Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n work_n work_v worldly_a 239 3 8.4488 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A08586 The saints societie Delivered in XIV. sermons, by I.B. Master in arts, and preacher of Gods word at Broughton in Northampton Shire.; Societie of the saints Bentham, Joseph, 1594?-1671. 1636 (1636) STC 1890; ESTC S117220 223,204 307

There are 17 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

's the proper object of hatred it 's against God and from the Devill pag. 130. c. They who have or desire to have fellowship with God must avoid the society of sinners 4. disswasives whose children what beasts and filthy persons they be They are dirt chaffe dust smoake and scumme pag. 13● c. They must labour to be like God wherein and why p. 138. c. They must pray to God Prayerlesse persons wofull what faults hinder prayer How to pray aright pag. 140. c. They must heare Gods Word Lets removed Motives to heare Directions how to heare to obtaine fellowshippe with God pag. 142. c. They must seeke the Lord what it is to seeke how by what meanes and why we should seeke the Lord. pag. 146. c. They must sanctifie the Lords Day the name of the Day the judgement of diverse Divines of the Sabbath whether workes then lawfull what workes meant disswasives whether sports lawfull reasons disswasives objections answered whether worldly words 4. reasons whether worldly thoughts 3. reasons Meditation of Gods Workes Word and why conference for the Lords Day workes for the Lords Day sc reading singing and how prayer deeds of mercy their kinds and manner of doing them Recreation for the Lords Day foure motives to practice pag. 149. c. They must choose the thing which pleaseth God diverse choosers which are the best pag. 177. c. They must take hold of Gods Covenant the foundation and frame of this Covenant how the same to the justified Iewes formerly as to the justified Christians now and how not we must enter into and keepe this Covenant outwardly and how inwardly and how how the Law binds how not against Antinomists 6. motives to keepe covenant with God p. 178. c. They must cleave to the Lord what it is to cleave to God manner meanes and motives pag. 189. c. They must serve God what it is to serve God How we are free from the Law how not against Antinomists and others we must serve God with feare objections answered disswasives from serving foure evill masters the excellencie and manner of Gods service pag. 191. c. IIII. Booke ALL Saints have fellowship with Christ because they are his fellowes spouse branches building members and linkt to him in the nearest ties pag. 202. c. Reprehending those who harme them pag. 209. c. Disswading from hurting the Saints why the world is enrag'd against them who are their greatest enemies how holily they live how neare and deare they are to Christ pag. 211. c. Perswading all to joyne in fellowship with Christ This is the sweetest most honourable the firmest richest the most joyfull and peacefull society pag. 217. c. Comforting those who have fellowship with Christ from Christs names against feare Christ loves such with all loves such are justified what justification is its causes How faith justifieth how not sixe notes of happinesse all in the justified Such are sanctified and how difference betwixt justification and sanctification how sanctified persons are cleane how once justified alwaies justified pag. 228 c. They have Christian liberty a fourefold false liberty disclaimed Christian liberty frees not from obedience of the Morall Law what conscience is what binds conscience the Law binds the conscience to obedience wherein this liberty consists its excellencie a threefold use from this liberty pag. 242. c. Exhorting and directing to this society Scripture truths trier sinnes of former times as bad as now why they seeme worse now pag. 253. c. They who have fellowship with Christ do and ought to imitate Christ wherein we must imitate Christ actively passively and why prophane livers fashion followers and followers of men censured how men may be imitated how not what we must doe if we imitate Christ 3. motives to imitate Christ pag. 256. c. They have and must have faith and what faith its excellencie three sorts faulty concerning faith our duty concerning faith pag. 265. c. They have Gods Spirit abiding in them its necessity who faulty our duty to examine our selves who have who want Gods Spirit duties of such who have Gods Spirit and of such who want the same pag. 269. c. They who have fellowship with Christ be and must be his sheepe braunches spouse members building their duties hence pag. 276. c. The Conclusion shewing the drift of all pag. 278. c. Courteous Reader pardon I pray smaller faults escaped in printing and amend these greater as following Page 13. line 5. for comsorts reade consorts p. 21. l. 1. correcting 1. converting p. 31. l. 28. openly r. onely p. 38. l. 19. of r. as p. 49. l. 28. leading r. loading p. 64. l. 33. stayng r. staining p. 70. l. 16. alike r. alive p. 80. l. 12. it r. in P. 100. l. 4. where r. whence Ibid. l. 5. Bubus r Subus p 108. l 33. money r. many p. 178. l. 19. feele r. seeke p. 183 l 17. Iudaicall r. iudiciall p. 227. l. 17. we and all r. woe and alas p. 245 coniunction r. conviction p. 225. l. 33 dissoluble r. indissoluble Marginall faults Pag. 13. for tunica quem r. quam p. 23. bonum r horum p. 100. comitatu r. comitatum Ibid contratius r. contraria p. 110. it appeareth r in apparell p. 245 exemple r Epist p. 253. virtutis r. veritatis p. 154. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 256. limices r. limites Information for the meanest Reader Where you shall find these following this is their signification e. g. For example to wit viz. sc that is i. e. i. Ibid. there or in the same place 1. True good fellowes have fellowshippe with 1. All Saints pag. 3 c. Therefore they must 1. Avoid wicked mens society pag. 6. c. 2. Love all especially the Saints and all those pag. 9 c. 3. Relieve each other pag. 12. c. 4. Communicate gifts and graces pag. 18. c. 5. Conceale each others frailties pg. 23. c. 6. Reprove one another pag. 32 c. 7. Strive for the peace of the Saints pag. 34. c. 8. Forgive each other pag 37 c. 2. The Lord or God the Father pag. 115. c. Therefore 1. Themselves are comforted pag. 118. c. 2. They who wrong them and neglect this communion are reproved pag. 125. c. 3. All are perswaded to this communion p. 129 c. To this end they must 1. Shunne sinne pag 130. c. 2. Shunne society of sinners pag. 135. c. 3. Imitate God pag. 138. c. 4. Pray to God rightly pag 140. c. 5. Heare Gods Word delightfully pag. 142 c. 6. Seeke the Lord. pag. 146 c. 7. Sanctifie the Lords Day pag. 14. 9 c. 8 Choose that which pleaseth God pag 177 c. 9. Keepe Covenant with God pag 178 c. 10. Cleave to God pag 189. c. 11. Serve God Pag
yet fully resolved that neither I will nor mine shall if I can remedy it sport and play upon the Lords Day Surcease henceforward O froward flesh to hinder me with thine idle objections Ob. 1 Tell me no more that the Lords Day wil be a sad Day if I may not sport this day bringing sweeter and sounder delights Tell not me that many men must have recreations therefore upon the Lords Day For as my workes have toiled them so my time shall refresh them if such refreshing is needfull I my selfe could not take it well to have another mans toiled servant sent to me for food because he must have food he having wrought hard Tell me no more that many good Divines think them lawfull on the Lords Day for if it be disputable it 's the safest course not to use them And what Divine will say it is not lawfull not to sport upon the Lords Day Consid 3 Whether worldly words are not unlawfull upon the Lords Day 1. Since the Lord Iehovah in expresse words by the mouth of his Prophet Isaiah 58. 13. saith thus not speaking thine owne words 2. And for these following causes 1. Where the Lord hath commanded the whole man to rest from servile works there he commands the hand to rest from working the foot from walking and the tongue from talking But in the fourth Commandement Thou shalt doe no manner of worke the Lord hath commanded the whole man c. Therefore c. 2. Those things which as lets hinder the duties of the Lords Day are forbidden But worldly words as le ts hinder the duties of the Lords Day scil holy conference therefore c. 3. Where bodily workes are forbidden there those things are forbidden which hinder the sanctifying of the Sabbath as much or more then bodily workes doe But bodily workes are forbidden therefore worldly words hindering more the sanctifying of the Sabbath Because a man may worke alone but cannot talke without company 4. That Commandement which ties the outward man from the deed done ties the tongue from talking of the same e. g. The sixt forbids murther and murtherous words The seventh adultery and adulterous words The eight theft and deceitfull words But the fourth Commandement ties the outward man from worldly workes and therefore the tongue from worldly words And therefore whether many people are not much to blame who make the Lords Day a reckoning day with workmen a directing day what shal be done the next weeke a day of idle tattle about their pleasures profits gossips tales and other mens matters Whether worldly thoughts are not unlawfull on the Lords 4. Consid Day considering 1. That each Commandement extends to the thought binding it e. g. the 6 from anger the 7 from lust the 8 from covetousnesse c. 2. That the Lord especially requireth the inward man Luk. 10. 27. 