live as Christ may have glory from them But alas Vse
God and men flourishing in the Courts of our God as those that are planted in the house of the Lord and bringeth forth more fruit in old age to the glory of his blessed name Amen and Amen from his heart saith To your Honour most addicted SAMUEL WALES Apr 30. 1627. 2 Thess 1. v. 11 12. 11. Wherefore we also pray always for you that our God would make you worthy of this calling and fulfil all the good pleasure of his goodness and the work of faith with power 12. That the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you and ye in him according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ. THE scope of the Apostle in this Chapter is to refresh with the cool water of consolation the faithful Thessalonians now in the fiery Tryal of Tribulation and with Cordials of lively Comforts to confirm their spirits macerated and steeped in afflictions His chief Argument is taken from that righteous recompence of reward which the just Judge of all the world will give in the day of his appearing endless trouble and torment to them that have here troubled and tormented the godly eternal ease and refreshment to them who are now hated and vexed for Christs sake And to the end this comfort might sink more deeply and stick more firmly he digresseth a little into a description of Christs coming to Judgement opening as it were the very Heavens and representing him to their eyes with all his glory These two Verses now contain the conclusion of this consolation the sum whereof is a commemoration of the Apostles Christian care and religious practise of carrying the names of these Thessalonians continually before the Lord in holy petition and making suit for them that they might hold out in this noble but painful race and warfare which was indeed the scope of his consolation In them we may consider 1. The act or duty simply propounded 2. The amplification of it 1. From the adjunct circumstance of time when or how often he did exercise it 2. From the moving cause included in the first word Wherefore 3. From the subject or persons for whom the afflicted Thessalonians 4. From the object or person to whom our God 5. From the matter of the prayer that he would make you worthy c. Let us begin with the first The act or duty performed by Paul and two other holy men of God Sylvanus and Timotheus is prayer we also pray that is we do not only give thanks to God for you comfort and teach you the way of salvation both by preaching and writing but moreover we make earnest requests to God in yoor behalf Our lesson hence is Ministers must pray for their People Teachers of the Church must add prayers for the Church to all their other labours prayers I mean both private and publick The sons of Aaron are commanded to bless the Children of Israel Num. 6.23 Deut. 33.10 1 Sam. 12.23 Jer. 18.20 to put incense before the Lord a type of holy prayers Samuel calls the neglect of this duty a sin against God The Prophet Jeremy professeth he had stood before the Lord to speak good for his hearers and to turn away his wrath from them Nothing is more plain or frequent in all the Epistles almost of all the Apostles And good reason For First They are spiritual Fathers of their Congregations and therefore should have paternal affections in them which cannot but send forth Prayers for their Children Will not natural Parents earnestly wish and desire the good of their sons and daughters Secondly Their Prayers may greatly help and advantage the People 1. By diverting threatned and imminent or removing already inflicted and incumbent Plagues Moses standing in the breach turned away the Lords wrath from rebellious Israel and saved them from deserved destruction Psal 106.23 The withered hand of that wicked Jeroboam at the Prayer of the Prophet is restored Two heavy Judgements shewed in Vision to the Prophet Amos prepared for Israel at his intercession were stayed at least for a season Read Amos 7.1.2 3 c. 2. By procuring or pulling down from Heaven many blessings upon them spiritual and corporal Elias prayed saith the Apostle James and the Heaven gave rain and the Earth brought forth her fruit If the prayers of private Christians may prevail with God for healing those that are sick in soul or body shall we think the requests of his faithful Messengers who come nearer unto him will do nothing But especially their Prayers may obtain of God that blessed success and fruit of their Ministerial travels in the conversion and sanctification of their hearers than which nothing can be more profitable for the People and which is the Crown of the Ministers rejoycing First then many are worthy to be reproved Some are so full of Satan that if any of their hearers do but cross or displease them they break out into black and bitter cursing instead of blessing wishing Gods Plagues and vengeance may fall upon them Some are so ignorant they cannot pray some so profane they care not for praying either for themselves or others they have more skill of swearing and swaggering than powring out spiritual prayers Many utter words of prayer in publick who are dumb at home all the week long and trouble not the Lord with one fervent and savoury request for the spiritual welfare of the souls of their people I fear when the great Shepherd the Prince of Pastors shall appear these will appear and be found unfaithful Shepherds For as that Christian who never prays for himself but in the Church is convinced to pray only for fashion so that Preacher who never prays for his sheep but in the Pulpit may justly be thought to pray of custom rather than from conscience and zealous desire of their salvation and he that prays of custom only will I warrant him by cold and careless teaching except the wind of praise drive his Mill testifie to the world that he cares not much who carry away their souls so he have their fleeces Secondly therefore let all that are set over Congregations in the Lord provoke themselves to this duty I mean to be as well instant suiters for them to the Lord as constant instructers of them from the mouth of the Lord. Let every faithful Steward of Christ say with Samuel God forbid I should cease praying for the people of God committed to my charge For 1. If we bear them in our hearts 2 Cor. 7.3 as Paul did his Corinthians Philippians if we earnestly long after and love them in the bowels of Christ Jesus as the same Paul did the same Philippians Phil. 1.7 8. and what are we but hirelings if we do not we cannot but remember and mention them to God in our daily prayers as Paul did all the Churches 2. Can we see our Auditors rotting and stinking in the Graves of their ungracious courses stumbling or poasting
rather in the path of perdition stabbing and wounding themselves continually and like mad men treasuring up wrath which shall burn themselves in the bottom of hell Can we see these things and not pity them and pitying shall we not by prayer seek to help them 3. Seeing all our speech without the inspiration of the Almighty can neither call nor keep men in the state of grace have we not need with the Apostle night and day exceedingly to pray for them The converting of a sinner a work no less difficult than the quickening of one dead is far above the activity of any means or labour we can use yea the power of the Angels of Heaven A moral dispute of an heathen Philosopher much more a divine discourse of a Christian Preacher may stirr up strange pangs and passions but cannot imprint grace in the soul no more than turn a stone into flesh Should we waste our lungs and weary yea wear our tongues with speaking if God bow not the heart we spend our strength in vain and for nothing Now how can we expect or promise to our selves this great blessing I mean the winning and saving of souls by our doctrine which a good Pastor thristeth after more than any earthly commodity and vvherein he rejoyceth more than if ten thousand royal diadems all garnished vvith pretious stones vvere set upon his head if vve crave it not of God by fervent prayer Thirdly Hearers must hence learn to crave the help and comfort of their godly Ministers prayers I doubt not but they fare better for them in their persons children estate travels sickness seed-time harvest It s a good and commendable custom to commend the afflicted in