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A35955 Therapeutica sacra shewing briefly the method of healing the diseases of the conscience, concerning regeneration / written first in Latine by David Dickson ; and thereafter translated by him. Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1664 (1664) Wing D1408; ESTC R24294 376,326 551

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sealed with the spirit of promise Ephes. 1. 11. As it is not sufficient to prove that wholsom water given to a feaver-sick person is not a wholsom drink because the cooling refreshment by it endureth but a short while So it is not sufficient to prove that consolation and joy given to a sorrowfull sinner seeking favour through Christ is not solid and true joy because it stayeth but a short while It is sufficient that it hath stayed so long as was needfull for after the word of promise was believed the joy was sent to ease the afflicted souls present grief and to give him earnest that full and lasting joy should be given in due time unto him When the messenger hath done his commission let him return to his master As the sheet let down in the vision from heaven to Peter after it had served for Peters instruction it was taken up to heaven again Act. 10. The Spouse in the Canticle knew by experience that her spiritual joyes would not last long and therefore chargeth the daughters of Ierusalem that they waken not her beloved till he pleased 5. Another objection is this If my joy had been solid saith the afflicted it should have brought forth better fruits then it hath done but joy spiritual as I then called it did degenerat into a carnal security and I was not the more holy by it To which objection the answer may be this the blame of this is not to be laid on spiritual joy but upon the abuse of this mercy by ingratitude for this gracious blink of felt favour negligence in the use of means to entertain this sense by sleepinesse of conscience and other sins and namely the laying too much weight upon this sense and not fixing the heart by so much more upon the word of promise when felt consolation may be withdrawn is a just cause for spiritual joy is not given to any to build upon its continuance but to make the convert hold the confirmed word of promise so much the faster when for the exercise of faith comfortable feelings are withdrawn The spouse in the Canticle after a feast of this kind falleth a sleep and giveth slight entertaining to the Bridegroom when called upon by his word for which she is chastised by his withdrawing of his comfortable presence Cant. 5. 1 2 3. c. But let us put the case that the felt joy of the spirit were not abused yet is it not unusual for God to withdraw consolation and to send trouble and anguish on the soul of his dear child to try his faith and train him on to hold the word of his grace in the hardest condition he can be into as he did exercise Iob and Ieremie the Prophet Ier. 20. and the Psalmist Ps. 77. In which condition to suspect that the consolation and joy of the spirit speaking to the heart by his word is not his gracious operation or is a delusion cannot but exceedingly grieve the Lord and give him cause to chastise this suspicion with desertion 6. But how may I know saith the afflicted that my joy was solid and was indeed the gracious operation of the holy Spirit For answer 1. If this joy was given to him when or after he was lamenting his sins and fearing wrath deserved and flying unto Christ offered in the Gospel he hath reason to reckon that joy to be such as the Word of the Gospel doth promise and approve 2. If during the time of his sweet feeling of peace and joy through Christ he found his faith in God and love to Christ confirmed and strengthned if the Word of the Gospel was in more estimation with him if his heart was inlarged to blesse praise and thank God for manifesting himself in Christ reconciled if the purpose of following after holinesse was renewed in him he hath no reason to suspect his joy and comfort 3. If after the removing of this sweet feeling he is going on in the study of holinesse believing in Christ how heavy in heart soever he may be by affliction and tentation he may be assured his sometime felt joy of the Lords Spirit was solid and his present suspicion thereof to be an evidence of his infirmity and of a tentation from Sathan This was the way how the Psalmist wrestled out of his sad condition Ps. 77. CHAP. XIV Of the converts suspecting that his zeal for God and against the sins of others hath been fleshly severity and imprudent temerity IT cometh to passe that they who love God sincerely and cannot endure the out-breakings of the wicked do sometimes transgresse the bounds of moderat zeal and being overtaken in some miscarriage for which being rebuked by their friends or by them in power censured or civilly chastised do in stead of moderating their zeal in time coming grow more slack and remisse in their zeal suspecting themselves inclined to unreasonable severity and rashnesse and ready to be esteemed haters of mens persons by those among whom they live as in some by-gone experience they have already felt And upon this occasion the tentation of Sathan falleth on tending to extinguish the fervency of true zeal required in all true converts And here there is danger lest true zeal grow cold and the convert become luke-warm both in curbing sin in others under his charge and in pursuing duties in his own person In which sicknesse he may be the better pleased with himself by so much as his friends and others do commend him for his moderation and prudence as they shall call it 2. As to the remedy of this evil there is no doubt but that may befall true zeal which is common to other vertues of which there is none so perfect but some in-lake or excesse may be observed in them And therefore as it is without reason to go back from pursuing duty in the exercise of other vertues because imperfections therein are remarkable from time to time So is it without reason to grow luke-warm in zeal which may render a man loathsome unto Christ Rev. 2. 3. Wherefore let the convert take heed what the Lords Word doth require of him in his calling and labour to discharge his duty towards others so as he may be found both zealous and prudent that in the expressions of his zeal against sin meeknesse and love to the offender may be manifested 2. To this intent let the convert carefully take heed to entertain these three properties of commendable zeal which are 1. The fear of God 2. Humility of heart 3. The love of his neighbour for the fear of God will not suffer the convert to depart from his commandments Humility of heart will make the man modest in his expressions and the love of his neighbour will make him mix meeknesse and compassion toward sinners with his zeal against offences This is the right seasoning of zeal which the Apostle calleth the zeal of God according to knowledge CHAP. XV. Of the converts suspecting his aiming at circumspect
professors of the christian Religion and seeming zealous worshipers crying Lord Lord may deceive themselves and misse heaven but also Preachers of the Gospel yea and Prophets yea and men indued with the gift of doing miracles and casting out of devils in Christs name not a few shall be disclaimed by Christ and condemned by him in the day of judgment If it be asked what can be their mistake and the cause of Christs rejecting of them we answer Such men deceive themselves 1. because both they and beholders also think them holier then they who are inferiour in place and gifts unto them 2. They compare themselves with those they live among and not with the law of God 3. They put not due difference between common gifts and saving graces 4. They consider not that to whom much is given much will be required of them and therefore after tryal they will be found pust up with the estimation of gifts induements imployment and successe which they have had as if these were the undoubted evidences of their regeneration and of Gods special love towards them they will be found men void of repentance and far from humble walking in the sense of their natural habitual and actual sins they will be found void of all fear of wrath which might drive them in the acknowledgment of their blindnesse poverty and misery unto Christ the Redeemer and justifier of sinners and they will be found void of all care of and endeavour after new obedience conceiving that the exercise of their gifts and successe in their imployments are sufficient holinesse and evidence of the holy Ghosts dwelling in them and working by them for otherwayes Christ will never disclaim them who have fled to him in the sense of their sin and haunted him as their refuge in the fear of deserved wrath and studied by faith in him to be furnished to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit which he hath promised to them that abide in him It is one thing to be justified before God another thing to be reputed righteous by men and esteemed so by a mans own self it is one thing to be indued with the knowledge of divine mysteries another thing saveingly to believe them and have them written in their heart it is one thing to teach others the way of salvation whereby the hearers may be saved another thing to apply saving doctrine to themselves and make right use of it it is one thing to cleanse the outer side of the plater and reform the mans outward carriage another thing to be inwardly renewed it is one thing to teach repentance and mortification of lusts another thing by he Spirit of Christ ro mortifie in-bred pride and the love of the world vain glory and other carnal lusts The course which Paul followed is the only safe way though he was a man most laborious in the work of the Lord yet he lived most sensible of his natural corruption and the body of death he did not trust in his holy life but in Jesus Christ Rom. 7. 24 25. he so made use of faith in Christ as he did not neglect the means of mortification of his sinfull nature 1 Cor. 9. 27. I keep under my body and bring it under subjection lest that by any means when I have preached to others I my self should be a cast-away The fifth and last sort of self-deceivers by absolving of themselves without the Lords allowance or approbation are temporizers who for their temporary believing temporary repenting temporary motions of their affections and temporary amendment of their maners do seem to themselves and others also true believers This sort however it be in sundry cases coincident with one or moe of the former four self-absolvers yet because our Lord in the parable of the sower of seed Matth. 13. 21. and Luke 4. 17 doth put a difference between the stony ground and the other sorts of ground we shall give it a room by it self specially because it may have the own proper considerations Temporizers then we call such as upon temporary motives from temporary principles for temporary ends do imbrace the Word of the Lord readily but slightly and do as readily and lightly passe from it upon temporary motives in special when persecution arileth for the Word Mark 4. 16. when they have heard the Word immediatly they receive it with gladness and afterward when affliction or persecution arises for the Words sake immediatly they are offended Lightly they take up truth delivered and lightly do they passe from it again they have no root in themselves or solid believing of the truth for the truths cause but what pleaseth others pleaseth them and what displeaseth others doth displease them in the maters of religion the way of God set down in Scripture when they hear it they can say nothing against it yea they think it good to hear the Gospel and the largenesse of Gods grace and because it sheweth unto them a possibility of their salvation they receive it with a sort of natural gladnesse which sort of believing doth endure for a time to wit so long as the way of others among whom they live and the laws of the country and prosperity and good estimation with others goeth along with the profession of the truth received but when the wind of another doctrine bloweth and doth carry with it power to trouble and persecute them who will not receive it by and by they are offended and renounce the truth controverted because it draweth trouble with the profession of it for such persons suppose that gain ease and applause are very godlinesse It is true sometime the true believer may be surprised with a sudain tentation to renounce the profession of truth in some point for fear of death as Peters example doth shew us but true faith recovereth strength and ariseth after a fall and endureth persecution for that truth as temporary belief doth not but faileth altogether And the temporizers repentance failleth also because it ariseth from natural principles and is for natural motives and ends Such was the repentance of Saul in weeping and justifying David for sparing his life 1 Sam. 27. 21. Such was the repentance of the carnal Israelits Psal. 78. 36. and the humiliation of Ahab and such is their amendment of life all nothing but temporary and which doth not continue as Hosea chap. 6. 4. sheweth O Ephraim what shall I do unto thee O Judah what shall I do unto thee for thy goodnesse is like the morning cloud and like the early dew that passeth soon away Neither is it any wonder that unrenewed men may attain to something like unto faith and repentance and outward amendment of maners if we consider that humane writings find so much credit with men as not to be called in question but believed to be true for experience testifieth that their affections are moved sometime with delight and sometime with indignation and pity not only when they read Histories but also when
greatly the glory of all the attributes of God doth shine in the work of Redemption 2. By this doctrine it appeareth how vain and wicked the devices of superstitious men are who for pacifying of Gods wrath have appointed pennances and pilgrimages and self-scourgings and soul-masses and purgatory and such like other abominations whereof the word of God hath not spoken but forbidden all the inventions of men as unworthy conceits to bring about mens salvation which inventions tend only to derogat from the dignity of the price of Christs ransom and to cry down the fulnesse and perfection of the price payed by our blessed Redeemer Jesus Christ and to set up other Saviours in his room 3. Hence also it is manifest how fit a high Priest is appointed over us who is touched with our infirmities and temptations by whom we may have so solid consolation in all the pangs of our tormented consciences and in whom we have a solid foundation laid down to all that flee to him for setling our faith and hope in the Son of God who hath of set purpose with the Fathers consent suffered so many and great evils that he might redeem us 4. And hereby we may perceive also how well divine Justice is satisfied and with what warrand the consciences of the weak believers may be quieted who so use to exaggerat the grievousnesse and the multitude of their sins that they forget to put a right estimation upon the satisfaction made by Christ for all that come unto God through him The third article THe third article of the covenant of Redemption● past between the Father and the Son concerneth the benefits gifts and graces to be given unto the redeemed all which gifts and graces are summarily comprehended in that one gift of God spoken of Ioh. 4. 10. which gift is Christ who is freely offered unto and given to the elect believer for righteousnesse and eternall life according to what was said Isa. 9. 6. for unto us a child is born a Son is given on whose shoulders the government is laid whose Name is called Iehovab the wonderfull counsellour the strong God the eternall Father and Prince of peace And 2 Pet. 1. 3. who according to his divine power hath given unto us all things which pertain to life and godlinesse through the knowledge of Him who hath called us to vertue and glory 2. The benefits which are appointed for the redeemed are so conveyed and brought unto them that first they are Christs riches which he hath purchased unto the elect and being resolved to die that the purchase might be made fast to his people he hath made his latter Will and Testament once and again and left in legacy to all that believe in him all things which belong to righteousnesse and salvation and these benefits in an acceptable time he effectually applieth and puts them in possession thereof Of which gifts we shall name chi●fly three the first is regeneration or turning of the man toward himself the second is the gift of saving faith the third is perseverance In which three gifts the patrons and magnifiers of the power of mans free-will do what in them lieth to obscure the glory of Gods free grace by glorying that without the speciall grace of God they can convert themselves or not as they please so that when God intends their conversion and useth all means for their conversion they are able to resist all his gracious operation and make void his purpose and endeavour But this covenant of Redemption past between the Father and the Son Mediatour and Redeemer doth decide the question and give them the lie for only they whom God did foreknow did he predestinat to be conform to the image of His Son and whom he did predestinat them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified Rom. 8. 28. Concerning these three gifts IT is agreed between God and Christ that the elect shall be converted invincibly and infallibly and that saving faith shall be bestowed on them and that they shall persevere in the obedience of faith so as they shall not totally and finally fall away from Gods grace It is promised to Christ Psal. 110. 3. that in the day of His power His people shall be willing for albeit the native corruption of their will opposeth it self and resisteth the holy Spirit when he is using the means to convert them yet in an acceptable time the invincible power of Gods free grace toward them so taketh away all actuall resistance that the man unwilling of himself is made most freely and heartily willing to be reconciled to God for God can both preserve the naturall liberty of the will and take from it that crookednesse and frowardnesse that is in it he can infuse and creat in the man a right spirit and new habits of grace and can bring forth these habits unto exercise making the redeemed man not only able to will but also actually to will and to do what is pleasant to him Philip. 2. 13. and Ephes. 2. 8. we are taught that faith is not of our selves it is the gift of God not of works least any man should boast And this gift of saving faith is bestowed only on the elect and therefore it is called the faith of the elect Tit. 1. 1. and only they believe in Jesus Christ that are ordained unto eternall life Acts 13. 48. yea every one cometh to Christ who is given to him of the Father Ioh. 6. 37. and no man cometh to Christ save he whom the Father draweth Ioh. 6. 44. but they that are not redeemed do not come to Christ for righteousnesse and life Ioh. 10. 26. ye believe not saith Christ to some Jews because ye are not of my sheep My sheep hear My voice and I know them and they follow Me. As for perseverance the Father promiseth to the Son that the work of grace shall be firm in all the redeemed ones or in his elect seed Isa. 59. 21. as for Me saith the Lord to Christ this is my covenant with them my spirit that is upon thee and my words which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor out of the mouth of thy seeds seed saith the Lord from henceforth and for ever And Jer. 32. 40. I will make an everlasting covenant with them that I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me And a speciall command is given unto Christ for preserving all unto eternall life who come unto him Ioh. 6. 39. this is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up at the last day which Christ undertakes that he will faithfully perform Ioh. 10. 28. while he saith I give unto them eternall life and