3. That worldly thoughts hinder from heavenly and therefore whether those are not blame-worthy who busie their heads upon such daies in plodding about their worldly businesse c. And lastly if it be not a pious and profitable a comfortable and necessarie resolution for a man constantly to purpose to do as followeth Affirm 1 Medit. Whereas many men so be they goe to the Church perswade themselves they have done their devoyre to the vtmost if not superabundantly promerited although before and after those solemne sacred and publique meetings they let loose the reynes permit their hearts licentiously to take liberty of wandring and roming libertine-like into a world of businesses and to plunge themselues into innumbred swarmes of plottings and contrivements for the effecting of some dunghill delights or worldly profits yet I for my part although I cannot as I would will doe what I can to withdraw my meditations upon the Lords day from such like trashy and fruitlesse wanderings and bend them to thinke earnestly and orderly upon 1. The workes of God generall and speciall 1. To the glory of God beholding in their innumerable varieties and melodious harmony the powerfull omnipotency and infinite wisdome of God 2. To mine owne endlesse comfort viewing in these the boundlesse and bottomelesse depths of the Lords ample and gracious favours towards me giving me such a being such senses members calling substance such variety of creatures to delight feed and guard mee such a Sauiour such a Word such excellent meanes to save me c that thus feeding my soule with such solacing considerations I may edge and keene my dull desires to praise and magnifie a God so good and gratious 3. To the humiliation of my soule naturally prone to an overweaning conceipt of its owne nothingnesse pondering the grievous groanings and massy burdens of distressefull miseries Gods justice hath inflicted upon the poore creatures for my sinnes and finding my selfe to come short of them in obeying the will of God I continually fayling they alwayes doing that for which they were made 4. For mine owne instruction these being a large and faire booke written by the LORD IEHOVAH in faire and capitall letters wherein he that runnes if he have but eyes in his head may reade his owne fickle and fading condition being like the withering grasse the basenesse of himselfe made of dust and turning to it againe the uncomfortable irk some and fastidious condition of death a spirituall darknesse scil sinne and iniquity resembled to death and darknes naturall Yea the booke of the creatures is a library so full of learned literature that contemptible Ants and glorious Angels beautified stars and basest vermine yea all beings created to swim and play in the liquid streames and vast ocean to flie about with out stretched wing in the thin and perspicuous ayre or to runne and range upon the sound and solid earth by their contentation with and thankfulnesse for their little pittance and obedience to the Lord their bountifull benefactour preach loudly to me contentment with and thankfulnesse for my so large allowance and obedience to a father so beneficiall to me undeserving That so by the meditation of the workes of God I may be stirred up to trust love feare and obey God pondering and perusing his works of justice and mercy The Word of God especially that meanes of my salvation I last of all enjoyed in the Word of God read and preached for when I consider 1. That this is a daily duty Ios Assidua meditatio memoriam efficit indel ebilem Chrys Hom. 35. in Gen. 1. 8. Psal 1. 2 practised by the best men as David Psal 119. 97. 99. and the Virgin Mary Luk. 2. 19. 2. That as meditation without hearing is erroneous so hearing without meditation is barren and the dulnesse of my blunt and obtuse and Affirm 2 the leaking property of my running out memory I cannot but thinke it a fitting duty upon the Lords day thus to doe Conference 2 Secondly whereas many unguard the doores of their lips and suffer those little unruly members to enflame each others ministring and
fellowship 219 c. Grace how like 4. Its spreading nature and excellencie 19 c How it may be lost how not 118 c. We must labour to worke it in others and why 19 c. We must grow in grace if we wil be like Christ 262 263. H HAte sinners and how 10. Sinne and why 39 Hearing of Gods Word needfull and excellent 142 c. Obiections against it answered 143 How to heare and faulty hearers 14● c. How we must heare and why 172. 181. Heaven hoped for in vaine by many 88. Holinesse See sanctification How the Saints are holy Honour due to God How God is honoured Why with soule and body both Why with the soule especially How with the tongue and life 72 c. Motives to honour God 84 c. Honour of the Saints 198. And of their communion See glory Hope of Saints its excellency 236. Hosts are Gods 122. Husbands duty 203. Saints husband transcendent 46 203. Hypocrites how hurtfull 26 55. I IGnorance hurtfull its fruits 97 273. Inheritance of Saints unparalel'd 45. Inhabitation in Christ See Christ Whence it is 270 271. Ingrossers of corne censured 67. Imitation of God wherein 138 c. Of Christ wherein and why 257. Of men wherein 262. Imprecations to be shunned though Saints have imprecated and why 76. Imputation of Christs righteousnesse 235. Ioy of the Saints 129 192 224. Why they reioyce 239. Iustice of God by whom abused Obiections against it answered 77. Iustification