Congregations to the prayers of the Pastor Hezekiah seeing himself and his People in a great and dangerous strait by messengers intreateth the Prophet Esay to lift up his prayer for the remnant that were left in the Kingdom of Judah The Apostle wills the faithful when any are sick among them to call for the Elders of the Church that they may pray over them If any be so godless as to despise or make light account of the praiers of Gods Messengers not only the godly but the wicked shall condemn them For reprobate Pharaoh when the hand of God presseth him can say to Moses intreat the Lord for me and Simon Magus to Peter Pray to the Lord for me that none of these things come upon me But here let Jothams Counsel be remembred Hearken to me you men of Shechem that God may hearken unto you If thou wouldest have thy Teacher to be a speeding spokesman to God for thee if either thou desirest or thinkest thou shalt ever need the relief of his prevailing prayers in the day of thy calamity see that now thou obey from the heart the doctrine he delivers submit as a good Child to his holy counsels and admonitions If thou continuest to rebel against the word which he brings from God it may be as the Lord charged Jeremy not to lift up a cry for the Jews nor to make any intercession for them because he was determined not to hear so he will lock the heart and close the lips of thy Minister that though he would fain speak for thee he shall find neither words nor affections of prayer God shutting the door of prayer against him because he meaneth to shut up his mercy from thee and not to be intreated to do thee good And this is just that he who would not hearken when God besought him in his Minister to repent should not be heard when by the Minister he sueth to God for favour Thus much of the duty The first thing whereby it is amplified is the adjunct circumstance of time when or how often they prayed always which is not so to be understood as if they were continually upon their knees or did nothing else but pray without intermission but the meaning is that they continued and renewed every day the practise of this duty at fit times and seasons So Solomons servants are said to stand continually before him King 10. and Jehoiachim to eat bread continually before the King of Babylon that is he had a daily allowance or portion at meal-times And the daily Sacrifice in the Law is called the continual burnt-offering because it was constantly repeated twice a day that is offered continually morning and evening as elsewhere the Holy Ghost expoundeth himself Now because Paul and his fellows may and must be considered both as Ministers and as Christians hence we observe that Christians must daily exercise themselves in Prayer The servants of God must keep a constant course of calling on God day by day This lesson is taught by the most holy mouth of our Saviour both in that Parable of the Widow importuning the wicked Judge the scope whereof is to teach that men ought always to pray and in his pattern of prayer wherein he directeth us to beg every day bread for the day likewise by the example and practise of the Saints David Daniel Anna Paul The reasons are many and evident First What more equal than that part of every day be given and consecrated to him who is the Lord of the day and of all our time Is it not reason we should daily do homage and service to him by whom we are maintained and sustained daily in whose hand are all our days all our ways Is it not fit he have a sheaf of his own Field a Cake of his own Lump They had a morning and evening sacrifice in the time of the Law shall we who have greater light than they had come behind them in honouring the Lord shall we want that truth whereof they had the shadow Secondly Prayer is a singular means of near and Heavenly communion with God therein the godly not only seek but enjoy the face of God talk familiarly with him And have we not need every day to maintain this communion which is the root and fountain of all our comfort to hold and continue acquaintance and fellowship with him who is our life strength best friend Is it not a shame for Children living in house with their Father to pass a day without speaking to him or looking him in the face Thirdly Prayer sanctifieth to us that is obtaineth of God for us a lawful and comfortable use of all the things and affairs of the day Without prayer therefore our callings and our labour in them are unclean whatsoever we enterprise or do is unclean to us we cannot expect Gods blessing on any thing for our good we cannot be assured that it shall beprofitable or wholesome to us vve may justly fear we shall be brought to Judgment and condemned for every thing we do take or use because vve defile it Fourthly every day vve stand in need of many things belonging both to temporal and spiritual life We want much knowledge vvisdom faith love fear c. our graces have no less need to be
unworthy to be called or accounted our brethren in Christ who hearing of our afflictions would not afford us the help of their prayers Now this is a rule in the royal Law urged also by Christ himself whatsoever ye would that men should do to you do ye even so to them and that which is now their lot may be ours e're long we are subject to the same things they suffer Suppose we were out of all reach of gun-shot yet we are commanded to put our selves in their room and to be affected towards them as if their case were ours as if their afflictions were our own proper burden First then Vse 1 what manner of Christians are those who if they pray at all pray only for themselves many alas too many are of this mind may but they sit and walk in the warm Sun of prosperity sleep in a whole skin line themselves well with wordly wealth suck in the commodities of a fruitful and peaceable land let who will take thought for distressed Churches distressed Christians they will leave that to them who have little else to do To apply this somewhat more particularly We cannot be ignorant how diverse as dear to God as the best of us are at this day afflicted some pinched and pressed with penury some imprisoned some banished We have heard with our ears our neighbours have told us how some are spoiled of their goods houses children synagogues liberty of worshipping God purely their temple-songs turned into howlings some kept in sore bondage by hard cruel Lords mourning continually and drinking their own tears in abundance by reason of the oppression of the enemy and the avenger some given to be meat to the sword of the furious and sulphurous sons of Babylon who now is grieved for these breaches of Ioseph who lays them to heart the telling or hearing of these things may prove a pang of pity in us for the present but who cries earnestly to God for them who can say his soul bleeds in secret for Zions wounds and thirsts after the peace of her children as if they were his own natural parents and brethren that their miseries lie heavy upon his spirit that he bears them in his heart when he comes to God in prayer give me the man give me the man that I may pronounce him the blessed of the Lord yea one of 10000 who cannot take and find that contentment which otherwise he might and could in his own good fare quiet habitation commodious lodging sweet children to whom the best outward comforts are less pleasant and often sawced with sorrowful sighs because it goes not well with the people and Saints of the Most high Well we may here learn to judge of our selves if our houses our hearts afford no prayers for poor afflicted Christians Zeph. 3.18 if we be not sorrowful for the solemn assembly if the reproach of it be not a burden to us we are as far from a truly Christian disposition as they that are furthest dead lumps in the womb of the Church void of the spirit of Christ unworthy to be reckoned in the mystical body of Christ Secondly Vse 2 let us therefore make conscience of this duty let us never cease to commend unto the Lord his afflicted flock his peeled and persecuted people We ought to lay down our lives for them if God should call us thereunto and shall we be backward to lend them our prayers Is it likely we would spend our blood to do them good for whom we will not spend a few tears a little breath a few hearty desires and affectionate suits which we may do without hurt If the Jews