and full salvation for Isa. 53. 5. with his stripes we are healed now our healing is our full salvation from our sin and misery or our deadly sicknesses And Isa. 53. 10. the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand the pleasure of the Lord is partly our sanctification 1 Thes. 4. 3. partly our salvation and glorification Joh. 6. 39. this is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day And to this purpose powerfully doth his intercession serve from which the Apostle concludes that believers shall be perfectly saved Heb. 7. 25. wherefore he is able also to save to the uttermost them that come to God by him seing he ever liveth to make intercession for them The second proof is from Isa. 59. 20. 21. THe second place is from Isa. 59. 20. 21. where first we have the parties agreeing pointed at the Lord Jehovah saith and of the Redeemer He saith that He shall come to Zion as Redeemer Next we have the kind of agreement between the parties God on the one hand and the Redeemer with the redeemed for whom and in whose name he makes the agreement this is my Covenant with them but first with Christ as the words following do shew Thirdly we have the party redeemed Zion and Iacob that turn from transgression which is the mark of true believers in Christ and of the elect for whom this grace is appointed as Rom. 11. 7. Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for but the election have obtained it and the rest were blinded And Rom. 11. 26. all this Israel shall be saved as it is written Fourthly we have the sort of their delivery which shall be not only by price paying but also by powerfull and effectuall working as the originall imports Rom. 11 26 and Isa. 59. 20. Fifthly the benefits bestowed upon the elect are comprehended under the designation of the redeemed they are to be turned from their iniquity by effectuall conversion by granting them faith in Christ repentance and reconciliation Sixthly it is shewed how these graces shall be brought to passe to wit by application thereof by the word and Spirit of Christ from which sanctification salvation and the perpetuation of all graces unto salvation do flow and follow on them My Spirit that is in thee saith the Lord to the Redeemer incarnat and My word which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed c. These articles of the covenant of Redemption make expresly first against universall Redemption of all and every man because Christ as is shewed before makes his bargain for the elect and leaves the rest in blindness and is a Redeemer of none but of these to whom He is a deliverer actually from whom He turneth away iniquity and ungodlinesse which benefits befall none but the elect and the redeemed Next they make against election for faith and foreseen works because when Christ cometh to call-in the Jews He findes nothing commendable in them but impiety and transgression and defection and whatsoever might provoke Him to reject them they are turned from transgression Thirdly they make against a meer possible and contingent conversion for invincible grace is promised here for the word and the Spirit of Christ shall take up a dwelling in them and not depart from them Fourthly they make against the doctrine of the Aposlasie of the saints and uncertainty of their perseverance because here it is promised to Christ that from the heart and mouth of His seed the word and Spirit of Christ shall never depart The third proof is from Joh. 6. 37. c. THe third place is Ioh. 6. from v. 37. to 45. where first is set down the party contracters in the Covenant of redemption for the Elect are given over into the hand of Christ by the Father All that the Father giveth to me cometh to me v. 37. Secondly upon the Fathers giving of the Elect unto Christ followeth in due time the conversion and saving faith of the redeemed All that the Father giveth me cometh to me saith Christ. Thirdly the redeemed are committed unto Christ as to their leading on preservation and perfecting of their salvation This is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day Fourthly it is agreed by what means the faith of the redeemed shall be formed in them which are the revealed sight of Christ the Son of God in the Word the powerfull drawing of the illuminat soul unto Christ which powerfull draught overcometh all opposition and resistence because it is omnipotent and invincible for no man cometh to Christ but he whom the Father draweth v. 44. and that by making them savingly and in a lively maner see the Son and believe on him v. 40. Hence followeth 1. that it is false Doctrine to teach that there is an universal redemption unto life of all and every man because not all but only some are given and made to come to Christ the rest that are not given come not Secondly it followeth that Election is of meer free grace because men come not unto Christ that they may be given but they are given unto Christ that they may be brought and come unto him Thirdly by this agreement the powerfull conversion of the redeemed and their powerfull preservation unto eternal life is as certain as the power and constancy and obedience of Christ unto the Father is firm and certain This is the will of him that sent me that of what he hath given me I should lose nothing but raise it up at the last day ver 39. The fourth proof is Joh. 10. 14. THe fourth place is Ioh. 10. from v. 14. to v. 30. where we see that the Lord Jesus the true Pastor of Israel before he was incarnat Ps. 23. continueth in that same office now being incarnat and gives his people to understand this when he saith I am the good sheepherd Secondly the care and custody of all the redeemed both converted and unconverted was put upon Christ v. 14. 16. I know my sheep and am known of mine and other sheep I have which are not of this fold them also I must bring in and they shall hear my voice Thirdly the price of their redemption is clearly agreed upon v. 15. As the Father knows me even so know I the Father and I lay down my life for my sheep Fourthly the Father accepts the price and is satisfied and well pleased with it v. 17. 18. Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life that I may take it up again c. Fifthly all the redeemed are infallibly converted but they that are not redeemed are not converted v. 27 My sheep hear my voice and I know them and they follow me
a most wise course so to execute the decree of election and Redemption as he shall be sure to bring in his own to himself and not open up his counsell in particular to the discouraging of any as is told by the father Isa. 52. 13. My servant shall deal prudently and prosper The chief mean appointed is the preaching of the Gospel to all nations commanding all men where the Gospel is by Gods providence preached to repent and believe in the Name of Jesus Christ and to love one another as he hath commanded them Acts 17. 30. and 1 Ioh. 3. 23. and they who refuse to obey are without excuse Another mean is the bringing of so many as professe their acceptation of the offer of grace by Christ Jesus them and their children into the bond of an expresse solemn covenant that they shall submit themselves to the doctrine and government of Christ and teach their children so to do as Abraham the father of believers did Gen. 18. 19. Matth. 28. 19. 20. make disciples of all nations or make all nations disciples to Me. A third mean is the sealing of the covenant by the Sacrament of baptism Matth. 28. 19. 20. make all nations disciples to Me baptizing them in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost A fourth mean is the gathering them into all lawfull and possible communion with others his disciples that by their Church-fellowship one with another they may be edified under their officers appointed in Christs Testament to feed govern and lead them on in the obedience of all the commands which Christ hath commanded his people in his Testament by which means he goeth about his work and doth call effectually sanctifie and save his own redeemed ones leaving all others without excuse Concerning all these and other means and maner also of executing his decree it is agreed upon between the Father and His Son Christ as His holy Spirit hath revealed it to us in Scripture All which may be taken up in two heads the one is the agreement about the doctrine and directions given to His Church the other is about actions operations and all effects to be brought about for making his word good Concerning his doctrine Christ saith Ioh. 12. 49. 50. I have not spoken of my self but the Father who hath sent me he gave me a commandment what I should say and what I should speak and I know that his commandment is life everlasting whatsoever I speak therefore eve●● as the Father said unto me so I speak Concerning actions and operations and the executiou of the decrees it is agreed also between the Father and the Son Ioh. 8. 16. If I judge my judgement is true for I am not alone but I and the Father that sent me and vers 29. He that sent me is with me the Father hath not left me alone for I do alwayes these things that please him and Joh. 6. 38. I came down from heaven not to do my own will without the consent of the Father but the will of him that sent me In a word the consent and agreement of the Father and the Son Jesus Christ our Lord is such that the Son ●oth nothing by his Spirit but that which the Father ●oth work by the same Spirit from the beginning of the world Ioh. 5. 17. My Father worketh hitherto and I work and Col. 1. 16. for by Christ were all things created that ●re in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible ●hether they be throns or dominions or principalities or 〈◊〉 〈…〉 created by him and for him He is alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending the first efficient and the last end of all things Rev. 1. 8. because for the glory of Christ the creation the covenant of works and the covenant of grace were made and had and shall have their full execution all for the glory of God in Christ by whom all things were made and do subsist CHAP. V. Of the Covenant of works WE have spoken of the first divine covenant wherein God and God incarnat are the parties it followeth to speak of the next divine covenant to wit the covenant of works between God and man Adam and his posterity made in mans integrity In which covenant God is only the one party of the covenant and man created with all naturall perfections is the other party In this covenant mans continuing in a happy life is promised upon condition of perfect personall obedience to be done by him out of his own naturall strength bestowed upon him as the Apostle teacheth us Gal. 3. 12. the Law is not of faith but the man who shall do these things shall live by them And unto this law or covenant of works is added a threatning of death in case man should transgresse the sense whereof is ●old by the Apostle Gal. 3. 10. cursed is every one who doth not abide in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them The difference between the law and the Covenant of works THe word Law is sometime taken for the mater or substance of the law of nature written in the hearts of our first Parents by creation the work of which law is to be found in the hearts of their posterity unto this day And in this sense the word Law is taken by the Apostle Rom. 2. 15. the Gentiles saith he shew the wrok of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnesse c. Sometime the word is taken for the formall covenant of works as Gal. 3. 10. as many as are of the works of the Law that is under the covenant of works are under the curse for it is written cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the law to do them 2. The law as it is taken for the covenant of works differeth from the law of nature written by creation in the hearts of our first Parents first because the law of nature written in the heart of man in order both of nature and time went before the covenant made for keeping that law because the covenant for keeping that law was not made till after mans creation and after his bringing into the garden to dresse it and to keep it Gen. 2. 16. 17. Secondly God by vertue of the law written in man● heart did not obliedge Himself to perpetuat mans happy life for albeit man had keeped that law most acuratly God was free to dispose of Him as he saw fit before he made the covenant with him But so soon as he made the covenant he oblieged himself to preserve him in a happy life so long as he should go on in obedience to his law and commands according to the tennor of the covenant do this and live Thirdly death was the naturall wages and merit of sin albeit there had no covenant been made at all for sin against God deserveth of its own nature
life of necessity must acknowledge himself a man in himself unrighteous and a lost man and that he cometh to Christ to be justified and sanctified and saved by him and so to persevere in this course unto life eternall Of the tearms whereupon this Covenant is offered and pressed in Scripture THe terms of the covenant are diversly propounded in Scripture Exod. 19. 5. the Lord propounds it thus if ye will obey my voice indeed and keep my covenant then ye shall be a peculiar people unto me c. In these words the condition required of those that are already entered in covenant is most eminent for this people was in covenant from the time of Abrahams covenanting and was admitted to the Sacraments before their coming forth of Egypt and therefore the conditions previous to their entering in covenant and required for closing the bargain are not so much insisted on at this time This condition the people do accept and give answer to God by Moses vers 8. all that the Lord hath spoken we will do Another form and expression is used Acts 16. 31. Paul and Silas say to the Jailour now anxious how to be saved believe in the Lord and thou shalt be saved thou and all thy house The Jailour accepts of the condition and he is baptized and all his house vers 33. The condition of his person taking with guiltinesse and granting his lost condition is spoken of vers 37. the condition of the covenant therefore is propounded in the next room and is accepted where-upon baptism is administered unto him Psal. 27. 8. In other words the same condition is propounded the Lord craveth faith seeking communion on with God for the condition seek ye my face the Psalmist accepteth the condition and answereth Thy Face O Lord will I seek Isa. 45. 22. Christ requires faith in these he calleth and upon that condition promiseth salvation Look unto 〈◊〉 all ye ends of the earth and be ye saved the answer of the believer is set down vers 24. Surely shall one say in the Lord have I righteousnesse and strength Likewise the way of making this covenant is set forth by Christ offering himself a Saviour on the one part and the believers receiving Christ on the other part Ioh. 1. 11 12. as many as received him to them he gave power to become the sons of God even to them that believe on his Name And 2 Cor. 5. 19 20. upon this only condition of consenting to reconciliation offered he summeth up most shortly and clearly the covenant-making We are ambassadours for Christ as if God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be reconciled to God There remaineth no more for making of the covenant but that the hearer do honestly answer thus the offer and condition pleaseth me well I consent to be reconciled Now he who consenteth to be reconciled 1. Granteth his naturall enimity 2. Accepteth Christ the Mediatour Redeemer Reconciler offered to him by God whose fulnesse is in Christ And 3. obliedgeth himself to entertain this friendship all his life after Last of all the making of the covenant is sometime pressed to be received and followed under the form of a precept 1. Ioh. 3. 23. this is his command that ye believe in the Name of His Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he hath commanded us In which words the condition or estate of the person who is called to believe and enter in covenant is presupposed for it is imported that he must acknowledge nor only that he is a miserable sinner and unable to relieve himself but also that he is naturally averse from the way of seeking righteousnesse by faith in Christ and hath need that the soveraign power of God draw him to Christ. Secondly the condition of the making of covenant is propounded which is to believe in Jesu Christ. In the third room the con●ition require● of him that is entered in covenant by believing 〈◊〉 Christ is that we love one another as he hath commanded us This offered and commanded condition of the covenant of grace some by the grace of God do accept and engage to perform and do perform sincerely albeit weakly other some trusting in their own strength engage unto the obedience of faith and with their mouth professe they are sinners and do believe in Christ and that they will submit themselves to his Government drawing near to him with their lips when their hearts are far from him and such mens faith changeth not their old disposition and way of living but it suffereth them to serve their belly or mammon or vain glory and such other idols yet because the Church are not judges of the secrets of the heart they must receive into Church-fellowship all who confesse themselves to be sinners and professe they do accept the offer of Christs grace and promise subjection to his ordinances Obj. But how can the Church receive men in Church-fellowship who are destitute of lively faith Ans. The Church is not judge of the heart or of the secrets thereof because it cannot see faith in it self but must look to the profession of faith and to the fruits thereof in the own order and time the Church is witnesse to their engagement but not judges of their sincerity 2. The covenant of grace doth not exclude the most vile sinners if they acknowledge their sinfulnesse and do solemnly consent unto the condition of the covenant because according to this covenant nothing is bestowed on the covenanter of merit but of grace only which the Church knoweth God can give and sometimes doth give unto counterfit confederats making them sincere in his own time and that by the means of the ordinances made use of in the visible Church 3. It is one thing to be a confederat Christian in the letter externally in the sight of men another thing to be a covenanter in the spirit inwardly in respect of the heart and inward man Rom. 2. 28. and albeit the externall covenant doth not bring on righteousnesse and life except a man be also a covenanter inwardly in his heart in the sense of sin and imperfection making daily u●e of Christ yet it is certain that outward covenanting is an ordinary and blessed mean unto many to beget and foster faith and help forth the fruits thereof 4. It may and should suffice us that God in the first framing of a nationall Church did admit and commanded Moses to admit all the Israelites in covenant of whom very few were converted or reconciled to God in their spirit and this was not hid from Moses or from the truly godly in the camp of Israel as is plainly shewen to us Deut. 28. 29. where God bears witnesse against the people that their heart was not according to their profession and engagement and Moses speaketh out this truth in all the peoples audience while he is renewing the covenant with them notwithstanding they were unregenerat Deut. 29. Obj. But some will insist