handled with its causes and fruits 233 c. Whence it is how it differs from sanctification 237. How once iustified are alwayes 240. K KNowledge saving honoureth God 73. It is needfull to do Gods will 97. and necessary to enioy Gods Spirit 272. L LAbour in lawfull callings commendable 24. When not to be taxed of covetousnesse 68 103. Labour on the Lords Day See workes Lords Day why so called 150. Duties of the Lords Day See Sabbath Law how it is kept by the Saints 187. It binds How Christians are under the Law how not 184 192. How free from the Law 243 c. Liberalitie See mercy It s excellency 224. Liberty of Christians frees not them from Gods service 192. Not from authority gives not liberty to sinne Frees not from sinne 243. Not from the obedience of the Morall Law 243 c. Wherein Christian liberty consists and its excellency 248 c. Life godly honoureth God 83. Love of God to us how great Gods lovelinesse 49 c. We ought to love God Who truly love him 46 c. Their paucity 47 c. Love to God greatly rewarded the first and great commandement and how 49 c. It honoureth God 74. By it we cleave to God 190 The rule of love 194 c. What the Saints do love 239. Motives to love God 49 c. Love all men why and how all Saints and how 9 c. Love of Saints whence M MAn an excellent creature 85. Serves himselfe sinfully served sinfully how Disswasives Meditation for the Lords Day 165. Delightfull meditations 173. See thoughts Mercy of God what 79 60. To whom it belongs no incouragement to sinne 60 79. By whom it is abused 79. Mercifull workes of diverse sorts Their excellency 170 c. Who must give when how much of what how 13 c. N NEw creatures How Saints have all parts new 238 c. O OAths hādled by creatures 81. Rashnes Disswasives 81. Excuses answered 82. See swearing Obedience to Gods Law part of the Covenant of mans part 182. P PEace of Saints excellent with them necessary 34 c. What we must yeeld to for peace 36. It s excellency 235. Wicked have no peace 226 c Perfection how Saints perfect how not 139 242. Obiections answered 55. Persecutors of good men wofull 126 c. 209 c. Pharisees what who like them in these dayes 56. Piety a cause of persecution 212. Please God what pleaseth God that is to be chosen 177. Poore of two sorts 68. They must depend upon God 68. Be content 109. Poverty not to be feared 123. Christs poverty 222. Prayerlesse persons woefull 140. What prayers are fruitlesse 140. What kind of prayer is prevailing 141. It is a duty for the Lords Day 170. Yea delightfull 172. It is part of the covenant 182. Needfull 272. Whence it is 270. To pray for earthly things lawfull 103. Preachers are builders 207. Their faults may not keepe us from hearing 143 c. Priviledges of the Saints 218 c. Prophanest people usually the greatest persecutours 212 Profession is good though some Professors are bad 29 c. Providence good and lawfull 68 103. See depend on Gods providence Pure how Saints are pure 141 242. Puritanes what meant 29 212 No Pharisees 56. Not covetous 69. Not of wicked life 214. Scarce any of them begge 70. Or come to the gallowes 113. R REading Scripture and good Bookes a Sabbath duty and how to read 169. Recreation for the Lords Day 171. What is unlawfull 160. Redemption for Gods honour 80 86. It s excellency 86. Regeneration whence 270. It s necessity Danger of its want ● 72. Reliefe See mercy Remission of sinnes a great favour to whom it belongs 224. See forgivenesse Repentance late very dangerous 61 c. Reproofs how to be used who faulty Why we should reprove 32 c. Restitution 17 39. Riotous persons usually covetous 66. Revenge a great sinne 39. Reproches for Christ should not discontent 110. Not to be feared 123. Riches uncertainty 105. Vanity 106. Of the Saints 222 c. S SAbbath Day to be kept holy the name is Morall it s many names Motives to keep it holy and what then lawfull and unlawfull 149 c. Sacraments of the Iewes and ours how the same how differ Excellency of ours 181 c. Saints fellowship See fellowship Their excellency 127. Their portion to be afflicted 126 210 Sanctification handled with its fruits how it differs from iustification 237 c. It is necessary 272. Whence it is 270. Sathan not to be feared 124. His obiections against perseverance answered 119. Scripture though alledged by Hereticks decides controversies 2●6 Seeking of God a needfull duty what it is manner and meanes of seeking and motives to seeke God 146 c. Servants of God who who not Services of God and of others How to serve God and why bad Masters hindering this service of God 191 c. Sicke persons duty 170 Visiting them a Sabbath duty 170. How to visit who faulty in visiting 170. Sincerity needfull 92 272. Its signes 93. 〈…〉 a Sabbath 〈…〉 ing 〈…〉 Sinnes 〈◊〉 be concealed 23. And why 28. Sinne 〈◊〉 shunned 53. Yea secret sinnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 57 9● Least degrees of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all sinne and why sweet sinner 9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sins of Saints and wicked men 57 c. How good men sinne ibid. What they do having sinned 59. How they are free from sinne 124 245. Their sinnes no incouragements to sin 62 c. 