in captivity must pray for the peace of heathenish Babylon how much more should the Israel of God for Jerusalem the City of God Is not the Christian Church the Spouse of Christ If we can see Christs own Spouse despightfully used trampled upon wounded and not be troubled not speak a good word for her how dare we say the love of Christ dwelleth in us The Lord no dobut hath just reasons within himself why as yet he sendeth not inlargement and deliverance to his Church but this freeth not them from blame who seeming and calling themselves the Churches chidren pray not at all or very coldly for the prosperity of their mother Nay I will say boldly this denying to help the Church against the enemy though they never conspired with the enemy makes them guilty in Gods sight of the Churches desolation as sure as he that looks on while a true man is rob'd and murthered and calls not for aid is accessary to the murther Wherefore let us now begin if hitherto we have been supine and careless and continue to be importunate petitioners for the faithful in misery oh let us double our importunity if it be possible giving the Lord no rest till he arise have mercy on Zion and stablish Jerusalem till he tread down her enemies as straw is trodden for the dunghil and raise up Carpenters which may fray and cast down the horns that have scattered Judah Zech. 1.21 that there may be no more a pricking briar to the house of Israel nor any grieving thorn of all that are round about them that they may be no more a prey to the heathen but dwell safely and none may make them afraid Let us often set before our eyes their rueful condition think how many good things they want which we enjoy and how little worthy we are to enjoy what they want labour to be affected with a tender sense of their miseries that our hearts melting in compassion may send forth many zealous prayers the fruit and benefit whereof they whom we never knew never saw shall undoubtedly feel and reap in one kind or other The fourth point in order Interpretation is the ob●ect of Paul's invocation the Author of the blessings which are afterwards begged thus discribed our God that is the true God who generally is the God of the whole world The Lord of all the earth Zeck 6.5 the God of the Spirits of all flesh peculiarly of his own people Whence let us observe omitting all others only this Instruction The Lord is in special sort the God of the faithful Doctrine The godly and true believers have God to be theirs in a special manner He is my God my Fathers God Exod. 15.2 saith Moses this God is our God for ever and ever saith the Psalmist O Lord thou art my God saith the Prophet in the name of the Church The Lord my God shall come saith Zachary My God shall supply all your needs saith the Apostle And many such places there are through out the Scriptures For First Reason 1 he hath selected them out of the world and separated them from other people to be his peculiar people and embraceth them with such a love as he extendeth not to all Secondly Reason 2 he hath confirmed them to himself by making with them a
observing and taking heed of this thief this murtherer Thirdly not to insult over Vse 3 nor to be censorious in judging Christians for their falls Seest thou one that calls on the name of Christ do this or that unbeseeming his profession do not presently condemn him for an hypocrite nor cease to acknowledge him for a brother but rather support him in love and the spirit of meekness considering thy self lest thou also be tempted remembring that thy self though as famous for faith and sanctitie as any of these Thessalonians art in danger to do as much yea more if the Lord do not lead thee in his truth and righteousness But let no man mistake me or deceive himself I speak of one who failing in some particular act is for the main undefiled in his way not of a man that follows sin as a trade and after illumination and admonition purposeth to go on still in his trespasses We may as lawfully and certainly judge such an one to be de presenti a slave of the Devil one far off the kingdom of God as call that a crab-tree which beareth crabs or a thorn which bringeth the fruits of a thorn The second instruction is Doct. 2 The godly must by all means grace their calling Christians must so demean themselves both in peace and trouble as they may honour and credit the Christian-name and profession For Paul's prayer includes the Thessalonians duty as if he should say we knowing and considering that this is a main thing chiefly to be looked unto by you that are believers worthy the labour of your lives do constantly beg for you at the hands of God this grace that he would make you worthy of this calling The Ephesians are exhorted to walk worthy of the vocation wherewith they are called Timothy must teach women to carry themselves as becommeth those that profess godliness And good reason For First Reason 41 in so doing they honour the holy name of God by causing the doctrine and religion of God to be well-thought and well-spoken of Whereas by staining their profession they blemish the glorious name of God For they open the mouths of the prophane to blame and blaspheme religion to rail against and curse the Gospel which things must needs redound to his dishonour Hence the Lord complaineth of the Jews that by their idolatrous mariages they had prophaned his holiness and again for that they had made his name to be prophaned among the Gentiles by their wicked lives Indeed the doctrine is holy and good and no way to be charged with the faults of the persons yet the men of the world judge of the doctrine the worth and sweetness whereof they know not by the works and fruits which they see and know and conclude there is no such holiness goodness power in Gods School because no more appears in their lives Therefore the Apostle would have young women obedient to their own husbands that the word of God be not blasphemed and servants faithful to their masters that they may adorn the doctrine of God our Saviour See Tit. 2.5 10. 1 Tim. 6.1 Secondly Reason 2 hereby they may further the conversion of the uncalled How is that may some say I answer when they shall evidently see what a broad difference there is betwixt their own lives and the lives of the godly they may by Gods blessing be convinced that they are out of the way of life When their experience shall teach them that in those whom they have often reviled and condemned nothing is found worthy to be blamed they may be brought to feel shame and self-condemning accusation in their own consciences when they behold such worthy fruits of religion in the lives of others as even they that will not be good cannot but commend and admire they be drawn to some liking of religion allured to look into it to enquire and hearken after it to be acquainted with those that teach and profess it till at length they be taken in Gods net Whereas by blemishing their profession they hinder the salvation of others hearten and harden the wicked in rebellious courses in hatred or dislike of Gods truth who think they have good cause to hate it seeing it produceth no better effects in those that follow it and so drives them further from grace and Gods kingdome Thirdly Reson 3 justice and gratitude requires it For this calling is honourable and honoureth us it makes us of Gods houshold children of God and the Church members of the Son of God setteth before us a kingdome a crown of erernal glory as the prize for which the goal to which we must runne Is not this a great dignity Is not this so worthy a calling worthy honouring are we not guilty of horrible unthankfulness unrighteousness if we do not honour it all we are able Before we come to application Quest it shall not be amiss for further explication of the point to answer one question how do Christians honour or dishonour their calling Sundry waies Answ but these are the principal 1. They honour it by growing up to an holy dexterity and skilfulness in the trade of Christianity when they so receine the word as they encrease in knowledge and holiness labour still more and more to abound and excell in spiritual understanding maturity of judgement power and ability to subdue evil and do good Contrariwise they disgrace Christianity by non-proficiency when after much teaching they continue silly punies