to light by his long continued preaching of his word the obstinat enimity of the reprobat multitude against him opened up his decree against all that sort in the sad message committed to Isaiah Chap. 6. 9 10. Go and tell this people hear ye indeed and understand not see ye indeed but perceive not make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy and shut their eyes least they see with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand with their heart and convert and be healed vers 13. yet there shall be a tenth part the holy seed to wit the elect shall be the substance thereof And of this prophesie use is made when the multitude of misbelievers was like to obscure the glory of Christ Iob. 12. 37 38. to 42. they heard the offer of grace preached by Christ himself and saw his manifold wonders yet they believed not neither could they believe because God had rejected them as Iohn doth prove from the prophesie of Isaiah Secondly Is it not fair dealing when the Lord professeth that his word shall be preached and his wonders manifested for the elects cause albeit they were but as a tenth part to a cursed and reprobat multitude who should hear and see without his blessing and in his dispensation doth in effect as he hath professed As it is a reasonable answer of a husband man and Gardener to his child asking him why he beats the whole sheaf and watereth all the Garden seing the sheaf is most part straw and chaff and the garden full of weeds to say to his child that he beats the sh●af that he may sever the corn from the straw and chaff and that he watereth the ground where herbs and weeds do grow together that he may make both to come up above ground and after that may pull out the weeds and foster the herbs for the masters use So it is a reasonable answer to such as cavil against the preaching of the Gospel to a mixed multitude of elect and reprobat to say that the Gospel is preached to both for the conversion of the elect and bringing to light the hatred of the reprobat against God and the offer of his grace Thirdly we grant the Lord knoweth mens wickednesse and inability to obey his commands and their naturall enimity against him but he knoweth also that all men by nature are proud and puffed up with the conceit of their own wisdom and righteousnesse and ability so as they will not acknowledge their sinfulnesse nor be sensible of their misery and danger of perdition but do entertain a high esteem and opinion of themselves and in speciall this that they love God above all things and that they can do any thing commanded at least in such a measure as may reasonably satisfie God as is to be seen in the example of the Israelits undertaking Exod. 19. therefore God in His wisdom before he convert any man doth pull down this false conceit by putting his ability to proof by the preaching of the law to the intent that as the Lord knoweth what is in man so man may know it also both in his own and other mens experience and this is brought to light yet more clearly by the preaching of the Gospel wherein albeit God make the precious offer of life and salvation to every hearer of the Gospel if he will acknowledge his sin and betake himself to Christ yet no man of himself will either believe or receive the offer but will go on in his own counsell and wayes till God by his grace convert him This sicknesse is common both to the elect and the reprobat but when the naturall perversnesse of both is manifested God cometh and maketh the difference of the one from the other out of his meer grace by drawing the elect powerfully to Christ and letting the rest go on to their own perdition in his righteous judgment And our Lord doth so expound the mater Ioh. 8. 47. He that is of God heareth Gods words ye therefore hear them not because ye are not of God Fourthly the Lord professeth plainly that in the dispensation of his word and works of providence he intendeth the tryall of men and the discovery of their hearts to themselves and to others and what fairer dealing can there be then this for Exod. 16. 4. He tells them that he will rain down Manna upon them to prove them whither they will walk in his law or not and Exod. 20. 20. He tells them he will give them his law and preaching of his word to prove them that his fear might be before them and Deut. 8. 2. that the dispensation of his providence toward them all the fourty years in the wildernesse was to humble them and to prove them to know what was in their heart whether they would keep his commands or not and Deut. 13. 1 2 3. that he would suffer false prophets to arise among them to prove them and to try whether they would love the Lord their God with all their heart And to this same intent we are advertised that Christ should be not only a tryed stone but also a stone for tryall set for the ruine of some and raising up of other some Isa. 28. 16 17. and 8. 14. compared with Luke 2. 34 35. for by this maner of dispensation the Lord maketh manifest that both the elect and reprobat are concluded under sin and unbelief of themselves and that no man can come to Christ except the Father draw him that he may have mercy on whom he will have mercy And this maner of probation of men by a common offer of grace unto all is a part of that prudence whereby Christ by his conditionall promises and exhortations and the preaching of the Gospel to all hea●ers maketh all these that are outwardly called to be without excuse and fisheth forth the elect out of the sea of sin and misery and out of the society of those that perish of which prudence Isaiah speaketh chap. 52. 13. Behold my servant shall deal prudently and prosper and be extolled and be very high Wherefore this wisdom of God in converting the elect without giving cause of stumbling unto any of the rest is rather to be admired and praised then to be disputed against as we are taught Rom. 11. 33 34 35 36. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God how unsearchable are his judgments and his wayes past finding out Obj. But for all this the carnall wisdom of proud men is such as neither is it subject to God nor indeed can be but standeth in hostile enimity against him and will not be quiet but when it heareth what is said Rom. 9. 18. that God will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardeneth will say as it is vers 19. why doth God yet find fault for who hath resisted his will this doctrine say they doth hinder mens repentance
comparing the words of Ieremiah and the commentary thereupon by the Apostle For Ieremiah saith that they did transgress the Covenant albeit God did shew himself a husband unto these un-believing Fathers that is they changed the covenant of Grace in a covenant of Works of their own framing and transgressed that Covenant also And the Apostle saith they did not continue in that covenant because they changed it to themselves in a covenant of Works according to which Covenant God did deal with them for in stead of being a husband to them he exacted of them the penalty of the broken covenant of Works and Lorded it over them and did not regard them Heb. 8. 6. For they sought after the righteousness of works and not to have righteousness by faith and therefore did he despise them and dealt with them after the tenor of the covenant of Works And it is observable that the words of Ieremiah do comprehend the Apostles meaning for the words may bear both that God was a husband unto them to wit in making a covenant of Grace with them and that he dealt with them as a Lord over them by exacting of them the penalty of the broken covenant of Works and of the rejected covenant of Grace As ●o the covenant of Grace the Apostle speaketh of it in express termes first by Gods promising that he would make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and Iudah Secondly by his setting better promises before them then these were which were made to the Fathers in the wilderness Thirdly by his giving no other cause of bestowing so great blessings on them but his own good-will and pleasure Fourthly by his requiring no other condition of them but saith that they who feel in themselves the want and need of the promised blessings and are convinced of their own unworthiness might give credit unto God that maketh the promise and so embrace the promises and apply them to their own use As to the external dispensation of the Covenant it is certain first that it was common to all that were externally called to all the members of the visible Church for the covenant made in the wilderness with the elect Fathers and reprobat with the believers and un-believers with those that rejected the covenant of Grace and the offer of Righteousness by faith and with those who looked through the vail afar off to Christ coming and were saved was one and the same 2. It is certain that the external form of the covenant of Grace was more obscure and vailed over by the types and figures of the levitical ceremonies before Christ came but after his coming it was propounded in clearer and better promises 3. A day is set to wit the fulness of time when these shadows and typical figures should be abolished and the grace of God should be set before his people to be looked upon with open face 4. And yet the grace of God was not so hid and obscurely propounded to the Church before Christs coming as it could not be taken up by the children of God for in the midst of the shadows and dark typs the star-light of gracious promises did shine and the doctrine of the new Covenant was in substance holden forth by the Prophets and one instance thereof doth appear in this place of Ieremiah As to the internal covenant of Grace first these things which are promised in that Covenant do declare in what state God doth find men whom he doth convert and draw into covenant with himself for when the Lord taketh in hand that he will write his law in their heart that he will teach them himself to know him by the teaching of his Word and Spirit and that he will forgive their sins he pre-supposeth that lawless rebellion did reign in them with blindness of mind and hardness of heart and that the Elect by nature are without law without God without faith before he reform them according to the Articles or tenor of the covenant of Redemption 2. Albeit by nature the law be written in mens hearts as to the knowledge of sundry moral duties and so far as is sufficient to make them inexcusable for their contraveening these sparks of light Rom. 1. ●0 and 2 14. 15. Yet the writing of the law here promised is spiritual and super-natural inlightning their minds by the light of Gods Spirit and renewing their heart and in effect the thing promised is actual conversion of them 3. And seing conversion is here promised by Christ the Testator absolutely he hath taken in hand absolutely to effectuat it for it is not said I will put my law in their heart if they please to suffer me but determinatly I will put my law I will write my law in their heart and inward parts that is I will make them willing who were averse and obedient to my law who were rebellious 4. Christ the Testator doth in all this not satisfie himself by promising the illumination of the mind and the inclining of the heart for a time but promiseth also to make a solid and permanent work of it by making them persevere which is imported in the words I will put and I will write it for to write it is as much as to fix and ingrave it that it may remain 5. The chief head of the Covenant and which in substance doth contain all blessings is set down in these words I will be their God and they shall be my people for by this promise right is granted unto the true heartconvert and confederat first unto God himself then unto all his benefits whereof he hath need in order to righteousness and eternal life for they whose God the Lord is they do live and shall live for ever as Christ saith God is not the God of the dead but of the living Matth. 22. 32. And all particular promises what are they else but explications of this great and first promise and applications thereof to his childrens cases in particular Gifts of the Spirit are promised here and induements whereof disciples have need whereof pilgrims going home to that heavenly city have need yea the Spirit himself is promised to them who is to remain with them to the end of their life as a directer and leader They shall all know me saith the Lord that is as Christ doth interpret it They shall be all taught of God Joh. 6. 45. 7. The Lord sheweth here that he will deal with men in their regeneration and reconciliation as with reasonable creatures by preserving and not destroying them in their simple naturals by maintaining and not over-turning the liberty of their free-will I will make a Covenant saith he with the house of Judah Now a Covenant is a free and voluntar Contract 8. He sheweth that he is Lord and Over-ruler of mans will who can turn it about as he pleaseth and that he is not hindred nor impeded to execute and bring to passe whatsoever he hath purposed to do by the
the fathers Secondly the Apostle observeth the wonderfull mercy of God that while he is finding fault with the incredulity of the fathers who lived under this old covenant he will avenge this their incredulity ignorance foolishness and ingratitude by telling them that he will make a new covenant and give them that were then living a taste of it for recovering them finding fault with them he saith the dayes come that I will make a new covenant Thirdly this covenant of grace m●de with the Church is procured by Christ to this end that the covenant of Redemption might be brought unto a reall accomplishment by the covenant of Grace This observation is grounded upon this that Christ is called the Mediatour of this better covenant Heb. 8. 6. For he will draw up a clear covenant of grace with his people that the blessings purchased unto them according to the covenant of Redemption may be applyed unto them by this covenant of grace and reconciliation Fourthly the preaching of the promise of this new covenant is a most fit mean to draw on and close this covenant of grace between God and his people who are the called according to his purpose This observation is gathered from Ieremiahs preaching and Pauls preaching of this unto the hearers of the Gospel to this very intent and purpose Fifthly in the promising and preaching of this covenant of grace God will have all mens opinions thoughts and conceptions about this mystery limited unto and depending upon his mouth alone revealing the same in his Word This observation is gathered from the Lords invitation of all men to take heed what he is to say and what he is to let forth in this mater Behold the dayes come saith the Lord wherein I will do such and such things which now I fore-tell I will do Sixthly both the making and way of making a covenant with man dependeth absolutely on God either to make a covenant or not to make what covenant he pleaseth to make upon what conditions he pleaseth and with what persons he pleaseth to make his covenant No man ever preveened God desiring him to make a covenant but God did preveen all men he preveened Adam once before his fall and again by preaching the Gospel in his audience after the fall he preveened the fathers in the wilderness he preveened his posterity that have lived or shall live in the latter dayes promising to make a covenant with those who were not come into the world but were to come long after the promise Seventhly the Lord will have all men to understand that the end of his covenanting with men both in that old dark form and in the new clear form is his own glory For he hath made all things for himself even the wicked for the day of evil This observation is gathered partly from this that the Lord bringeth forth his soveraignty for a reason of his rejecting of the misbelieving fathers in the wildernesse I despised them I regarded them not I Lorded it over them as the originall may bear And partly from this that he bringeth forth his own will and pleasure for a reason of his shewing grace to their posterity I will forgive their sins c. 8. He sheweth also that in his works he doth not depend upon man but that all his works are known unto him from the beginning and that it is determined by himself what and how and by what means he will do every thing This may appear from this that he doth fore-tell what he is to do about the saving of his elect Jews and Gentiles being no lesse certain to do what he promised about the posterity to come then he was certain of what was past already about their incredulous fathers 9. The Lord will have us to know that laying aside the consideration of his decrees it is simply in the power of God to punish sin in whom he will and to pardon sin through a Mediatour to whom he will that is to have mercy on whom he will have mercy and to pardon whom he will pardon This is collected from this that the fathers do sin in the wildernesse and justly perish and the posterity do sin and are graciously pardoned 10. In all this proceeding no violence is used upon the will of men whether of them that perish or of them that are saved The saved do walk freely and willingly in the way of salvation as their hearty choise and these that perish walk willingly in the way of perdition God proceeds with both by a volun●ary covenant as this place doth shew 11. In them that perish the meritorious and culpable cause of their perdition is in themselves but in them that are saved no cause is found at all but the cause is found in Gods grace alanerly This is collected from this that the Lord giveth the reason of the perdition of the misbelieving fathers from their sins and transgression of covenant they transgressed my covenant and I despised them and of the salvation of their posterity no other cause but this their sins I will not remember any more 12. The Lords justice is cleared in the perdition of them that perish because he gave precepts and promises and other morall motives to hinder them from sinning and to move them to keep his wayes albeit he did not effectually impede their running on to sin according to their inclination and pronenesse to follow their own way This is collected from this that the Lord saith he made a covenant with their fathers and they did break it 13. It pleaseth God not only to give his precepts unto men concerning their duty but also to condescend so far unto them as to open up in a part his decrees and deep designs about mens salvation that they being admitted somewhat near to the treasures of His wisdom goodnesse justice and mercy might be so much the more wise and the more stirred up to discharge their duty and make use of his dispensation This we collect from his revealing of the decree of election of the posterity of Israel and drawing them effectually into a covenant of grace with himself 14. The Lord doth reveal to the world the doctrine of election unto life only in the general and doth not descend to the nomination of them in particular This is collected from this that he doth promise to convert and draw into a new covenant of grace the posterity of Israel and Iudah without nameing particularly these that were designed for that salvation 15. Albeit the Lord keepeth up the names of the elect except of some few before their conversion yet he giveth forth marks and evidences whereby after their conversion they may be known both to themselves and others This we collect from this that He sets down infallible marks of the elect who are to be Gods covenanted people or worshipers of God that they do know God and have his law written in their hearts and inward parts 16. As for the reprobation of