〈◊〉 encouragements answered 60 c. Disswasives from sinne 63 136 c. Sinne must be shunned if we imitate Christ 262. How sinne is infinite 78. God no author of sinne 77. It is an evill master by whom it is served disswasives from serving it 198. Sinnes of former times ●s great as now 254 255. Why seeme greater now 255. Sheepe of Christ their duty 276. Sonnes of God who 201. Their duty See Father Society See fellowship Soule is to honour God and first 73. Sparing how commendable 25. Spirit of God dwels in Saints Its fruits in them their miserie who want and scorne this co-habitation 270 271. Who falsly boast of the Spirit Who have who want the Spirit 272 273. Duties of both 274. How the Spirit is grieved how quenched how gotten how kept 275. Sports whether lawfull on the Lords Day Reasons Disswasives 160 c. Strength Spirituall whence 207. Swearing now an honour to God 80 Anabaptists confuted Disswasives from all evill kinds of swearing 80 c. Excuses answered 81 c. Sorrow of Saints 239. Sufferings See afflictions T TOngue is to honour God 74. Many wayes 74 c. Thoughts unlawfull on Gods Day 164. Time-serving hurtfull 93. V VIsiting the sicke a Sabbath duty How who faulty 170 Vsury a filthy sinne 92 100. W VVAnts temporall how supplied to the Saints 123. Will of God must be done 88. It s reward 88. It must be done totally 90 Faithfully 92. Timely 93. Continually 95. Meanes motives let removed 96 c. Mans will contrary to Gods 97. Word of God a Word of faith grace salvation reconciliation life 142. It s excellency 75 172. It is to be talked of 74. Not to be iested with 75. No to defend vice nor dis●hearten vertue 75. Not to be used in charmes 76. Words not fit for the Lords Day 163. What then commendable 167 c. Workes of God for his glory mans good 165. Workes unlawfull for the Lords Day with disswasives 157. World by whom served disswasives from serving it 197. Wrath a great sinne 39. Wicked men are fooles 128. Their society to be shunned and why 6 c. 135 c. Y YOung people should do Gods will and why 93.
observing the matter of this Treatise then in enquiring after the Author thereof Expede Herculem By this small parcell of his paines thou maist iudge what the man is Yea by a studious reading of this Booke thou maist know thy selfe and understand of what company thou art Thou maist hereby iudge of companies and know which is the best In this Treatise thou shalt finde that the true Good-fellowes here described have a sweet communion one with another yea and with the Father and his Sonne What high prerogatives and excellent priviledges these be what cordials are thence ministred to poore distressed soules what thereupon to be avoided what to be endeavoured after are distinctly and succinctly set out in this Discourse Such apt and iust consequences are diducted from the principall Points as most if not all the heads of our Christian Religion are explaned Brevity and Perspicuity are here ioyned together Read and marke and thou shalt find such varietie of matter as will minister delight with profit Thus much I thought good to give thee notice of not simply to commend the worke but rather to incite thee to seeke after the treasure which is hid therein that so thou maist shew thy selfe like the wise Merchant who having heard of a Pearle of great price and of a rich treasure could not be quiet till he had got them as the Lord noteth among his Parables Farewell in the Lord. Thine in the Lord G. M. The Contents SHewing the occasion and drift of this Discourse pag. 1. 2. All Saints have fellowship together Ten Reasons proving the Point The Saints have like grace and glory and how Sixe Objections against this fellowship propounded and answered pag. 3. c. Saints must not communicate with the wicked Reasons why not Disswasions from their communion how we may how we may not communicate with the wicked and with whomwe may not pag 6. c. Saints must love each other entirely and why how we may and why we must love all men even the wicked and how we may not we must especially love good men five motives perswading five objections answered and how to love the Saints pag. 9. c. Saints must communicate gifts and graces each to other 4. reasons why and 6. motives perswading to relieve 2. reasons why rich men should give 6. Le ts removed the poore must give their objections answered how much we must give 3. reasons why we must give much when we must give 5. reasons why it is not good putting off till death of what a man must give after what manner and to what end p. 12. c. Grace must be communicated it is the best work of mercy though sleighted by some derided by others 6. motives to communicate grace from Saints examples Gods glory the nature of grace the practice of the wicked our brothers gaine and our owne pag. 18. c. Saints frrailties are to be concealed not