babish ignorant sticking and stumbling in the very grounds and easiest points of religion ever learning and never attaining to any solid distinct orderly knowledge of Diuinity 2. They honour it by stedfast persisting in the holy doctrine they have received against all contrary blasts of vain mouths when they are so rooted and grounded in the truth that they are able to stand firme and unmoveable against the enticing words of corrupt Teachers yea to trie their spirits discover and avoid them On the contrary they dishonour it by being reeds and weathercocks in religion when they hearken unto and suffer themselves to be seduced by the subtilties of impostors and glorious shews of counterfeit Angels of light vomit up again the wholesom doctrine they have taken down and drink in the lying words of deceitful workmen 3. They honour it by an unspotted conversation when like Zachary and Elizabeth They walk in all the commandments of the Lord blameless and are as the Philippians are exhorted to be unblameable sincere harmless without rebuke shining as lights in the world that is so frame their lives as they cannot justly be accused of any open and gross sin after their calling They dishonour it by falling into reproachful and scandalous evils 4. They honour it by abounding in fruits of righteousnefs when they labour to be full of good works holy just profitable actions ever to be speaking and doing that which is agreeable to the word of grace and may honour God edefie the inward or help the
and call our selves from the masters we serve and the Lord grant that whosoever heareth or readeth may be perswaded or this doctriue may put a sting into his conscience never giving him rest till he resolve to lead the life of a Christian And so I pass on to The third instruction A Christians walking worthy of his calling is from God All ability in believers to grace and adorn their profession is Gods gift Therefore doth the Apostle beg this grace at the hands of God for the Thessalonians And there is good reason for it First no man is of himself sufficient to think much Iess to accomplish that which is good This that great Apostle who was taken up into the third heaven confesseth and confirmeth in himself therefore all the sufficiency of the faithful must needs be from that Father of lights from whom descendeth every good and perfect gift Secondly God gives the first grace whereby they begin both to deny ungodliness to renounce all that spiritual uncleanness of sin which is contrary to their calling and to do those good works to which they are called to bring forth new fruits of holiness and righteousness a greeable to their new calling Thirdly he continues and confirms this grace or gracious work by a subsequent upholds them in their integrity stablisheth their hearts in holiness gives wisdom to espie and shun the snares of the tempter Delivers from every evil work and consequently preserves from shameful fals disgracing their calling waters them as a garden that they may be fruitful in good works which are a comely ornament to their profession Lastly he limiteth or restraineth their adversaries spiritual corporal whether solliciting to defection from the faith or tempting to sin in conversation suffers them not to affault his children when where with what weapons with what force and fury they would or else ministreth strength to withstand and overcome them Now he that curbs or puts to flight the enemies which would draw us to dishonourable acts must needs be the cause of our honourable standing in the day of battel and consequently of our winning credit to our calling First then hast thou escaped many dangerous pit-falls and quick-sands in which others have been overthrown many foul sins of youth of age which have foiled others and defiled both them and their profession Hast thou as a brave Souldier of Jesus Christ warded or repelled those blows of temptation which have brought others on their on knees or driven them from their station Hast thou purchased the name and repute of a worthy Christian by a godly harmless meek sober peaceable conversation gained honour not only to thy self but to the general calling of Christianity and so sent abroad the smell of the ointment of thy graces that others have been thereby induced to speak honourably of Religion for thy sake Be not proud of it its Gods work in thee ascribe the glory of it wholly to him who keeps back his children from evil and confirms them in good without whom we have no stedfastness no power to live well or hold out in good courses but should certainly after we have begun in the spirit end in the flesh It s truly said of an Enemy the least temptation if God forsake us and suffer the Devil to work as powerfully as he can will be intolerable invincible Secondly Vse 2 Dost thou desire to honour thy Christian calling by walking as beseems the Gospel Do for thy self what Paul did for his Thessalonians send every day post to the Court of heaven none other but thine own heart on the winged horse of Prayer Spread thy petition as Hezek his letter before the Lord say unto him Lord as thou hast made me partaker make me also worthy of the heavenly calling give grace that whiles I live I may shew such behaviour as is fitting the honourable condition to which thou hast brought me Let me die rather than I should admit or commit any thing which might impair the reputation of Religion and cause Christianity to find worse entertainment in the world Guide me therefore by thy counsel till thou receive me to glory hold me by thy right hand strengthen me with thine own might turn from me shame and contempt order my steps in thy word and let no iniquity have dominion over thy servant keep my spirit ever waking and watchful against sin stablish my heart in thy fear my feet in the way of thy precepts enable me to continue holy and faithful unto death and lead me in the way everlasting to the land of righteousness This is the way to obtain this excellent grace and he that perseveres earnestly begging it adding thereunto holy endeavours making the matter of his prayer the matter of his practise shall be preserved from opprobrious evils The second petition of Paul followeth wherein such things are begged as mainly and necessarily conduce to the honouring of a Christians calling especially by undaunted constancy and perseverance in the time of tribulation The means are two 1. General 2 Special The general is fulfilling all the good pleasure of his goodness By good pleasure I understand Gods decree and promise of bestowing on his children all spiritual blessings needful for the attainment of eternal glory or his love and favour now begun to be executed and manifested to the Thessalonians by effects and real gifts accompanying salvation this is amplified by the cause What is the root fountain and foundation of this good pleasure the goodness of God that is the kind and gracious nature of God whereby he is ready to deal bountifully with his creature The meaning then is we pray that the Lord would accomplish and finish all those good things he hath intended to work in you and for you that he would give the fulness and perfection of all those graces wherewith of his meer grace and goodness he hath purposed promised and already begun to enrich you The words may admit two other readings and interpretations for they may be turned all the well-pleasing of goodness that is all that goodness and holiness which is acceptable and well-pleasing to God And again All the desire of goodness that is all the good and godly desires of your hearts But this latter sense is barren and not so suitable to the Apostles words and scope the former is included in that which we gave in the first place which I judge to be fullest most proper and therefore most worthy to be preferred and followed The instructions to be drawn out of this clause are three First That all good in man is from the meer goodness of God Whatsoever grace God willeth to and worketh in his children it flows only from his free grace God saith the Apostle God worketh in us both to will and to do of his good pleasure You shall find the Scripture exemplifying this point in particulars ascribing all the saving benefits of God bestowed on his people to his grace and good will election