conclusions drawn there-from and by holy reasoning tye themselves to believe and obey the Word of God Rom. 6. 11. Likewayes saith he by reasoning reckon ye your selves to be deal unto sin but alive unto God through Iesus Christ our Lord. And giveth an example of this reasoning 2 Cor. 5. 14. 15. The love of God constraineth us because we thus judge c. 11. Because the Lord divers wayes according to his own wisdom exerciseth men that sometime by his long-suffering patience he leads them unto repentance sometime also by his word and rods he doth drive them thereunto therefore let the use of all exercises all temptations and afflictions and the use of all benefits and divine dispensations of providence be carefully made use of that men may so look upon Gods bounty and long-suffering on the one hand and upon their own sins and ill deservings on the other hand as they may be led and constrained in love to seek after so gracious a God and to flee for refuge unto Christ mourning for their provoking of justice so oft against themselves and in whatsoever condition of prosperity or adversity to submit themselves to God however he shall be pleased to dispose of them 12. The doctrine of reprobation must not be determinatly applyed to any particular person how wicked soever he shall for the present appear neither must the suspicion which any man may have of his own reprobation be ●ostered because particular reprobation of this or that person is among the secrets of the Lord not to be medled with whereof a man may not give out sentence before the Lord hath revealed his own decree But on the contrair all the hearers must be warned and pressed to be wary to entertain any hostile thought of God or to foster suspicions of him as implacable but rather think of him as their faithfull Creator just indeed yet mercifull long-suffering and bountifull both to the kind and the un-kind as they shall find if they will seek him for Sathan will press this temptation hard enough and foster the suspicion which he hath suggested against God in the minds of them whom God hath afflicted albeit he get no assistance by any imprudent and un-just application of the Lords Word unto this or that particular person to conclude their reprobation 13. The scope of all doctrine must be this that sinners may be humbled in the sense of their unrighteousnesse indigence infirmity and unworthinesse and being humbled may be led unto Christ believe in him and be more and more glued unto him and grow in the love of him and rest their souls upon him as God one with the Father and holy Spirit worshiping him in spirit and truth endeavouring according to their vocation to advance his Kingdom in themselves and others And to this end let neither on the one hand his incarnation nor humiliation in the dayes of his flesh wherein he was in paying the promised price of our Redemption derogat any thing to the estimation of his person who is one God with the Father and holy Spirit God over all blessed for ever Nor on the other hand his Majesty make sinners stand off or be afraid to make their adresse to him but by the contrair that the personall union of the divine and humane nature in him and his cloathing himself with the offices of Prophet Priest and King may allure all sinners who hear of him to come to him as Media-tour who will not deal with them who come unto him as a judge against them but as an advocat Surety and intercessor for them and who will save to the uttermost every one that come unto God through him Heb. 7. 25. 14. For tryall of a mans regeneration and coming rightly to Christ and growing in grace the exercise of these three duties are necessarily required to wit 1. The exercise of repentance or the entertaining in himself of the sense of his naturall sinfulnesse and infirmity to do good and of the power of inherent corruptions whereby he may be made more and more to renounce all confidence in himself and walk humbly before God 2. The exercise of faith or the daily renewed imploying of Christ for grace and actuall help in all things as his case requireth 3. The exercise of love or the endeavour of new obedience flowing from love to God and his neighbour through Christ. CHAP. IX Of the more speciall application of divine covenants for removing the impediments of regeneration VVE have spoken of the prudent application of divine covenants in generall it followeth that we speak of the curing of the sicknesses of the conscience concerning regeneration more specially Some of these sicknesses do tend to hinder regeneration that it be not wrought at all whereof we shall speak God willing in the rest of this first book Other sicknesses do tend to obscure the work of regeneration begun and to foster questions in the regenerat man and make him doubt whether he be regenerat or not or whether he be in the state of grace or not and of these we shall speak somewhat in the second book And last of all some cases and sicknesses of the conscience do tend toward the deceiving of the regenerat man about his present condition wherein he is without calling his state in question at the first and of these we shall speak in the third book 2. As for the first sort these cases which impede and altogether marr regeneration cannot easily be numbered because of the multitude of deceits whereby the unregenerat are deluded but it shall suffice for our purpose to name some of them only for examples cause in handling whereof the way of curing other like cases may be observed In handling of these cases it is not to be expected we should follow any exact method or accurat distinction of one case from another partly because many faults may be variously interwoven one with another partly because in all these cases the same faults are found after divers wayes to put forth their poyson We therefore that we may follow the easiest course shal divide all unregenerat men impeding their own regeneration in three ranks The first rank shall be of those who eshew so far as they can all examination of their own conscience least it should pronounce sentence of their state and disquiet them The second rank shall be of those who do judge themselves indeed according to the law of God but after examination do despair of any remedy The third rank shall be of those who make a slight examination of themselves and upon some slight pretence give our sentence of absolution of themselves which God will not allow 3. As to the first rank to wit of those that eshew all examination of their own conscience we shall name only seven sicknesses or impediments hindering their self-examination and passing sentence on themselves The first is gross ignorance of their naturall sin and misery and of deliverance to be had through Christ
sort of men the Lord doth speak Deut. 29. 18 19. shewing that he makes his covenant with his people lest there should be among you saith he a root that beareth gall and wormwood And it come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my own heart to add drunkenness to thirst It is possible few shall be found so impudent as that they dar in expresse termes professe this their mis-belief of Gods justice yet they are not a few who foster this error in their heart who having as it were made a Covenant with death and hell are far from fearing to perish in their sins In this sort are all they to be ranked who conceive that all the threatnings in the Scripture are given forth to the intent that men being bridled by terrors might compose themselves to a more humane and social life among others who lest they should seem Atheists in word do cry up Gods mercy bounty and love to man so as they make small reckoning of the Lords truth and justice even as if the justice of God in punishing rebels could not consist with his mercy to the penitent or as if the end of creating man could not be obtained if obstinat sinners be destroyed 2. The main cause of such error is an obstinat purpose to walk after the counsel and imagination of their own heart and because they cannot quiet their conscience in following their own wayes except in promising to themselves impunity in their sinning they presume confidently to go on in their own wayes against all threatenings and so do blow their consciences blind Such profane presumption although it deserveth to be beaten with a rod rather then to be reasoned with yet let the Pastor deal with the presumer as he ought to do with other desperat like sinners and in the first place let him propose for remedy of this evil what the Lord doth speak against such a person Deut. 29. 20. The Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lye upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven And as he findeth this work upon him So let him deal with him 2. Some are near of kindred to such persons who do not reject all threatenings yet do think in their heart that none are in danger except grosse flagitious and notorious sinners but as to themselves they conceive because they are not the worst of men they are without the reach of divine justice especially if their conversation be according to humane laws so regulated as they have the reputation of honest neighbours With such men Christ dealeth Luk. 13. 1 2 5. when word came concerning the Galileans whose blood Pila● mixed with their sacrifices Christ saith to them Suppose ye that these Galileans were sinners above all Galileans because they suffered these things I tell you nay but except ye repent you shall all likewise perish This is the remedy prescribed by Christ to such men 3. Some there are who hope to be absolved before God and do absolve themselves in their own conscience by their good works and obedience done to the law Of this sort was Paul before his conversion who till the time that the spiritual light of the law brake in upon his mind and killed the conceit of his own inherent righteousnesse was no mean man in his own eyes Rom. 7. 9. Such was the rich young man in the Gospel who said to Christ that he had keeped all the commands from his youth up till Christ did prove him a covetous Idolater who put a higher price on his riches then upon Christ and the kingdom of heaven Such were the Pharisees who by their obedience to the law such as it was doubted nothing to absolve themselves and that God should absolve them also But that the met-yaird should be no longer then their cloath or the law of further extent then their imagined possible practice they admitted no metonymie or figurative speech in the law whereby under one branch of a duty commanded all duties of that kind are comprehended and all faults contrary to the duty are forbidden As for example they counted not the sixth command to be violat except the man did take away his neighbours life nor the seventh command broken except by grosse adultery and violation of the marriage-bed nor the eighth command transgressed except another mans goods were openly or privately taken away whose mistake Christ doth correct Matth. chap. 5. and 6. 2. Such men as those are far from repentance far from humbling themselves before God and seeking remission of sin through Christ for they are ignorant of the righteousnesse of the Gospel by faith in Jesus Christ and of the way of coming to ability for doing any acceptable work by faith in Christ and therefore they go about to establish their own righteousnesse Rom. 10. 3. and 9. 31. 32. The false ground which they do lay for their own absolution is this they think to be justified by their works against which ground the Apostle hath pronounced condemnatory sentence Rom. 3. 20. By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in Gods sight for by the law is the knowledge of sin 3. With this sort we may joyn these who not only come short of the obedience due to the law but also are in conscience convicted of many transgressions of the Lords law yet they conceive that God will not exact of them or of any man who is about to obey his law more then the man can in the common infirmity of flesh overtake and do perswade themselves that God will be satisfied with all them in whom is a willingnesse to obey the law their false ground which they lay is this that God will accept a mans will for the deed And to this purpose they do abuse the Scriptures Isa. 1. 19 If you be willing and obedient you shall eat the good things of the land And 2 Cor. 8. 12. If there be first a willing mind it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that he hath not 4. But here is their error whereupon they purchase from their conscience mis-informed an unwarrantable absolution first they lay down for a ground that they must be justified by works 2. Because they know they do come and shall come short in obedience they turn the condition of the covenant of works into other terms then God hath appointed and make the will of a man to obey the law so far as he is able to be the condition of the covenant which God disclaimeth 3. They deceive themselves in this that what is spoken to converted believers in Jesus Christ already justified by faith aiming at new obedience they do apply to themselves lying under the curse
to your selves lest at any time your hearts be over-charged with surfeting and drunkenness and cares of this life No wonder then that such men profit not by the Word of God but remain fruitlesse because they are by our Lord compared to the ground that receiveth the seed among thorns Mat. 13. 22. He heareth the word but the cares of this world and the deceitfulness of riches choaks the word and he remaineth unfruitfull 6. Some there are who having received a sufficient measure of gifts whereby they may promove the kingdom of Christ and be profitable to the society they live in by making use of their gifts do pack up all their duties in a sequestration of themselves from all businesse conceiving this way to be fittest both for God's service and their own salvation Whereupon they betake themselves to a private life in some obscure corner choosing rather to live as Monks and Eremits then to appear in publick and make use of their gifts with the hazard of toyling themselves and tossing of their estimation among beholders of them And this their resolution is backed with a pretended purpose to spend their time in reading and prayers without provoking any man to hatred or emulation against them thus they conceive they shall provide best for their own ease and safety and if withall they apprehend that they are not fitted with gifts which may be profitable to others and do think what they have bestowed upon them by God to be scarce sufficient for the carrying of themselves on in the course that tendeth to happinesse then they conceive they are well excused if they let all publick works alone without putting forth their finger to help what they see amisse We do not deny but sundry godly persons in the heat of persecution have been forced to lu●k in a wildernesse among wild beasts during the time of the danger of whose fellowship the world was not worthy neither do we deny that age and infirmity of body may make men unfit for all publick imployment But the fault we tax is of such men as being able in Church or State to do service to God and the society they live in do for the love of their own ease hide their talent and not make use thereof for the benefit of others for if a narrow search be made of such mens resolution the fear of outward trouble in the world a declining to fight the fight of faith impatience to be at any pains and a desire to keep the estimation of their parts from the hazard of mens censure and love of their own fleshly ease will be found the fountain of their resolution But here we deal with none but such as the Apostle and Christ doth speak against to wit such as in some honest imployment for the common utility refuse to be at pains and work and therefore are not worthy of their bread 2 Thess. 3. 10. And let us hearken to Christs judgement of such men whom the world admireth for most holy Moncks in the parable of the talents he taketh up the lazy lubbart of whom we speak under the reckoning of a k●avish servant who because he had but one talent which amounteth to no small sum went away and hid it in the earth Mat. 25. 26. Thou wicked and slothfull servant saith he c. and ver 30. cast the unprofitable servant into outer darkness there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth The remedy is that men of parts and abilities do not yield unto their lazy humor nor to their discouragements which may foster their temptations to idlenesse but study rather to live in the sense of their obligations to God and to improve all that they have received from him for his honour and the well-fare of his people and to this end it is fit they should hearken to the counsel of judicious friends rather then lean to their own judgment over-swayed with temptations lest the Lord deci●her them and lead them forth with the workers of iniquity Ps. 125. 