that they are such offendours as the world deemes them sc they are not covetous because they are painefull why they are painefull neither because they are not wastfull why they are frugall neither because they are not alwaies open handed to clamorous beggers why they relieve beggers Dissemblers not here justified but condemned slandering the Saint 2. motives perswading to conceale the frailties of the Saints what Puritanes are naught who are here pleaded for 5. answers to the worlds objection some Professours are naught therefore all are naught pag. 23. c. Saints must reprove and be reproved how we must reprove a man faulty may reprove 4. cavils against reproving confuted 3. motives perswading to reprove pag. 32. c. Saints must be peaceable what peace such have others discord should not dissever Saints what we must yeeld to for this peace pag. 34. c. Saints must forgive yet Magistrates may punish Men may sue at law and how How men may forgive who must forgive whom when what and how the envious wrathfull and revenger no rule for us 7. motives perswading to forgive and objections answered pag. 37. c. II. Booke GOD is the Saints Father he is their Father all or most of those wayes whereby man is father to man He begets feeds clothes corrects provides inheritance for and marieth them pag. 41. c. Saints must love God Few love God truly and who they be 4. motives perswading to love God pag. 46. c. Saints must shunne sinne They are not without sinne contrary-minded confuted selfe conceipted Pharisees censured who are such a sixe-fold difference betwixt the sinnes of good and bad men a threefold incouragement of sinners to sinne answered sc Gods mercifulnesse 2. Hope of late repentance 3. Saints sinning Motives disswading from sinne pag. 53. c. Saints must depend upon Gods providence Covetousnesse censured who are covetous Depopulatours censured pious poore encouraged to depend on God meanes must be used and may without coveteousnesse Puritanes how covetous how not 4. motives to depend upon God pag. 65. c. Saints must honour God how God is honoured with soule and body and why why with the tongue and how sc by talking reverently of the Word 4. abuses disswasives from each 2. By talking reverently of Gods titles 3. Abuses disswasives from each 3. By speaking reverently of divine Attributes how God is just how mercifull who dishonour him in both 4. By speaking reverently of Gods workes how of creation and redemption 5. By a right use of anoath 2. Reasons against Anabaptists 4. kinds of wicked swearing 4. disswasives from superstitious oaths 6. from causelesse and 4. objections answered How to honour God in our lives 6. Motives to honour God pag. 72. c. Saints must do Gods will Selfe-deceivers Gods will must be done wholly faithfully timely and continually Motives to do Gods will and directions how pag. 88. c. Saints must be content with Gods allowance depopulation usurie covetousnesse and pride from discontent censured 3. reasons why we should be content Honest labour not forbidden Nor prayer for temporall things why and how pray for them Nor providence Nor begging allowed 8. motives to contentment what food should content what raiment calling a poore estate and why with afflictions and why pag. 98. c. III. Booke OBjections against the fellowship of Saints answered pag. 113. c. Saints have fellowship with the Father the Point proved and confirmed by foure reasons pag. 115. c. Comforting the Saints against Bellarmines uncomfortable doctrine of falling from grace and the Devils temptations to this purpose against enemies poverty infamie exile death sinne and other terrours pag. 118. c. Reprehending wicked men their danger presuming to harme the Saints their folly in not laying hold of this societie pag. 12● c. Perswading by a threefold motive to this communion p. 129. c. They who have or desire this fellowship must shunne sinne because it is darkenesse death it angers God crucifies Christ grieves the Holy Ghost makes men monsters it
die that sacrifices by this meanes are made abominable new moones and Sabbaths hatefull and prayers not sufferable It is most unlike Gods workes Sinne is a worke of the flesh Gal. 5. 19. His of the Spirit Sinne is a worke of Sathan 1 Iohn 3. 8. Sinne is a worke of the body Rom. 8. 13. His of the Spirit It is that which Christ Iesus his Heavenly Husband soules Saviour by whose meanes it is that the Lord is become his gracious Father came to destroy 1 Ioh. 1. 7. 22. 3. 5. And that upon good grounds It being against his Fathers glory the salvation of his Elect it being contrary to his Fathers works and advancement of his kingdome CHAP. IIII. Duty 3. Saints must depend on Gods providence IF God be our Father we ought to cast our care upon him Duty 3. depending upon his fatherly providence for food rayment and the supply of all outward things This truth being a maxime surely confirmed in those sacred lines written by the heavenly Majesty and generally assented unto by all men I supposing there is not a man to be found either so unexperienced or brainlesse as not to consent that childrens sole dependance is on parents wise and carefull providence I shall not need long to insist in the confirmation of this Thesis In a word David Psal 55. 