Many of better proficiency are to be censured who finding in themselves some seeds and elementary rudiments of godliness let fall the fails of their desires and sit down well contented I wish this Corinthian and Laodicean-like fulness be not a sickness too common among Christians but I fear too many not of the worst sort of our hearers if once they have but thus far profited in Christianity that they can thank God they are much reformed in mind and life or perswaded of the truth of their conversion think themselves rich enough they have gotten grace sufficient to save their souls and now they are well-satisfied they will not trouble themselves to labour for any more This is to manifest our own consciences being witnesses we have no questions we feel no poverty of spirit we complain of no wants our secret sighs and fervent longings for grace are dried up and withered the temper of our spirits is cold and dead as the winter season our affections are grown flat and frozen we please our selves in a conceit or self-sufficiency and that more holiness than we have already attained is superfluous But brethren if we be so easily so quickly satisfied and glutted with Gods dainties which make true believers more hungry I testifie unto you we may justly fear that we never rightly tasted at least never kindly digested them but have all this while dreamed and been deluded by Satan and consequently doubt of our conversion Assure your selves when God shall call us to an account such a time will come and how soon we know not we shall have small comfort in looking back and recounting what a long rich spiritual seed-time and harvest we have enjoyed wherein manifold means and opportunities of getting a fair stock of grace have been plentifully afforded and we in the mean time like loitering sons of shame dallying with Gods bounty and neglecting to redeem the season have gathered little Secondly Vse 2 if the godly must desire it followeth that in the use of all sanctified means they must labour for the accomplishment of all Gods gracious pleasure in themselves all gifts accompanying salvation We must not rest in any measure of holiness but press after perfection of every grace and never rest till we see yea feel powred upon our heads all the goodness that God hath promised to shew his children in this life Truly as the heathen King is reported to have wept when he heard a Philosopher speak of more worlds than one because himself had not yet conquered one so it s a thing much to be lamented that whereas God hath provided for his children even in this world such a liberal portion of grace as might make their lives an heaven upon earth the most of us enjoy and receive so little the reason whereof is because we are not covetous enough we beg not in good earnest or else second not our prayers with suitable endeauours we aim not at a great measure Alas that we should be so poor and have a father so able so willing to enrich us I beseech you therefore if there he any consolation in Christ if ever you have tasted how good the Lord is stick not in beginnings call upon your selves to strive and endeavour after the highest degree of mortification and power to resist and conquer remnants of corruptions the highest degree of all positive graces knowledge faith love joy fear c. the highest degree of chearful and constant obedience of lively and fruitful walking before the Lord the highest degree of peace and comfort of strength stedfastness boldness The means in which we must strive are 1. A constant attending upon publick ordinances especially the Word preached and the Lords Supper which God hath sanctified for perfecting the Saints and by which he is wont more and more to convey his graces into the souls of those who use them with pure and prepared hearts 2. Feeding much upon Christ by application of he promises drawing and keeping near him in our spirits taking all occasions of looking up and speaking to him often bringing and baring your hearts before him as husbandmen do the roots of their trees before the Sun the reason is because he is not onely the fountain of goodness who makes the spirits of those that delight in approaching to him and walking with him watered gardens but also that Sun of righteousness whose sweet and quickening heat doth enliven regenerate renew impregnate with spiritual graces and fruits the invisible world of believing souls and advance the same to persection spiritually as this visible Sun doth creatures in this visible world naturally the more communion any one hath with this fountain this Sun the more grace he shall be sure to have 3. Plying God with fervent prayers springing from spiritual hunger and deep sense of our own beggery intreating him by the wind of his Spirit To blow upon the garden of our hearts that the spices thereof may flow forth 4. Improving Song 4.16 and blowing up grace by spiritual exercises of reading finging meditation conference private communication of gifts 5. Evacuation purging out by renewed repentance such matter as might cause an oppilation of those passages in which grace should flow unto us for Christ to whom we are joyned as members if we be believers is an head full of the holy Ghost full of grace truth if we defire to receive abundantly of his fulness we must take heed the nerve of faith and pipes of Gods ordinances be not stopped or made ineffectual in us by our worldliness deadness of spirit lusts or some known corruption too indulgently handled 6. Laying our hearts low before the Lord in humiliation and humility For the low valleys because they receive most dew and rain into their bosoms are most fruitful so the humble heart the broken spirit is of all others a subject most capable of the spirit and shall be most plentifully watered with the showres of grace because the God of all grace and goodness hath promised to dwell in such a spirit Do you now see the way Walk in it that you may find rest to your souls Do you know these things Blessed are you if you do them And therefore still suffer the word of exhortation in the use of these means propound this mark to your selves To be filled with the holy Ghost with wisdom and understanding with all riches of full assurance with all might patience and long sufferance with joy and peace in believing to be full of good works of mercy and good fruits of thankfulness and Gods praises all the day Oh spare no pains for storing up abundance of grace as David said of his children the fruit of the womb happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them so may I much more truly say of the fruits of the spirit happy is the man that hath his heart full of this treasure here only covetousness yea violence is lawful and holy Say not within your selves this
1 how few will be able to stand if they be judged by this doctrine How many who call themselves Christians will be found lighter than vanity liars against the truth First many propound to themselves no other end of living here but hoording up riches building their nests on high serving their bellies wallowing in pleasures enjoying honours The glory of Christ their consciences being witnesses is no more thought on or remembred than if Christ had never bin of all other things this hath never troubled their heads Wel if Christ had ever visited these men with the light of life and by his spirit sent joyful tidings of salvation to their spirits it would be otherwise with them Never did man truly know Christ and what Christ hath done for his soul but was much taken up and transported in musing devising defiring to glorifie him Be not deceived if the Lords honour be a stranger in your minds memories intentions endeavours you are in darkness till this present and cannot be assured to your comfort that you have part in the redemption which is in Christ Jesus Secondly do not many live as if they had been made or born to the dishonour of Christ As 1. our idolaters who more stupid than the old Egyptians give the glory of Christ to creatures to their own works to the works of the Painter Carver Baker I fear these grand thieves are long since past shame and grace too Therefore the Lord Jesus requires at their hands the restitution of that honour which most sacrilegiously contrary to his crown and dignity they have robb'd him of 2. Our prophane swearers who tear the glorious name of Christ or toss his