5. 7. Some are very like in all externals to the true converts so far as can be observed by beholders for they professe the true religion with others they seem to have consecrat themselves unto Christ they associat themselves unto and haunt the company of these who are in best esteem and joyn themselves alwayes with the reputed godly they seem ready prepared to bear Christs crosse and to go forth out of the city after him bearing his reproach and to be waiters upon his second coming yet inwardly they were never renewed they are not troubled with the sense of sin and sinfullnesse they do not in earnest or seriously seek after Christs righteousnesse and remission of sin through him nor worship God in their spirit These are described to us in the parable of the foolish and wise Virgins Matth. 25. the foolish were in company and outward fellowship of religion with the wise their outward conversation was without scandal as was the behaviour of the wise they had lamps of profession as the wise and were not suspected by themselves or others to be unsound they went forth in profession waiting for the coming of the Lord as the wise did and last of all no other infirmities were found in them then such as the wise Virgins were subject unto also they all fell asleep now and then nothing could be outwardly found to difference them from the wise Virgins which external likenesse as it deceived the beholders of these foolish Virgins So also it deceived themselves neither shall this personal difference be openly manifested till the Judge the searcher of hearts shall come and separat the goats from the sheep and the hypocrits from the unfeigued believers The remedy is that every one who pretend unto holinesse externally search their own hearts and inward sinfulnesse daily and flye to Christ in earnest that their nakednesse may be covered and their affections made spiritual seeking after things above and that by faith in Christ they may be filled with the unction of the holy spirit for bringing forth true fruits of faith 8. Unto the former we may joyn such as for their eminent gifts above the common sort of pious people and their abilities to conset discourse and dispute of maters of religion seem to themselves and to beholders also eminent Saints especially if they appear sharp censurers of others and z●alous against every least degree of sin in others but most of all if they for their enduements be fitted and called to pray in publick and preach the Gospel to others and withall do live without scandal they doubt nothing but they are high in Gods estimation as they are set up in reputation among the godly in the visible Church Now that such gifted men may deceive themselves and passe sentence in their own favours for their own absolution from any challenge which may condemn them our Lord doth fore-warn us Matth 7. 21. 22. telling us that not only many private
Deep calleth unto deep at the noise of thy water-spouts all thy waves and billows are gone over me And Psal. 77. 7 8. will the Lord cast off for ever and will he be favourable no more Is his grace clean gone for ever and will he be favourable no more c. At last he discovereth his duty to believe in God and concludeth against himself that his giving so far way to the tentation was his infirmity 19. We must distinguish worldy sorrow and hypochondriack-passions and perturbations of mind from cases of conscience and spiritual exercise in the wrestlings of faith that for a natural disease and distemper a pertinent remedy may be called for from the bodily Physicians and to such as are under a spiritual exercise the doubts of their conscience may be prudently loused In such a case when both the bodily distemper and spiritual exercise are joyned circumspection is necessary that proportionable remedies be used by the Physician and the Pastor or prudent friend that bodily medicine and spiritual consolations may be each in their own time and order wisely made use of and because it useth to fall out that exercise of conscience and distemper of bodily humours are oftentimes joyned one with another let it be sufficient that a word is casten in here for advertisement 20. In curing cases of conscience it is not sufficient to louse some one doubt or other but after satisfaction given to the parties afflicted concerning the present case which hath troubled them they must learn to observe other causes which may trouble them afterward wherewith for the present they possibly are not troubled and must be directed to acquaint themselves with Christ that in him they may have relief from every sin and every sort of misery and to that end and purpose they must consecrat and devout themselves to him to depend upon him in all things and at all times whatsoever way he shall be pleased to exercise them for whosoever do come unto Christ must come of set purpose to abide in him and never depart from him but to live in him and draw grace after grace out of his fulnesse grace to mortifie sin grace to renew the acts of faith and repentance daily according as they find new guiltinesse contracted and weaknesse in themselves to do commanded duties for except the do so they shall easily slide back from their begun sanctification and furnish mater to Sathan for raising of new doubts in their souls and new tentations unto sins wherein they have not fallen before therefore must they keep the habits of faith and repentance in actual exercise daily 21. In dealing with a troubled conscience let not the comforter whether a Pastor or a prudent friend trust to his abilities or arrogat to himself above what is due to him but let him keep his eye upon the Lord and in his heart be praying to God to blesse the Word in his mouth giving glory to God expresly if he perceive the afflicted party laying hold on Gods Word delivered by him And let him also teach the afflicted to lift his eyes to the Lord when the Word of consolation is dispensed to him by the Minister or prudent friend that God may have the glory in his consolation and no more ascribed to the instrument then is due For the Minister may sow the seed and plant and water but God only can give the increase men are ready to fail in this point and mar the blessing for God is a jealous God and will not give his glory to another 22. In case the expected consolation be not found or the doubt propounded be not solved so soon as is desired let the afflicted be exhorted that he make not hast in seeking comfort but patiently submit himself to Gods will in exercising him for a while and humble himself under his mighty hand in meeknesse waiting for clearnesse and comfort in due time for affliction is sent to work patience and patience to work experience and experience to work hope which shall not make the patient man ashamed and it is far better for a soul to lye for a time in the bonds of affliction till it be daunted and subdued then before patience hath had the perfect work to seek to have its foolish wishes granted unto it for if once a soul heartily submit it self to God or strive to submit and patiently wait on consolation will be found not far off 23. In regard the work of the holy Ghost working the conversion of a man may begin before it can be marked it is the part of him who medleth with the afflicted conscience to deal tenderly with the afflicted and so to temper his speech as he may both further repentance and faith pre-supposing the parties exercise may prove a begun work of grace for it is better so to judge in charity of Gods dispensation then to foster sinister suspicions of the party afflicted which may readily break forth in some unhappy expressions to the hurting of the patient and hindering his profiting by what may be said beside 24. Because we have to do in this Book with the weak believers who in the sense of sin and deserved wrath are fled or flying unto Christ with a purpose of amendment of life but do fear they are not or shall not be admitted into that kingdom of our Lord Jesus for this and that pretended reason therefore it will be to purpose in comforting them to make use as of other Scriptures so in special of these two passages the one 2 Cor. 5. 19. the other 1 Cor. 1 30. the one serving to convince them that they are already in the state of grace and of the number of believers in Christ how strongly soever they are assaulted with fears doubts and suspicions that it is otherwayes for in this passage 2 Cor. 5. 19. the Apostle summeth up the whole Gospel in few words holding forth first that the fulnesse of God in three persons was in the second person of the God-head the Mediator Christ Jesus and is upon the work of reconciling the world to himself not imputing their transgressions unto them that receive the gracious offer of reconciliation tendred through Christ in the Gospel Secondly that God in Christ ●ath committed unto his Ministers the word of reconciliation that they with authority may offer reconciliation and friendship with God unto the hearers of the Word of the Gospel Thirdly that the Apostles and Ministers of the Gospel are sent forth and directed as Embassadors to exhort and request m●n in Gods name and in the name of Christ God Mediator manifested in the flesh to be reconciled unto God Fourthly that so many as do consent unto and imbrace the gracious offer of reconciliation are reckoned to be believers even all they who do acknowledge their natural enimity and sins against God and do welcom the message of reconciliation sent by the Ministers of the Gospel and do ingage themselves to hold fast this Covenant
Lord may take the penitent in his fatherly embracements and comfort him abundantly Mean time till the sensible comfort be given unto him let him hold fast the promises made to them that flye unto Christ. CHAP. IV. Wherein is solved the doubt of the regenerat man raised by his suspicion whether he be elected or not IT cometh to passe sometimes that a sinner lamenting his sins and seeking liberation from sin and misery doth call in question whether he be regenerat because he hath a deep and fixed suspicion that he shall possibly be ●ound not among the Elect and by consequ●nce be found a reprobat of whom if ye ask a reason why he saith so he can give no solid answer only he will tell you he can perceive no certain signs and evidences of his election yea that he findeth nothing in himself but that which may be found in reprobats and that he is affraid he be found one of that number and that this suspicion hath taken deep root in him that he cannot rid himself of this doubt and fear 2. This case we must confesse is very dangerous except it be timously cu●ed for here faith is taken as it were by the throat and the ground of hope is like to be razed The suspicion of Gods decree is dayly fostered and augmented and the afflicted person not only doubteth of Gods good-will to him but is tempted unto desperation By this means the command of God to believe the promises and consolations of the Gospel seem to him to be offered to him all in vain the hope of successe or profiting in the use of the means appointed by God is undermined so long as this suspicion is entertained yea all the exercises of religion become burthensome out of a fear he shall follow the exercise thereof to no purpose and so the duties of religion are oft-times left undone or cast off for a time if the tentation grow strong and continue with him without cure or comfort thus he standeth upon the border and precipice of some sort of desperation if his fear and suspicion be not removed in some measure 3. For cure of this case the Pastor or prudent friend as in all his conferences with the afflicted So here in speciall must seriously pray to God that he would blesse the means of information and consolation which he is about to use for the satisfying of the afflicted To this end therefore first let all the reasons whereby the afflicted pretendeth to make his reprobation probable be resumed and refuted as frivolous all of them And certainly they cannot but be found frivolous because God hath not given any certain evidence or sign of reprobation so long as a man is alive except that sin unto death the sin against the holy Ghost in a malicious refusing rejecting and hostile opposing of Jesus Christ wittingly and willingly for as to finall unbelief and impenitency no man can passe sentence upon any person that hath heard any thing of the Gospel so long as breath is in him for God can convert a soul to himself in the pangs of imminent death as he did the thief on the crosse All the evil which the afflicted can say of himself cannot prove him a reprobat the hight which his reckoning can rise unto to fortifie his own suspicion of himself is only to give appearance that he is 〈◊〉 regenerat mean time we pre●uppone the afflicted person under this tentation to labour under the sense of manyfold sins which do furnish strength unto the tentation and to be hungry and thirsty for righteousnesse and to be desirous to draw near to God in Christ if he could be delivered of his suspicion of Gods purpose and affection towards him And therefore his christian friends are bound in charity to expound this his hunger for righteousnesse and thristy desire of reconciliation through Christ to be a begun work of gracious regeneration and so also a hopefull sign that he is elected Secondly after refutation of his pretended reasons for his suspicion and fear this suspicion must be set before him as a strong tentation of Sathan and a soul-murthering lie thrown as a fiery dart at him such as the Apostle Ephes. 6. maketh mention of of set purpose to beat the shield of faith out of his hand Wherefore he must be exhorted to resist the Tempter and that so much the more as Sathan out of envy and malice doth slander God and the begun work of grace in the man and all to vex the soul of him whom he cannot keep in his snare Thirdly the giving so much way to this wicked suggestion must be represented to the patient as an act of ignorance and folly yea an act of iniquity and injury unto God and to his own soul for what a madnesse is it to pry in upon the secret counsell of God and to neglect his revealed will set down in Scripture what presumption to intrude our selves upon his secret decrees and to cast behind our back his open commands given to us To refuse obedience to Gods ordinances given to us for our salvation except he shall first●●ll us what is his purpose about us in particular To open our ears to the false suggestions of the devil a lyar and murtherer from the beginning and stop ou● ears from hearing the voice of God speaking to us in Scripture Wherefore let the afflicted under this temptations take heed to what is said De●t 29. 29. The secret things belong unto the Lord our God but these things that are revealed belong u●to us and our children for ever that we may do all the words of this Law Let the Lords Command be first obeyed and then the decree of God concerning the believer in him shall be timeously revealed for his promises are agreeable with his decrees and his promises are offered to us that thereby his decrees may be brought on unto a just and gracious execution Fourthly let the afflicted call to minde what benefits the Lord hath bestowed upon him from his infancy and in special that he hath offered and doth continue to offer Christ Jesus unto him if he will receive him for wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption and upon this ground he is bound to give unto God a good construction in every sort of dispensation toward him and look upon God as his friend and father CHAP. V. Wherein the regenerat mans doubting of his regeneration because he findeth no power in himself to believe in Christ is answered SOmetime it cometh to passe that the renewed man after a long time standing in the stare of grace falleth in doubt about the work of grace in himself because when God doth change his dispensation toward him and bringeth him to tryal by trouble wherein he is found weaker then he expected he beginneth to suspect whether the former work of grace hath been found or not and his reason is because he findeth by experience often repeated that in straits and difficulties when he