22. hath these words Cast thy burden upon the Lord q. d. If there be any thing which troubleth thee or that thou thy selfe standest in need of commit the care thereof into Gods hand staying thy selfe altogether upon his providence He shall sustaine thee i. God will play the part of a good Father St. Peter 1 Pet. 5. 7. Casting all your care upon him for he careth for you Let it be the badge and character of all gold-sicke Mammonists and earthly-minded worldlings in whose catalogue I include not onely greedy inclosers cut-throat usurers unjust getters but also swil-bellyed drunkards lascivious wantons riotous spend-thrifts c. For although these in their owne apprehensions and the worlds conceipt are free from avarice Yet it 's evident that they are notable Mammonists as thus 1. Those are truly covetous whose desire of other mens goods is such that for the obtaining thereof they sticke not to use meanes indirect and unlawfull Eph. 5. 5. But these riotous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fraudater alioni avid●● avar●● Eph. 5. 5. roisters for the generall have desires enlarged as bell after their neighbours goods little regarding how they get so they may have to spend upon their lusts hence it is that they 'le be usurers make no scruple of oaths lyes or any such like sinister means to minister fewell to the consuming fire of their insatiable and ravenous lusts 2. Those who desire worldly things before and above any 〈◊〉 Col. 3. 5 thing are covetous persons Col. 3. 5. But these jolly follows desire wordly things before above any thing For they pursue with such enraged thirsting appetites carthy drosse that they will not refraine upon the Lords Day from plodding and pratling about their adored God They cannot spare the Lord a fragment of their time to pray with their families or in private They cannot when God by his judgements soveraigne authority by commandement the necessities of their brethren and their owne duty in joynes sanctity dayes of humiliation and fasting least they should be undone 3. They who are lovers of mony are covetous persons as appears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by cōparing He. 13. 5. 1 Tim. 6. 10. In both which places the word is the same and translated in the one love of mony in the other covetousnesse But these men are lovers of money preferring it before the glory of God their soules health and their poore brother And therefore although they stick not bravingly to defray large expences at some drunken sitting and lash out in trimmer attyre perhaps then their neighbours yet are not to be excluded the lists of covetous persons Let it be I say the note of such to distrust Gods gracious providing for them From which mistrustfull diffidence Insoelicissimi p●uperes sic sunt quasi inter concertantes procellas in medio mori posit● nunc istcrum 〈◊〉 nunc all num stictibus ●bruuntur Salv. lib. 5 pag. 514. their in humane depopulations unnaturall usuryes purloynings lying defrauding and an innumbred swarme of such unconscionable kinds of gettings whereby they teare in pieces their poore brethren contrary to the lawes of grace nature and charity doe streame forth But let not the least thought of diffident distrustfulnesse seaze upon the innobled soule of any in Gods family No not of such whose drooping soules are ready to saint and sinke under the pressures of poverty and scantnesse 1. For be it that inregard 1. Of the inhumane practices The poore mans hurters of madded and irreligious depopulatours an order of men more worthy banishment from our English Coasts in my apprehension then the jesters juglers loyterers vagabonds and fooles which Marcus the Emperour shipped from Rome these being in my conceipt the greatest bane to our Common-wealth robbing 1. Our Dread Soveraigne of many able subsidy men so of maintenance Of many able fighting men so of safety Lessening the number of his subjects so of honour 2. Our country of its native commodities corne and cattell the towne in tillage maintaining farre more cattell then the same inclosed And of the fruitfull endeavours of many able bodies there being a necessary dependance of the greatest number of trades upon the tilled towne and the tilled towne besides the many benefits other wayes affoords imployment to as many if not more shepheards then the same inclosed 2. And in regard of the never satisfied thirsting appetites of greedy gripes of this world whose hunger after golden vanities cannot be satisfied with any additions to their former sufficiencies Which unquenchable humour causeth them to get into their hands as much as possibly they can little considering that the Common-wealth is benefited most by distribution of its imployments into as many families as is possible