Titles unreverently in their Mouths these honour him as the Jews did when they spitted on him 3. All contemners of Christs ordinances and servants who shall one day find that whatsoever is done to things or persons bearing his Name Jesus Christ will take it and revenge it as done to himself 4. All wicked livers whose ungodly works cause that worthy Name by which we are called Jam. 2.7 to be blasphemed in the world We shall sometimes hear them detest and curse both Turk and Pope for persecuting it with the sword when themselves like arrant hypocrites in whom the love of Christ dwelleth not tread it under foot by their cursed and most abominable licentiousness Secondly Vse 2 Let all the Lords people study in all things and by all means to glorifie Christ Jesus Let his honour be dearer to us than all things For this cause were we redeemed † Is 43.21 called quickened that we should shew forth his praise live to his glory Do not masters look their servants should be a credit to them The Angels of Heaven have no more noble imployment than to serve and honour the Son of God The Father hath committed to the Son the government of all things That all men might honour the Son Joh. 5.23 as they honour the Father If any desire direction for the practice of this most necessary lesson know that we must glorifie the Name of Christ both inwardly and outwarly Inwardly in spirit and affection 1. By stirring up and cherishing in our minds honourable thoughts of Christ an high esteem of him and his excellency of that incomparable goodness and power which he sheweth in leading us to salvation 2. By believing against hope and reason trusting on his grace and casting our selves wholly upon him in want of feeling and when all things seem to be against us 3. By intending his honour in every thing making it the mark at which we shoot and if we cannot be so happy as at all times to find that this is the end which before every action first comes to our minds and sensibly moves our wills yet must we strive to find in our selves after the action an high prizing and earnest thirsting after his glory far above all our own good temporal and eternal 4 By grieving heartily to see or hear him dishonoured by false worshippers false teachers carnal Christians 5. By often calling upon our hearts to admire and rejoyce in him more than all other things Outwardly both in word and work In word 1. By ascribing the whole glory of our salvation to him only 2. Speaking of him and using all his Names and Titles with such reverence as beseems so great a Lord. 3. Continual praising him for his mercy and truth towards us for the things be hath wrought daily worketh and will hereafter work for us speaking much good of him before others telling them what a wise powerful bountiful Lord we serve 4. Confessing him boldly before the sons of Men vindicating and maintaining by our Apologies his cause and truth when they are opposed and spoken against In work and conversation 1. By submitting our selves to the direction of his word in all things enterprizing nothing without leave or warrant from him 2. By a godly life and fruitfulness in a Christian course 3. By upholding and setting forward his Gospel to the utmost of his power For the Gospel is Christs chariot wherein he rideth through the world to conquer his enemies and gather his Church if the Gospel run and prevail his glory is inlarged if the Gospel be stopped his glory is hindred 4. By willing undergoing any thing for his sake These are the things which we must remember and do that Christ may be glorified in us in the doing of which we shall not be a little helped by accustoming our selves every day yea often in the day to call our own hearts to account and enquire what glory hath redounded to Christ this day this hour from my thoughts my speeches my actions that so far as we find our selves barren and defective this way we may take shame to our selves and turning our feet into the way of Gods testimonies with renewed care and redoubled resolution set upon this greatest and most honourable Work of honouring the Lord. Secondly Doct. 2 observe that a good Christian desires the Lord may be glorified by others A good man is not content to honour God in his own person but he heartily wisheth and prayeth that others may do it as well as himself So did David Psa 67.3 4. and Paul Eph 3.21 For First Reas 1 The zeal of God burns in his breast the love of Christ constraines him he knows that God most highly esteemes and loves his own glory that this being the last end of all his counsels and works must needs be more worthy and excellent than all creatures in regeneration he puts on the image of God by which he is inclined and enabled to will what God willeth to love what the Lord loveth and in the same manner according to his measure therefore he cannot but desire the inlargement of his glory in the world and the communication of that grace to many by which they may be effectually taught and moved to glorifie him Secondly He loves the souls of men Reas 2 and
is a bountiful rewarder of all diligent and faithful servants of his most beloved Son Secondly the members must follow and be conformed to the head Now Christ the head of believers first glorified his father upon earth and was afterward glorified with that glory which he had with the father before the world Therefore the faithful shall go the same way that is after they have finished their course of obedience in doing and suffering to the glory of Christ they shall be received into the glory of Christ and the Father Thirdly in glorifying the godly Christ glorifieth himself Relatives mutually give and receive honour The nobility beauty bravery discretion of a wife is an honour to the husband and the glory of the spouse of Christ shall fet forth and illustrate the glory of Christ If any ask Quest what is this glory which the Lord bestows upon his Saints that honour him I answer Answ It s either present or future Present in this world a preamble to that which shall follow in the next is either more open and manifest or more hidden and secret More manifest is when God gives them some great and famous deliverance or lifts them from a base and mean condition to places of dignity or makes them to be highly reverenced and had in precious esteem even amongst those who are of a different religion and contrary disposition Joseph had great glory in the Egyptian Court Ge. 45.13 Moses was very great in the sight of Pharoahs servants and the people of Egypt David honourable in Sauls house 1 Sa. 22.14 Mordecai in the Court of Ahasuerus Est 8.15 More secret is when the wicked who openly despise vilifie condemn the godly are forced inwardly to justify them and to feel their own consciences telling them that they or no people in the world are in an happy estate and in the way of life Whence it is that sometimes we have known Mockers and professed Enemies of Gods Servants Puritans Men call them now adays in cold bloud or in the evil day desire their prayer wish to dy their death and commit to their trust most important businesses For the spirit of glory rests upon them which causeth the face to shine and imprints that Majesty in the countenance or conversation which makes their persons no less venerable and terrible to those that hate them than amiable to those that love them Future is that wherewith they shall be crowned in the life to come when every faithful person shall be cloathed in soul and body from top to toe with such glory as shall cause admiration in men and Angels and dwell for ever with most glorious company in a most glorious Mansion of which particulars I think it not fit to treat largely in this place it shall suffice briefly to have named them because I hasten to an end First Then it follows hence Vse 1 by the rule of contraries that the end of all such as either oppugne the glory of Christ or wholly neglecting it hunt and hawk after the glory of the World shall be shame and confusion Think on this ye proud vain-glorious men who leave no stone unmoved that you may magnifie your selves whose only study and strife is to climb to the height of earthly greatness but if the name of Christ lie inglorious in the dust will not wag a tongue stir a hand or foot to lift it up Think on this ye persecutors of Christs truth ways sincere servants