his yoke upon them are troubled with doubtings whether they be of the number of true believers whether they have rightly come unto Christ whether they have been well accepted of him and for their doubting they can give no other reason save this I cannot be quiet nor rest in assurance that I am in the state of grace if they be interrogat what they think of the evident signs of their regeneration which have been and are to be seen in their conversation since they began in earnest to seek the face of God in Christ They will possibly not altogether deny Gods work in them but yet dare not lean weight upon these signs because they do find these signs also brought in question whether they have been or are kindly and sincere mean time they are about to do that which is acceptable to God in the course of their calling albeit with more heavinesse and lesse alacrity then b●cometh persons reconciled to God in Christ. 2. This disease will be found complicat and made up of moe mistakes and errors then one and therefore is to be the more narrowly considered because it is no small hinderance of a comfortable christian conversation which God doth allow on his children for in the party troubled with unquietnesse we presuppone I● there is a serious sense of sin and purpose to do better 2. An unfained embracing of the covenant of grace and reconciliation in Christ J●sus And 3. an honest though weak endeavour to bring forth the fruits of new obedience and yet notwithstanding the person is not quiet but walketh heavily and is discouraged by reason of his uncertainty whether he be in the state of grace or not yea he is cast down and disquieted because he is disquieted and cannot get a reasonable answer from his conscience when he asketh of it why are thou cast down and disquieted within me 3. The mistakes and errors whence this dissatisfaction and unquietnesse doth flow are many but we shall condescend upon eight or nine only The first error and cause of unquietnesse is or may be this that the party afflicted albeit he have the habits of saving grace in him and doth by Gods grace put forth these habits in actual exercise yet he doth not reflect upon nor turn his eye to observe the operations of Gods holy Spirit in himself nor the acts of saving grace which the holy Spirit hath made him put forth of which if he take not notice they are to him for the time as if they were not and so no wonder he be disquiet while he perceiveth not in himself that which might make him quiet For example when the sense of sin is raised up in a mans spirit by the holy Ghost if he do not observe that this is one of the operations of the holy Spirit convincing the world of sin or if he do not turn back his eye on this operation and upon his own act stirred up thereby to subscribe the sentence of the law against himself no wonder that he doubt of his conversion till he see the foot-steps of God the converter of him from the love and approbation of sin unto the hatred of it and when he is ●l●d to Christ the only Redeemer from sin and misery and hath laid hold on him according to the covenant of grace offered in him if he do not look back on this operation of God drawing him to Christ and upon his own act of coming unto Christ by the draught of Gods Spirit what wonder he do not reckon himself among believers albeit he be in Gods account one of that number And when the holy Spirit hath kindled in him not only a purpose of new obedience but also a begun endeavour to live holily justly and soberly if he do not observe and acknowledge these operations of Gods Spirit making him to bring forth these acts what wonder that this mistake and inconsideration do open a door to disquietnesse and doubting whether he be in the state of grace or not 4. For removing this cause of disquietnesse the afflicted person must beware that he passe not sentence of Gods dispensation towards him according to the tentations and suggestions of Sathan nor yet according to the opinion which his Pastor or friend may have of him judging somewhat uncharitably of him upon sinister suspicions neither let him stand to the suspicions of his own incredulous heart but let him consider what the Word of the Lord hath said of the person in whom these three grace● do concur to wit 1. the sense of sin and inability to help our selves 2. flying unto Christ for relief from sin and misery and 3. some measure of upright purpose and endeavour to serve God in new obedience for of such saith the Apostle Phil. 3. 3 We are the Circumcision or true Israelits who have no confidence in the flesh but rejoyce in Iesus Christ and worship God in the spirit Let him therefore esteem the discovery of his sinfull and wretched estate in himself to be the very fruit of the eye-salve and work of the Spirit bestowed on him by Christ and let him esteem his hearty consent given to the covenant of grace and reconciliation to be the undoubted act of saving faith For hearty consent to the offer of grace in Jesus Christ presuppones first that the person sees no standing for him by the law or covenant of works but is beaten from all confidence in himself and made to believe and subscribe the righteous sentence of the law against himself to the praise of Gods truth and justice Secondly it imports the mans believing the testimony which God hath given of Christ Jesus to wit that God hath made a gift of life eternall to the soul that hungereth and thristeth for righteousnesse and that this life is in his Son yea it imports the mans receiving and embracing of Christ offered in the Gospel Thirdly it importeth that the consenter to the covenant of grace as he hath renounced confidence in his own works So he hath given up himself to God to live by the grace of Jesus Christ unto eternall life Now if the afflicted shall reflect upon these two operations of the holy Ghost making him humble in the sense of sin heartily to receive Christ Jesus for his relief and withall do observe an unfained purpose and begun endeavour to live more holily and fruitfully by the grace and furniture of Christ howsoever he labour under many infirmities not only is he undoubtedly a new creature but also by observing the foresaid evidence thereof may conclude that God hath begun a good work of grace in him and so shall this first cause of disquietnesse be removed 5. Another cause of disquietnesse is or may be this if the afflicted after examination of the work of grace in himself being convinced of his blessed estate and confirmed by present sense of Gods love shed abroad in his heart do not hold fast his estimation of Gods work in himself longer
unto Christ and engaged heartily to his service must not take heed so much to what his sickly and not clearly informed conscience doth say as to what God who is greater then the conscience and giveth order and rule to the conscience doth say to such a poor soul fled unto Christ. Secondly let him consider that his peace is not ●arred with God by Sathans warring against him for peace with God standeth well with warr against all spiritual enemies and therefore the lesse rest he hath from Sathans trouble and molestation let him be the more confident of his peace with God whose battels he is fighting against Sathan Thirdly let him consider that perturbation of mind doth neither hinder peace with God nor peace of conscience for the mind and thoughts of a man for many reasons may be troubled and disquieted when peace with God and peace of conscience are setled and established for when the mind is troubled and tempted to anxiety the Apostle sheweth how to remove the perturbation of the mind and setle the peace of conscience also Phil. 4. 6 7. Be carefull saith he or anxious for nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanks giving let your requests be made manifest to God and the peace of God which passes all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Iesus And in his own experience he lets us see the difference of perturbation of mind from peace with God and the conscience also 2 Cor. 7. 5 6. When we were come into Macedonia our flesh had no rest but we were troubled on every side without were fightings within were fears neverthelesse God that comforteth these that are cast down comforted us in the coming of Titus So also 2 Cor. 2. 12 13 14. 15. The seventh cause of disquietnesse is or may be this if the true convert be either ignorant or forgetfull of the way of obtaining maintaining repairing and recovering the true peace of God in himself and of the change of Gods dispensation toward his children which is common through many tribulations God doth bring his own to heaven Sometime he shews them his countenance in a comfortable providence sometime he hides his face but doth not change his love toward them Psal. 30. 7. Thou hidest thy face saith David and I was troubled but here was his wisdom he went the straight way to recover his peace I cryed to thee O Lord and unto the Lord made I my supplication and his mourning was turned into dauncing Psal. 30. 7 8. to the end But many weak converts are not so wise who by their inconfiderat courses do cast themselves in fears jealousies and suspicions both of Gods love to them and of their own interest in him when they misse felt consolations they fall to quarrel their right And if they resolve to have their condition helped they prescribe their own time way and measure and nothing can satisfie them till they recover possession of lost sense with the Spouse Cant. 2. 5. Stay me with stagons comfort me with aples saith she for I am sick of love It is true sometime God doth coudescend to their passionat put suit of comfort but their not believing in the mean time and their hasting to have their condition altered before patience hath wrought the perfect work is not to be commended or approven 16. For removing this cause of disquietnesse let the afflicted consider first that the Lord neither sheweth his loving countenance to the weak disciple nor hideth it from him but out of love he neither corrrecteth nor comforte●h him but out of love I am the Lord and change not saith he sensible 3. 6. Therefore you sons of Jacob are not consu●●●d If he give consolation sensibly it is to confirm their weak saith by 〈◊〉 experience of the fruit of believing in him and if he withdraw his consolation it is that he may excercise their faith and train them to bel●●ve his Word without a sensible pawn for it And therefore for removing this cause of disquietnesse by all 〈◊〉 let the afflicted beware to mis-construst the Lords d●aling but let him strive against all suggestions of Sathan or 〈◊〉 own misbelieving heart and entertain friendly 〈◊〉 of God for a true friend or father when they give them beter will take it for no small 〈…〉 or fatherly affection to 〈…〉 Physicians and 〈…〉 from their Patients 〈…〉 potions when they 〈◊〉 and carve and 〈…〉 they are exponed to aim at the 〈…〉 much more should every man whatsoever dispensation of God he meet with give a good costruction of his working Secondly let him consider that the Lord hath his own way and order of working first he discovereth sin and misery and weaknesse in the creature and after that he discovereth his grace mercy and power in Christ to relieve first he humbleth and then listeth up first he woundeth and then he healeth first he smiteth and then bindeth up first he bringeth down to death and then restoret●●unto life H●s 6. 1. and Ps. 9. 3. and therefore let the afflicted be h●mbled under the sense of apprehended ca●ses of hi● disquietnesse and seek of God the restoring of wha● is lost or wanting and the healing of the wound in●●●ted in due order Now Gods order is this he will fi● have the Law magnified and his Justice acknowle●ed by all afflicted sinners even by them who are in th●tate of Grace and are not under the covenant or cuse of the Law to whom notwithstanding the Law mus●till be a pedagogue to lead them to Christ and w●n the Lords Justice is acknowledged and all fretting ●d murmuring against his dealing stopped then come● in the next place the discovery of grace in Christ● for since the fall of Adam God hath alwayes been i● Christ going about to reconcile the world to himself not imputing their transgressions to them 2 Cor. 5. 19. And when God hath drawn the sinner by faith to the Mediator Christ God incarnat then there is a matrimonial contract made betwixt God in Christ reconciled and the believer and an union between Christ and the believer in a judicial maner and so the believer is made to have a right unto Christs person according to that of the Spouse Cant. 2. 16. My beloved is mine and I am his And by this means also the believer is made to have right unto Christs purchase and benefits and to communion with him and his Saints as the Apostle teacheth us Rom. 32. He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things And after right given to the believer in due time the Lord giveth and reneweth the earnest-penny of the inheritance Ephes. 1. 13. In whom also ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise who really reneweth the believer and giveth him peace joy consolation strength and other gifts of grace with an ebbing and flowing thereof in the sense and feeling of
dissimilitude of manners or discrepance of judgment or contention about any mater then partiality hindereth a right judgment one of another and affection marreth reason many times that it cannot discern what is right Therefore let the person afflicted with this tentation turn himself to God who searcheth the reines and let him humble himself in his sight renewing the exercise of repentance and faith in Christ and let him apply to himself what the Scripture doth pronounce of these who in the sense of their sin do flye to Christ Jesus that in him they may have remission of sin and amendment of their life for so did the Prophet in the whole Psal. 17. when he had to do with his uncharitable friends and kinsfolk and so let the afflicted do CHAP. XV. Wherein the converts doubting of his being in the state of grace so oft as he doth not feel the sense of his reconciliation with God is examined and answered SO●e true converts are who indeed are indued with the saving graces of faith hope and charity and give evident proof of the in-dwelling of the holy Spirit in them and do rejoyce now and then in God their Saviour when his love to them is shed abroad in their heart but when a cloud cometh over their eyes and they do not feel the warm beams of the Sun of righteousnesse shining in their soul as they before have felt they are assaulted with doubting if any saving grace be in them at all and do entertain these tentations oft-times so far as to suspect and expresse in words that there is no solid faith in themselves no lively hope no christian charity no mortification of sin no purity of heart and such like if when they are thus tempted and tossed they lay hold on Christ as in their first conversion and find the sensible comfort of the holy Spirit by the word of the Gospel applyed unto them then all is well their doubting is overcome for the time they rejoyce and praise God But if the Lord shall delay for his own wise ends to renew their sensible consolations and to renew the earnest-penny of their inheritance forthwith they begin to doubt again and to hearken to Sathans suggestions and to suspect that their former feelings were but temporary and not the special operations of the holy Spirit and at length break forth in many sad complaints And in a word they do not maintain the work of saving grace in themselves longer then the sun shine of spiritual felt consolations abideth with them And albeit their exercise be no wayes so hard as was the Prophets Psal. 77. yet they fall out in the same complaint which the Prophet expresseth ver 7 8 9. Will the Lord cast off for ever and will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone for ever doth his promise fail for evermore hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies 2. For clearing of this case two diseases may be perceived in the afflicted which is here described The one is this the afflicted setteth himself to live rather by sense then by faith and doth put his faith on work of set purpose that he may obtain or recover consolation shortly but if his desire be not shortly granted he maketh not use of the formerly felt consolations to strengthen his own ●aith when consolation is withdrawn The other sicknesse is this the afflicted doth not take up the nature of saving graces nor perceive the beauty thereof except in the sun-shine of sensible divine approbation thereof he doth not take up the right definition or description of saving graces for saith is to him nothing if it be not a full perswasion except he can pour forth tears alwayes he thinks he doth not repent except he find a joyfull expectation of Christs coming in glory he thinks his hope not lively and so of charity and patience temperance righteousnesse and holinesse if he do not find them in some eminent measur as they may near●by stand before the law the afflicted of whom we are now speaking thinketh he hath nothing of saving grace in him We grant that this sicknesse is very rare and few they are that are troubled with it yet where it appeareth it must be speedily cured but with great circumspection cured for the earnest desire he hath of feeling the sweet sense of the joy of the holy Ghost must not be disallowed but commended to him and he taught to cry as it is said Cant. 2. 5. Stay me with flaggons comfort me with aples for I am sick of love yet with holy submission unto Gods will for time maner and measure 2. He is also to be commended that in his trouble he goeth to God in Christ not altogether without faith which he putteth forth in active exercise thereof by confession of sin by supplication and otherwayes but here is he to be reproved that while he is actually exercising faith love hope c. he reckoneth all he doeth to be nothing no faith no hope c. because it is not in such a measure as he would 3. He is to be commended that he doth aime at the highest degrees of faith love hope patience mortification of sin and practice of holinesse and all commanded vertues but here he faileth that he counteth all as nought when consolation and sensible approbation of what he hath is not felt for here he despiseth the day of small things and unthankfully mis-regardeth the lower degrees of these saving graces which notwithstanding are bought to the redeemed by the same price wherewith the highest degrees are bought to wit with the precious blood of Jesus Christ. 3. Wherefore let the afflicted consider first that the will of God revealed requireth of us that we walk by faith and under the sense of our sinfulnesse and afflictions whatsoever hold fast the covenant of grace in Christ Jesus and by adhering unto him hold up our heart and entertain spiritual life in us Secondly let him consider that this way of living by faith and dependence on the word of Gods grace doth please the Lord well for without faith it is impossible to please him and thus living by faith in him doth give more glory of truth grace mercy and constancy unto God then when we suspend the glorifying of him till we find the sense of consolation from him for if we believe in God only because we find the consolations of his Spirit our faith in that case is weak and leaneth more upon the pledge and sensible evidence of his truth bestowed upon us then upon his promise without a pledge for no man will refuse to give credit to a man upon a pawn but God is worthy to be credited upon his word without a pawn yea when his dispensation seemeth contrary to his promise Thirdly let him consider that the Lord useth to give sensible consolations not only to help our faith in the time of consolation but also to help our