ponder it betimes and believe before you feel Though your excellency mount up to Heaven and your fame reach unto the ends of the Earth though all mouths should bless you all tongues extol you to the skies and all knees bow unto you yet shall you perish like your own dung leave your names as a curse which religious posterity shall abhor and detest as the smoke of a dunghil or stink of a carcase and in the day of the Lord if not in this life be brought to a shameful ruine and clothed with ignominy never to be removed Secondly Vse 2 This must comfort us against the shame of the world and encourage us patiently to bear the reproach of Christ Are we scoffed at reviled slandered by wicked tongues overwhelmed with calumnies and indignities because we are zealous for the Lord Jesus and do the things are pleasing in his sight remember the time will come when Christ shall abolish our shame and deck us with his own glory when both our persons names shall shine as the Sun in his brightness Do the children of this world disgrace us Christ will honour us Do we lose our credit with men for submitting to Christs Laws We shall recover it with advantage when Christ shall admit us to society in his own happiness to eat to drink and reign with him in his kingdom Lastly Vse 3 this should admonish and provoke us if we desire never-fading glory to be studious and zealous of Christs glory He that will neglect himself and all things for honouring Christ shall neuer want true honour tho the world think this the high way to shame and dishonour Here is a lesson for all ambitious spirits thirsting after renown Lo this is the path leading to the temple of honour O ye sons of the mighty the way to be famous and glorious is doing homage to the Son of God Exalt him in your hearts houses dominions and he shall promote you to greatest dignity Advance him by your Councils swords Authority and he shall advance you yea make you an eternal excellency Honour him in his ordinances ministers members and he shall make you high in name in grace and in honour 1 Sam. 7.9 The zeal of Gods house consumed David and God made him a great name like unto the name of the greatest men of the earth Do not think that pomp and Bravery Wit and Policy Worldly wealth preferment and power of commanding many sumptuous buildings stately tombes and monuments much less cruelty and tyranny shall immortalize your names no no its blessed conformity to Christ in true spiritual purity hearty subjection to his government and down-right resolution for his cause which shall embalm and emblemish your memorials that children unborn may admire the fragrancy and splendor of them and at last set upon your head an immarescible crown of glory Be strong therefore and do it for if you despise and pollute the Name of the Lord Jesus know for a certain that he will expose your names to contempt and make your memory not De● 9.20 If you transgress against the Lord it shall not be for your honour the seed of evil doers shall never be renowned the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it The cause of this glory remaineth in the last words according to the grace of our God and of the Lord Jesus Christ the meaning is the which glory cometh and shall be bestowed upon you O Thessalonians and all other believers from the free favour and
mind for the Lord searcheth all hearts and understandeth all the Imaginations of the thoughts if thou seek him he will be found of thee but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for ever While Solomon followed this advice it was his Wisdome and Honour and when he forsook it it was his Ruine Nor will they have any better Success who under the like Admonition in their Circumstances do follow his example in his miscarriages We could use many words with you unto the same purpose not without Hope that although in themselves they should not be more forcible than the words of others yet with you they would be more effectual and prevalent because they are ours But our present design is onely to recommend unto your perusal the ensuing small Treatise which in its Original and Revival was directed by Divine Providence to the one of us and thereby to be an Admonition and means of Instruction unto the whole Family You will not find in it those Allurements of Style and Language which some in this Age do strive to adorn their Writings with about things Divine It is the Subject matter of this Book and upon the account of your special concernment in it we propose to your Consideration and that as declared without Rhetorical Ornaments yet with that Gravity of Speech and Evidence of Truth so as to recommend it unto the minds of those who are sober and modest and to vindicate it from the contempt of any It doth not belong unto us to pass our Judgement upon or give a Recommendation unto the particular matters insisted on it is sufficient unto us that we are satisfied that in the whole it may be exceeding useful unto your Souls as to their Direction in the ordering of your ways with respect unto the Will of God We could not therefore content our selves without the Discharge of our Duty and shall pray for a blessing upon it unto your Advantage when we shall be here no more TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE PHILIP LORD WHARTON Grace and Glory Right Honourable REmarkable is that passage in the History of Nehemiah when the poorer sort of the Tekoites laboured stoutly in repairing the Walls of Jerusalem their Nobles put not their Necks to the work of their Lord. Nehem 3.5 By which we are plainly taught that when God commandeth Nobles are no less straitly bound to obedience than inferiour persons Indeed as godliness is profitable unto all things so the power and practice of Godliness is necessary for all persons of all degrees The great men of the earth yea those that are mounted on the highest stair of earthly Majesty must not think it any disparagement to labour for understanding of the Mysteries of Religion to exercise the duties of piety their places cannot priviledge them their affairs may not excuse them from works of this nature Dut. 17. ● Psal ● 1.2 ●8 11 ●1 72. ● 11 For first as there is but one God and one Kingdom of Heaven so there is but one way leading to that Heaven which is the way of holiness and righteousness Whence it follows that the sons of Nobles are no more exempted from the necessity of hearing reading confessing praying fasting holy conference watching over their own ways and the ways of their houses and such pious exercises which are main duties means and helps of holiness than the poorest man in the world that if they leave the care of these things to the poorer sort they shall leave Heaven to them also and be turned into Topheth while the poor take the Kingdom by violence Secondly the mightiest are but Gods tenants farmers stewards vassals vassels as well as the meanest they hold of him whatsoever they have to their very breath by homage they so depend upon him that they cannot subsist one moment without him their greatness as well as their being is from him a gift of his providence for promotion cometh neither from the East nor from the VVest nor from the South but from God the Judge who putteth down one and setteth up another therefore they owe as much love Psal 75. ● 7. ● 13.8 Dan. 4.17 reverence thankfulness obedience to their Creator as others that is in a word they ought to be as religious as others Gal. 3.28 Col. 3.11 For in the spiritual Kingdom of Christ there is not nor shall there be in the day of wrath and before the glorious Tribunal of Christs any difference betwixt the Prince and the Pesant Thirdly Religion and Piety bringing to Communion with God and participation of the spiritual sonship and the divine Nature ennobles Nobility sets a Crown upon Earthly Dignity makes greatness truly honourable whereas the most glorious greatness without true godliness and goodness is not only vanity but baseness in the sight of God despised therefore by holy Moses for can any thing be more base than to command many and yet willingly to serve the Devil the worst Master the vilest Tyrant in the VVorld besides that in Scripture not the great but the good not the high but the holy are stiled the precious excellent glorious ones Gods Jewels worthy persons Temples of the living God in whom he