grace of God the man made a believer in Christ then the absolute promises of making a new heart and of writing the Law of the Lord therein Ier. 31. 31. and Ezek 11. 19. and all the promises of saving graces set down in holy Scripture do all of them belong to the believer in Christ in whom all the promises are yea and amen as if his name were set down 4. As to his doubt arising from his weak and infirm application of the promises let the afflicted consider what God hath already wrought and is a working in him by way of application for first God hath granted to him the use of the meanes with others in the visible Kirk so that it may be said unto him in this respect as it is Esa. 5. 4. what could be done in outward means and offer-making of grace which is not done Secondly God hath drawn more near unto him and hath illuminat his mind about his sinfull state in nature and about the way of delivery by faith in Christ and yet more hath inclined his heart to accept of the offer of Christ and make answer to the call as David did When thou saidst seek my face my soul answered thy face O Lord will I seek Psal. 27. 8. Thus God hath applyed Christ and the promises of the Gospel to the afflicted and hath made the afflicted to flye unto Christ offered in the Gospel and to apply him unto himself that hitherto the afflicted hath no reason to complain of not application of Christ and his promises on Gods part nor yet of begun-application on the afflicted's part Where is the● in-lake then I answer the defect is first in the afflicted who hath not duly considered the passages of Gods gracious approaching to him and drawing of the man to himself in Christ another defect is that the afflicted upon groundlesse mistakes doth not lay claim to Christ and to all the promises of grace for righteousnesse and salvation in him and that because he is not so clear of his right unto and interest in Christ as he can lay claim confidently unto the same 5. For clearing of the afflicted in this his right and warrant confidently to apply Christ and all the promises of the Gospel let him consider first the dreadfull sentence of the curse and condemnation of all them that do not believe on Christ Ioh. 3. 18. He that believeth in Christ is not condemned but he that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not believed in the only begotten Son of God Secondly let him consider the largenesse of the Gospel wherein grace is offered to all and every believer Ioh. 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life He saith whosoever without exception lest any man who desireth to believe in Christ should doubt that he shall be received and made welcome Thirdly let him mediate upon the wonderfull mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God who that he might ransom and redeem his people from sin and misery hath assumed humane nature into the union of person with his divine nature and given a perpetual pawn and pledge of his hearty willingnesse to reconcile justifie sanctifie and save to the uttermost every one who shall come unto God through him whereunto his mediatory Office and cloathing himself with most sweet relations of Prophet Priest and King to all his followers doth hear abundant witnesse Fourthly let him hearken to the quickening and comfortable invitations which by his Spirit speaking in Scripture he uttereth in the ears of all to whom the Gospel cometh with a joyfull sound Ho every one that thirsteth Isa. 55. 1. to 10. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy loaden Mat. 11. 28. We are Embassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead beye reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely Rev. 22. 17. Fifthly let the afflicted consider what answer he will give to the expresse command of God 1 Ioh. 3. 23. This is his comandment that we should believe in the name of his Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he hath commanded us For this commandment being directed to all the hearers of the Gospel chargeth every one without exception first to examine seriously their life by the rule of Gods Law that thereby they may be convinced of their damnable state in nature and made to acknowledge their sin and misery and inability to help themselves Secondly having examined and acknowledged their natural lost condition they are commanded to flye to Jesus Christ that by faith in him they may be delivered Thirdly that having fled to Christ they should evidence their faith by love to Christ or God in Christ and their neighbours especially such as are of the household of faith In which commandment both the order of applying Law and Gospel is set down and the necessity of believing in Christ upon the warrant of this clear command so that whosoever is a hearer of the Gospel and doth not in this order flye unto Christ he is inexcusable even the wicked and worst of men And much lesse excusable is the afflicted convert of whom we are now speaking who already hath acknowledged his lost condition without Christ and knoweth that there is no hope of relief except by faith in Jesus and hath fled to Christ and dare not depart from him if this man shall stand here and not relye on Christ and rest his soul upon him confidently what excuse can he make If he do object that his name is not written in this command 1 Ioh. 3. 23. it hath no force to impede his faith for neither is his name written in any of the ten commands of the morall Law and yet he findeth himself tyed to the obedience of every one of them and why is he not tyed also to this sweet command of the Gospel of grace as well as to other commands this command being given forth as the last declaration of Gods will for relief of them who acknowledge that they by the law are condemned wherefore let not the afflicted any more pretend the difficulty of applying Christ and his graces offered in the Gospel seing it is presupposed he hath fled to Christ and dare neither depart from him nor for the pretended scruple draw confidently in unto him but let him check and chide himself for not haunting Christ and conversing with him in heaven in that humility and confidence which the Word of the Lord doth allow unto him and commandeth him to take up and hold fast CHAP. XXII Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert concerning his conversion arising from the observation in himself of presumption and security in his prosperity and of his misbelief in adversity THere are some true converts who albeit they are neither idle nor
himself SOme true converts judging their state by some false rule do not only torment themselves but also so far as in them lyeth by pronouncing false sentences of their own state go about to extinguish the spunk of piety which is in them The false rule whereby they do judge themselves is strengthened by a groundlesse perswasion that it is a true and sure rule and ordinarily when they think or speak of it they prefix no reason for it but some confident asseveration such as without doubt it is most certain and I am perswaded of it and such like If I were regenerat and truly converted without doubt I should be in a better disposition then I am I should love the Lord more fervently I should understand the mysteries of Gods Word more clearly I should not be so little affected with the sense of Gods benefits bestowed on me I should not go so lightly under the conviction of so many sins against God as I feel in me I should be more diligent in the work of the Lord in my calling I should walk more humbly and circumspectly in all my conversation and such like many expressions The same course doth the afflicted follow in his examination of the operations of the holy Spirit and of every Christian vertue in himself without doubt saith he if this were truly as a Christian vertue in me there would not be such a disposition as I find in me my condition should be such and such as became a new creature which because I do not find in me I have just reason to call in question my conversion And here is a port opened for Sathan to enter at and to throw all his fiery darts at the miserable soul of the weak convert whence many complaints do break forth and thanksgiving for mercies received and for the time injoyed is broken off and ceaseth And partly through diffidence partly through murmuring the Spirit of the Lord is provoked to wrath 2. We grant that this is a dangerous evil not only to the person afflicted but also to such as are familiarly acquainted with his condition because this disease readily doth infect others as it came to passe in the camp of Israel where the murmuring of some set the body of the army on a mutiny against God for one that is weak in the faith when he heareth such complaints in the mouth of one whom he judgeth to be holier then himself incontinent he falleth on complaining of his own state saying that he hath more weighty reason to suspect the soundnesse of his conversion then the person hath whom he hath heard suspecting his being in the state of grace 3. Wherefore let the afflicted before he shall vent his suspicion of his state examine the rule whereby he hath passed sentence on himself whether he can make it good from the Scripture for it is not sufficient to say without doubt and I am perswaded it is true except it can be confirmed by the infallible warrant of Gods Word and let his friend who shall hear his complaint expresly require a reason of his confidence that such a rule is clear from Scripture and that the application thereof is made righteously Which if he cannot prove otherwayes then Sathan doth enforce his tentations that is either without Scripture or by abusing Scripture contrary to the intent thereof let him acknowledge his readinesse to misbelieve and disobey the Word of the Lord and to hearken to Sathans tentations to the weakening of his own faith and hindering of his cheerfull obedience to the Lords commands and because such question-making of being in the state of grace is oft-times very inconsideratly uttered even before them who do not allow the complainers misconstruction of his state or if they should allow it and say to the complainer that they believed that suspicion of his state were very just it should grieve the complainer more then the doubt it self Therefore let the afflicted neither hearken to the suspicion nor vent it when it is strongly suggested but let him humble himself before Christ because of these defects and wants of such evidences of saving grace as he would have and in the sense of these wants let him cleave close to Christ for covering his nakednesse and earnestly endeavour by faith in Christ to be made more and more conform to the examplar of holinesse holden forth in the Scripture CHAP. XXIV Wherein is solved the converts doubt of his own conversion because he hath found the deceitfulnesse of his own heart and dare not trust it any more SOme sincere converts who uprightly do serve Christ and adhere unto him by faith when they consider the doctrine of the deceitfulnesse of the heart of man and how many are deceived by trusting to the testimony of their own heart concerning their regeneration and justification do begin to call in question all the work of their own conversion and do fear least they be found in the number of the finer sort of hypocrits who deceive both themselves and others having nothing in them but a civil life and form of religion without the power of godlinesse and do sleep to death in security of which sort our Lord Jesus forewarneth that not only privat persons but also many preachers shall be found Mat. 7. 22. of whom we may suppone that they were not conscious of open and grosse wickednesse but were of a blamelesse carriage before the world professing the Christian faith and teaching others to believe in Christ and doubted nothing but Christ should judge of them as reall Saints to whom for all that Christ shall one day say depart from me ye workers of iniquity I never knew you It is certain that such men have been deceived by their own heart which when the afflicted doth consider he standeth astonished and trembleth for fear saying with himself what shall I think of my former opinion of my blessd state I fear my heart hath deceived me as others of greater gifts and better life have been deceived by their own heart 2. This is a doubt which hath need to be solved but neither this nor any other doubt can be solidly and effectually solved by any mean except the holy Spirit give a blessing to the means for it is certain that there are many who being religiously educat and free from grosse vices do not repent of their sins are not touched with the sense of their original sin and corrupt lusts but without taking any burden on their consciences for these do passe by their time well pleased with their own estate Some also there are who having fallen in grosse and scandalous sins do find for some time remorse of conscience for these grosse sins but for their other sins beside those and for their in-born corruptions are not carefull thinking it sufficient if thereafter they do not fall in such grosse faults The first sort of men do deceive themselves thinking they have little to repent of● in regard they are
So soon as his condition is clear to the Pastor or friend who is about to help him let the speaker unto him recollect in few words his condition as he conceiveth it and take up his doubt in a word as shortly as may be that the afflicted may perceive that his case is well taken up by the Pastor or Christian friend For oft-times here is the cure marred when the afflicted conceiveth that his case is not rightly apprehended or what is spoken is not spoken to purpose 7. Whatsoever his case seem to be Christian compassion must be shewed to the afflicted and his affliction estimat no lesse then the afflicted conceiveth of it but made possible for God to cure it For even our Lord in the resurrection of Lazarus groaned in his spirit in compassion toward the mourning friends before he gave them the full consolation And surely compassion doth well become a Physician for it is an addition to the affliction of the afflicted when the beholder cometh to him to think little of his pain 8. Whether the afflicted seem to be a convert or not let him be exhorted by his present exercise to humble himself before God and confesse his original and actual sins to God and flye to the grace of reconciliation and remission of sins and consolation holden forth in the Gospel to every self-condemned sinner through Jesus Christ our Lord for Christ is the end of the law for righteousnesse when the conscience is burdened and the rod is heavy the curse of the law and the rod of correction do drive the man to flye unto Christ and take his yoke upon him And this course is wholsome and safe whatsoever be the afflicted mans estate whether he be converted or not 5. And as for that speciall stratageme of Sathan whereby he beareth in the sentence of condemnation on the afflicted and fiteth his phantasie with the continual ingemination and inculcating of this fiery dart crying over and over again blasphemous words charging the afflicted with the sin thereof and pronouncing sentence against him saying thou art condemned thou art a reprobat and such like the afflicted man must be informed 1. that such peremptory sentences are not from the Lords Spirit speaking in the Scripture but from the false accuser of the brethren for God pronounceth not condemnation but remission of sin to every one that flyeth to Christ. 2. That he must put difference betwixt Sathans part in the sinfull suggestions and his own part in rejecting of them abhorring them and grieving for them 3. That he must put a great difference between his imagination or phantasie and his conscience between the voice sounding in his phantasie whether he will or not and the sentence of his well informed conscience approving or disallowing what is offered unto it to be chosen or refused consented unto or dis-assented from by the conscience judging according to the rule of Gods Word for a sentence of words may be suggested to the phantasie repeated and obtruded upon the phantasie a thousand times which the conscience may and should refuse and reject a thousand times We know by experience that a sentence of words may by oft repeating in the ears of a parret and other birds take such an impression on the phantasie of the bird that it shall repeat vocally the words one by one and pronounce them disstinctly as if that sentence had been the work of its own invention So also we see that by frequent repetition of any whistle or song the phantasie of some birds may be so beaten and informed that they shall chant the same song over and over again and make it as if it were its own Now phantasie and imagination being a thing common to man and beast it is certain that the phantasie of a man may be wrought upon and stamped with the like impression And this much as experience teacheth us doth befall men for when a certain song or toon is sung in our audience and is often repeated our phantasie before we be aware useth to repeat and same song or toon or quietly whisper the notes and measure of the song or toon And after our judgment hath observed this work of the imagination we can hardly stay our imagination or phantasie while we are about other serious thoughts from its secret sowthing of the measures and notes of the song for phantasie will not be ruled by the laws of reason more then the outward sense of seeing can be hindered from observation of what it seeth whether pleasant or displeasant What wonder is it then that Sathan who hath great influence on mens imagination doth make so deep impression on it by continual iteration that the afflicted seems to himself to own those blasphemous suggestions as his own thoughts and as the voice of his conscience and yet they are indeed nothing but Sathans whistling and false sentences pressed on the mans imagination And put the case that his deluded mind should take them for the justly deserved sentences of the conscience yet are they only the voice of the conscience ill informed not judging of the mater according to the rule of Gods Word which ●oth not impute Sathans suggestions to the soul afflicted by them and mourning for them And so much for solving of the doubts of the true convert concerning his state in grace and regeneration THE THIRD BOOK CHAP. I. Concerning some premises WE have handled some examples of those cases of the conscience of a regenerat man wherein his state whether he be converted or not is brought in question Now follow some examples of those cases which concern his condition In which cases albeit the state of the convert be not at the first brought in question yet his conscience may be deceived and miscarry for a time to his detriment Of which cases that we may speak the more clearly some considerations must be premised and taken along with us 1. A mans sta●e and his condition sometime are taken in a larger sense indifferently for the same thing as when we say that all the regenerat are in a blessed state or good condition and that all the unregenerat are in a miserable state or in an evil condition But when we put difference betwixt these two in a more strict sense a mans state is that relation of his person wherein he standeth either as a child in grace or as a child of wrath In which sense every convert is said to be in the state of grace and every unregenerat person is said to be in the state of wrath judicially declared such in Scripture But the condition of a man is his present morall disposition in order to his exercising of vertue or vice better or worse In which sense the renewed man or true convert is said to be in a good condition when he is going about the duties of religion and righteousnesse as becometh a renewed man and said to be in an ill condition when he is otherwayes disposed and exercised for