walks and dwells Kings born of God brethren of Christ the King of Kings dwelling in Heaven c. and will end in shame and misery as many testimonies and examples in Gods word prove abundantly Fourthly where much is given much is required where God sowes liberally he looks to reap accordingly Now great men are most indebted to Gods liberality their heads are anointed with Oil their cup runs over they are fed with the finest of the wheat and satisfied with honey out of the Rock they enjoy the most precious and delicate portions of the world and suck the sweetest marrow of Gods temporal bounty they have or may have if they be not wanting to themselves better means and more time of building up themselves in godliness than others Therefore they have no cloak for their sin yea double guilt lies upon their souls if receiving most wages they give the Lord least glory least faithful service They that having most allurements and helps to be good will not be good shall be deepest in Hell Fifthly fewest great ones are called to grace as few first born named in Scripture were vouchsafed the adoption of sons God delighting to stain the pride of Mans glory and to spoil him of all matter of boasting all occasion of putting confidence in carnal priviledges and its harder for great men to be saved than others because there are most and strongest bars to keep them from conversion they are most hardly brought to empty themselves by self-denial poverty of spirit mortification contempt of the world that they may be fit to enter in at the strait gate they are exposed to most greatest temptations and spiritual dangers as the tal Cedars to strongest blasts Satan hath many more advantages against them than meaner persons
applaud and settle themselves with more confidence on the dregs or dunghil of their own cursed condition as giving sufficient hope of salvation they think our doctrine touching the necessity of holiness and universal obedience in them that shall be saved to be vanity and falshood they resolve they need no more repentance than they have which indeed is none at all and so come not to Christ that they might have life vvhereas a good lise is a good oratour perswading and calling others to goodness wooing and winning the minds even of rude aliens to an approbation of it and so preparing them to be further wrought upon by the word of grace Whence the Apostle Peter exhorteth Wives to subjection from this reason that such Husbands as obey not the word may be won by the conversation of the Wives Were we such Christians as we ought to be saith an Ancient such as blessed Paul there would be no Gentiles no prophane men left among us We might draw many worlds to the faith 2. A bad life in Christians makes way for corruption in judgement renouncing of Christ and the height of wickedness For 1. God being provoked by mens impounding or imprisoning his truth in unrighteousness and partial walking in his Commandements in judgement gives them over to delusions leaves them to fall into errors and damnable opinions 2. When men are not what they profess and know they ought to be it cannot be but they feel themselves often stung lashed judged by the word of God and their own Consciences Wherefore to be rid of this trouble and torment and get liberty from Gods yoke the strictness whereof they cannot endure First they begin to desire and then labour to perswade themselves that some things which they have learned may be false or at least doubtful not very certain they invent or fetch from the Devils forge colours excused defences of that they mean not to amend wicked and Atheistical conclusions encouraging to continue in their course till at length the spirit being wearied and departing they fall to open prophaneness grow extremely impudent and obdurate in sin and so their latter end be worse than their beginning Wouldst thou have me speak more plainly Art thou a Christian in name but livest not like a Christian Take heed thou art in danger to be given over to heresie to believe Doctrines of Devils or wholly to forsake the way of righteousness to return to thy vomit and wallowing in the mire to become a stinking snuff or vapour in the nostrils of all men yea seven-fold more the child of hell than when thou didst first begin to profess Christ 3. As God expects more duty from his own than others so their unholy lives disagreeing from their holy calling kindle his anger more than the sins of others He will be sanctified in them that draw near him You only have I known of all the families of the earth therefore I will visit you for all your iniquities He takes it most unkindly to be dishonoured by his own people He will wink at the wickedness of strangers when those of his family shall be sure to smart for their disobedience and worthily For as one saith if Gentiles live filthily it s not a thing to be wondred at nor worthy of so deep censure but for Christians who enjoy so many glorious favours of God to live wickedly is a thing intolerable 4. Christians not Ministers only should be lights or candles shining and shewing to others the way to salvation If then by the dark and foggy cloud of carnal conversation we lead them into the pit how shall we answer our Judge Dread we not that sentence Cursed is he that causeth the blind to err in the way Indeed the wicked who take occasion from our unworthy walking to speak evil of the way of God or to wander in the way of death shall perish in their iniquity but we who give the occasion shall not escape Truly when I hear a man thus taxed Oh such an one is one of these forward fellows who love Scripture Prayer Exercises and yet he will swagger in some company as well as others or he hath so deceived me that I will take heed how henceforth I trust or entertain under my roof any of that feather I cannot but say within my self It were better a milstone were hanged about his neck and be cast into the depth of the Sea than he should by such un-Gospel-like carriage and discoloured manners lay such a stumbling block in the world 5. Think with your selves what comfort can any man have in that life which fighteth with his profession in that profession which is controlled by his life to which his life daily gives the lie which will certainly be an inditement and witness against him in the great day If it be a shame for one pretending himself a Grammarian to speak incongruously a Musitian to play or sing unskilfully howgreat a shame is it in the sight of God and his holy Angels for one to profess and make shew of Christianity and yet so grosly to fail in observing and obeying the rules of it that his own works condemn him in the gate What a shame is it lastly that those who by their lives ought to condemn the unclean world as Noah did by his obedience and all ought who hope to be assessors or benchers with Christ in judging the world should give the world just cause to condemn their lives I would gladly take off mine hand and make an end but the point holdeth me as if it were loth to leave you till you were perswaded I beseech you set your hearts to all these words which I testifie unto you this day and let them sink down into your ears yea into your souls Let your conversation be such as becometh the Gospel of Christ walk worthy of God who hath called you to his Kingdom and glory that you may by a real demonstration of the power of Religion stop the mouths of foolish and ignorant men who would be barking against Religion by practise and expressions of holiness muzzle or make ashamed the slanderous brood of Antichrist who charge us to deny or contemn inherent holiness Solomon said once Goe to the Pismire so say I Go the little Bees consider their ways and be ashamed of irregular lives of ill composed manners when you see their little cels or hony-combs so artificially and accuratly framed Consider remember often that your Christian calling calls for requires great circumspection watchfulness great purity and uprightness See you not how careful some Men are when they walk or ride in a fair new fuit to keep it from spotting So must you your heavenly vocation Speak do nothing but that which beseems your calling and you shall not easily offend in word or work What shall I say no more but this let 's either be such indeed as our names import and report to others or else cast away the names