these two help one another and therefore are joyned together by the Apostle 1 Ioh. 2. 16. All that is in the world is the lust of the eyes the lust of the flesh and the pride of life And when men are tempted by their own lusts the world doth furnish objects allurements and inducements to sin The third sort are the tentations from Sathan who beside that he is not idle to take advantage of concupiscence and the worlds inducements so is he chiefly busie to throw his fiery darts against the convert and to sollicit men to such sins as the convert doth most detest and abhor As for the first sort of tentations from God they are ordinarily by afflictions bodily or spiritual wherein oft-times the converts do not observe the Lords purpose and will revealed in Scripture or are forgetfull of the admonitions and consolations which they have heard from Scripture which was the case of the afflicted Saints Heb. 12. 5. and so they are more vexed then they should be and Ps. 42. 11. dejected and disquieted and do suspect that God is angry with them and with the way they walk in Heb. 12. 12 13. Of this sicknesse there may be three causes 1. the bitternesse of affliction for the present time wherein it is ●elt 2. The sense of by-past sin which the afflicted doth suspect God is pursuing and making hi● possesse the sins of his youth Iob. 13. 26. The third is the observation of in-born corruption discovered unto the afflicted much more then in prosperity 4. For remedy of this evil let the afflicted convert perswade himself from the Word of God that in all the afflictions of Gods children the Lord doth intend the tryall and exercise and increase of faith and other grace bestowed on them And upon this consideration the afflicted should rejoyce in this exercise Iam. 1. 2 3. Secondly let him remember that with the tryall of faith there is alwayes a discovery of infirmity and corruption of nature in the afflicted As in the purifying of gold both the good mettal and the drosse are discovered which as he should acknowledge that he may be keeped from fretting So must he still remember that the Lord doth intend the tryal of his faith that he may be constant in believing on Christ the only help and relief from sin and misery Thirdly in whatsoever condition he is in let him endeavour to go on in patience experience and hope which shall never make him ashamed for this doth the Lord teach us Rom. 5. 3 4. and Iam. 1. 4. As for the second sort of tentations from the concupiscence of the fl●sh and from the worlds allurements and terror let the convert afflicted follow the same course which is prescribed in the remedy of the tentations of the first sort As for the third sort of tentations which are from the devil tempting men to atheism or blasphemy or dispair or self-murder and such like which even nature doth abhor whereof something is spoken elsewhere 1. let the afflicted convert put difference between the devils sin in tempting to vile sins and his own seeming feeble resisting wherein albeit he thinketh himself polluted yet his not yielding testifieth his dissenting from those fearfull sins whereunto Sathan doth tempt him 2. Let him put difference between the consent of his unmortified corrupt nature inclinable to every evil from the lust of the spirit which fighteth against the lust of the flesh which hindereth the adversary from getting the victory 3. Let him put difference between the sufficiency of Gods grace upholding him in the conflict and the full victory against the messenger of Sathan buffetting him for God useth to susspend the victory for a time and yet make his grace sufficiently uphold his souldier till the victory be given as Pauls experience 2 Cor. 12. teacheth us And indeed it is a pleasant spectacle to the Lord to look upon his weak child striving against the flesh the world and Sathan and standing out by faith in Christ against them all 4. Let him consider that by these tentations of Sathan unto vile sins God can and doth mortifie sin and make his child watchfull and strong against both the sinfull inclination unto these and all other sins In the mean time let him beware of a more slye and subtile tentation which Sathan useth to slide in at the back of these ugly and grosse tentations which is this when he hath pressed with all violence these fiery darts and vile suggestions upon the convert he chargeth the afflicted soul with a giving consent unto them and like a scolding calumniator impudently beareth guiltinesse upon him and all to make him apprehend his condition to be worse then it is and to suspect that God by this exercise is pursuing him in wrath and this tentation is not readily observed by the afflicted convert but yielded vnto more then to the gros●e tentation Therefore in the last place let the convert guard against this tentation which brangleth his faith and lay the blame with the Apostle on corrupt nature whatsoever guiltinesse is found Rom. 7. 17. Now then it is no more I that doth it but sin that dwelleth in me a speech beseeming a man free of out-breaking and prevailing corruption and striving against all inward motions of corrupt nature And for remedy of this and other evils let him renew the acts of his faith in Christ laying hold upon the covenant of Grace that he may more confidently draw near unto God reconciled in Christ and so no more doubt of Gods good will to him notwithstanding of his hard exercise under tentations for thus Sathan shall not only flye from the first tentation being resisted but also be disappointed of the successe he expected in questioning the coverts condition and weakening of his faith CHAP. XXVII Concerning the converts mistaking his condition when he doth observe some degrees of Gods deserting of him TO speak of the sorts and degrees of Gods deserting a soul requireth a large Treatise and the case and cure thereof is already publickly set forth by a learned and godly Preacher of the Gospel It shall suffice for our purpose to speak of it only so far as it concerneth the converts mistaking his condition when he apprehendeth himself deserted whether the desertion be reall or apparent only and falleth into suspicion of Gods love to him or that God is displeased with him because he findeth not such lively influence of Gods Spirit as he hath found and such assistance of his gracious presence as he did expect in discharge of religious duties or exercises wherein divine providence hath yoked him The Scripture and daily experience do furnish instances of sad complaints of the Lords hiding his face and withdrawing or with-holding of light or peace or consolation or strength and ability for spiritual duties c. 2. For remedy whereof 1. let the convert remember that God doth not leave a believer fled to Christ for relief from sin and misery alwayes
renew accusations against them and so order that mater as neither Sathan shall prevail nor his child suffer damn●ge by the means for there is a great difference between Sathans renewing of accusations for sins forgiven and Gods making null the remission granted the Lord can suffer the one to be but the other he will never suffer to be for when a true convert groweth negligent and falleth in such sins after conversion as he lived in before conversion no wonder Sathan be permitted to call his former conversion in question yea the Lord may justly cast up to his child his former faults to humble him and shame him from going on albeit he doth not disannull the formerly granted remission 3 When thanksgiving for remission of sin granted for Christs cause beginneth to cool in the heart of a convert what wonder the Lord not only suffer but also present the vilen●ss● of by past sins to make the convert sensible of the remission and to cause him renew the acts of repentance and godly sorrow for his sins by-past as Ezek. 16. 63. and 36. 32. Then shall you remember your own evil wayes and your doings which were not good and shall loath your selves for your iniquities and abominations When the convert ●roweth remisse in watching over his own heart wayes and is in danger of falling back into these sins which he had repented of before what wonder the Lord by remembring him of his natural inclination and former wayes do warn him of his danger to make him preveen his fall 4. Wherefore let the convert maintain the solidity of former remission of sins and make good use of his former sins which went before his conversion and let him follow the example of Paul who did not suffer his former si●s go out of his mind but did renew the confession of them upon all occasions for his own daily humiliation for the edification of others and for magnifying the glory of the grace of God and yet for all this did not suspect the remission of sins received For by this means the convert shall preveen accusations and stop Sathans mouth and make his accusations have no force By this means the convert shall possesse firm and stable confidence of Gods unchangeable grace and mercy and of the stability of the remission of sin granted The sixth question is of a convert casten not only in an uncertainty for the time of his conversion but also in a doubt whether he be elected or not and knows not how to do in this case SOme converts fall in Heman the Ezrait his exercise whereof we read Ps. 88. especially ver 14. 15 While I suffer thy terrors I am distracted saith he Counsell hath been offered by some to the afflicted to follow the practice and experience of some eminent Theologues who being brought to such straits with good successe have submitted themselves to God to save them or destroy them as he pleased after which submission they have felt the marvellous sweet embracements of Gods loving kindnesse making them sure both of their conversion and election Whether to follow this example and experience of some notable Saints is the doubt wherein the convert is not clear and knoweth nor how to carry himself toward God in this case 2. For answer to this question It is free for God to comfort a soul casten down when and how he pleaseth it is free for God to passe by the infirmity and error of a terrified soul coming to him not in the wisest way prescribed to him and to look to the necessity of the mans consolation and not to his way of seeking of it But howsoever it pleaseth God to comfort some extraordinarily yet this is not the duty of the afflicted to come with such an unrequired submission unto God for it limiteth the Lord in a manner either to comfort the man speedily or suff●r him upon apparent refusal for the time to dispair For Gods order is to bring the sinner under the sense of sin and acknowledgment of deserved wrath for sin and then to charge him to believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and after believing in Christ to seal the believer with the stamp of holinesse and the earnest-penny of the inheritance which is peace with God and joy in the holy Ghost shed abroad in his heart 3. Wherefore as for the conversion of a man straitned in the pains of the new birth and fear of everlasting wrath and tempted to suspect that he is not elected It is a more safe way to lay aside all disputation about Gods decree because secret things belong to the Lord and to look to the Lords command and to his own duty of flying unto Christ So for the recovery of a convert fallen in Ionahs case and made to suspect that he is a reprobat cast off of God it is a more safe way not to dispute for the time either his election or conversion whatsoever suggestions may be cast in by Sathan then to offer unto God an absolute submission to be saved or destroyed as he pleaseth and then to lye in sorrow till God give an answer of consolation for God doth not require such a submission but calleth for an act of faith and obedience for God hath declared in his Word that he delighteth not in the death of a sinner but that he should repent and turn to God and be saved Secondly in this submission the heart will be found deceitfull which neither will nor can submit to be destroyed Thirdly this offer of such a submission as this is Lord I know not whether thou hast chosen me or rejected me in thy decree but I submit my self to thee absolutely If thou wilt destroy me thou shalt be found to be just and I do confesse so much unto thee but if thou wilt save me I shall proclame thy grace such a submission I say is but in effect a tempting of God speedily to reveal his secret counsel either by consolation if the submitter be an elect or refusal of consolation if he be a reprobat The only safe way in the foresaid case is to be humbled before God and flye to Christ by prayer as Heman did Ps. 88. and as Ionah did who choosed to look again to his holy Temple where the Mediator sat upon the mercy seat between the cherubims and not suffer such a thought as reprobation Thus did Heman Ps. 88. 13 14. But unto thee have I cryed O Lord and in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee Lord why castest thou off my soul why bidest thou thy face from me Let the command of God to every self-condemned sinner to believe in Christ prevail against all temptations to the contrair 1 Ioh. 3. 23. This is his commandment that we should believe on the name of his Son Iesus Christ. The seventh question is how to satisfie the convert doubting whether it be b●tter to forbear or go on in the outward exercise of religion at least in
five qualifications were common operations of the spirit or effects of saving faith not as yet manifested to be such before the person did close covenant with God in Christ for not imputing his sins unto him and making solid reconciliation with him 3. As for judging of others when we observe these qualifications all or some of them we must not determine positively what sort of operation the holy Ghost hath in hand but our part is according to our place and calling to help on the least preparatory qualifications which may serve to be inductive and serviceable to beget and foster saving faith in them even when the sense of sin and unworthinesse is like to drive them from Christ as it did Peter when he cryed out unto Christ Depart from me O Lord for I am a sinfull man For God hath not made us Judges of the operations of the holy Ghost in this or that person but to be their helpers unto faith when we perceive any good qualification in them and helpers of their repentance when we perceive any out-breaking evil in them The eleventh question shall be of the converts doubting what to think of his condition when he finds more freedom of prayer in the presence and audience of others then when he prayeth in secret alone IT is not a case unusual that some converts do find a great deal of freedom of prayer in the audience of others more then alone for they have experience that when they pray in the audience of others in their family or occasionally elsewhere their prayer is more copious then when they are alone their stile of speech more polished their words in better order their expressions more significant their notions more sublime more fervent more zealous then when they are in secret in their closet which difference when they consider they doubt what the matter doth mean 2. For answer first there is a difference to be put between solitary prayer in secret and prayer in society with others for in secret oft-times the converts worship is carried on in the sense of his sinfulnesse unworthiness and indisposition presented to God through Christ with sighs and confused groans without words for he studieth most for affection and not for words having no ear to care for but the ear of the searcher of hearts who knoweth his weaknesse fears tentations and wrestling with doubts But in company he studieth most to make use of knowledge and to expresse himself so as he may carry along the company with whom he prayeth with consent that he may edifie himself and them in worship and in this case he may find greater fredom possibly then he findeth alone in secret Secondly it is oft-times found that God for his own glory and the mutual edification of two or three gathered together in his name doth inlarge the freedom of speech in the speaker Upon which considerations the doubting convert may satisfie himself only let him beware least vain glory or studying to have the applause of such as hear him pray do not blow wind in his sails and in as far as after examination he findeth himself guilty let him when he is in secret alone be humbled before God for it and crave pardon through Christ seeking help and healing of this wicked inclination The twelfth question shall be of the doubt which the convert may have in a case contrary to the former SOme converts do find themselves more inlarged in secret prayer and alone then in the company of one or moe In company saith he I cannot utter my own privat condition without a needlesse and inconvenient discovery of my present case to others and I can hardly conjecture what may be their necessity with whom I pray or condescend upon petitions and thanksgiving fit for us in common I am taken up also with thoughts of what estimation my hearers may have of me c. But in secret prayer I am freed of that care I am not feared that God shall mis-construe my words or thoughts I may in secret make a long pause in my petitions and fall in meditation upon some passage of Scripture and after a while direct my speech unto the Lord I may expresse my affections by voice and gesture as they fall out and pour forth my heart to God with tears without fear of being esteemed an hypocrit c. Mean time I doubt what my indisposition to pray in company doth import when duty calleth for it 2. For answer we grant that God to some of his dear Saints whose prayers in secret he will accept and reward openly hath not given ability to edifie others by way of praying in their audience to others in regard of age of sexe to whom modesty and silence is most suitable he hath not given confidence to pray in name of others whether moe or fewer as their mouth But as for these to whom God hath given ability and a calling by reason of a charge in the family or some occasional exigence to pray in the audience of others and yet notwithstanding they do foster their natural aversenesse from such a duty they had need to examine themselves whether they be hindered by fear to loss some of their estimation at the hands of the hearers if possibly all things should not be found so well digested and expressed in the prayer as they would The thirteenth question shall be of the converts doubting what to think when he compareth his disposition to prayer and Gods dispensation toward him in prayer SUndry converts when they compare their own divers dispositions to prayer with the divers dispensations of God toward them in prayer they are at a stand what to think Sometime saith one albeit I be very hardly drawn to pray at all yet when after wrestling the conscience of the duty doth set me on work my prayer goeth on as I could wish light is furnished to me what to confesse what to thank for what to seek both for my self and others whereby I gather for the time that the Lord is pleased with my person in Christ and hath accepted my prayer Sometime it fareth otherwayes with me for when time place and leisure for prayer concur and I am now about to make use of opportunity and do fall down before the Lord to speak on a suddain I have nothing to say matter words and light do fail me darknesse and confusion falleth on my mind and my prayer suudry times is stopped and closeth with a sigh or groan which dispositions of my heart and dispensations of the Lord when I compare I am in doubt what to think 2. For answer in the first case concerning the Lords blessing of the aiming at duty the matter is clear and speaks for it self for God will have us to aim at a right frame of spirit when we are about the discharge of any part of his worship but not forbear to do the duty if we cannot reach that fitnesse of spirit which we desire let us