and to ingrosse in these scarcer times more corne then is fitting to turne the staffe of bread excessively into a drunken commodity for their owne inrichment no price being ever great enough to satiate their greedy appetite to be wasted by the sons of Belial upon their quaffingale-benches whose vicious humour is so patronized That what with Officers unwillingnesse to displease their drunken neighbours nothing regarding God King conscience and the present calamity What with the many proctours such have in private and publique some in pulpit daring to exclaime against those who disease these drunken Divels Except Iustice deales wisely and resolutely it wil be as great a waster as I know any Be it I say in regard of these two evils it is a matter of great difficulty if not of impossibility to have befitting subsistence for the greatest part of the poorer sort of people The former depriving them
1. By talking reverently of the unmatchable sacred sanctifying Word of God a necessary duty imposed upon all Gods children booke-learned or illiterate Deut. 6. 7. These words shal be in thy heart and thou shalt talk of them Yea it 's impossible the Word of God should be in the heart as it dwelleth richly in the heart of Gods children and not in the mouth Psal 37. 30. 31 The mouth of the righteous the Law of God is in his heart Abus 1 Oh that I could disswade all that heare me this day from all vaine and fruitlesse conferences of the Word of God such I meane which tend neither to the glory of God nor edification of mankind which that I may doe I will propound these following particulars to be advisedly considered Dissw 1 1. This Word of God is a most medicinable plaister of the soule Psal 107. 20. Therefore to be applied to heale 2. It is leaven Mat. 13. 33. Therefore to be imployed to alter the nature of man turning his heart first then his members that he may lead a new life 3. It is bread the soules bread Prov 10. 21. Amos 8. 11. Not onely vivifying the same but also preserving its health and sanity making it lively and full of vigour 4. It s water yea a transcendent water for pleasure profit and necessity It is water drawne out of the Wels of salvation Isa 12. 3. Still refreshing waters Psal 23. 2. And as the sweet distilling raine dewing downe abundance of fatnesse upon the thirsty ground Isa 55. 10 11. It is water to mundifie the putrified sores of a wounded soule To coole the scorching heat of fiery trials and hellish temptations To animate with all refreshing comforts the unwearied soule pressing forward with an ardent earnestnesse in the race of Christianity and fighting with an invincible courage and undaunted resolution under the Lord Iesus To fructifie the soule naturally b●ren of goodnesse that it may be as a field fruitfull in good works 5. It s a treasure unmatchable and peerelesse Mat 13. 44. To be desired most earnestly esteemed most highly kept most carefully and lost most unwillingly 6. It s the excellent heritage of the Lords inheritance Psal 119. 11. Surmounting farre in worth or value the most refined silver and purest gold of Ophir Psal 19 10. 119. 72. All manner of desired riches 14. And the richest spoiles taken after a wished conquest Ver. 162. Is it so as so it is and shall we then use it fruitlesly God forbid Abus 2 Secondly from framing or reciting jests of the Word of God What and if Iulianian A postasie scoffes at those Heavenly Oracles saying turne the other cheeke after blowes given to Christians according to your Masters Precept What though godlesse Atheisme sports it selfe with such sacred phrases yet my brethren do not you Dissw 1 It is not good jesting with the mighty hand and powerfull arme of the worlds Creatour Isa 49. 22. 53. 1. The rod of Gods mouth 11. 4. The rod of his power Psa 110. 2. A sharpe two edged sword piercing to the dividing asunder of the soule and spirits Abus 3 It is not safe dallying with such a devouring fire Ierem 5. 14. 2● 29. Thirdly from abusive usage of it in countenancing vice or disheartening vertue Let none of us dare to wrest these sacred lines and wring the Lords sword as it were out of his owne hand Dissw 1 It is an axe keene and sharpe Luke 1. 9. To destroy sinne not grace It is a sword double edg'd and cutting Psal 45. 4. Neither to offend vertue nor defend iniquity It is a hammer able to 3. 〈◊〉 breake and bruise to powder the Adamantine stony hardnesse of mans heart Ier. 23. 29. To batter downe Sathan and all his complices not to hurt the Lords Annointed It is a goad sharpe and piercing Eccl. 12. 11. To stirre up the good being sloathfull to discharge their duty to gall onely the wicked and ungodly Abus 4 Fourthly from talking of it charmingly of all inchauntments those are most dishonourable to God most acceptable to Sathan and most hurtfull to the charmer which are Disc of Witch Dissw 1. made of the Scriptures saith Mr. Perkins It is the peculiar heritage of the righteous Psal 119. 11. What have you to do Ob. 1. An. with it therefore you sonnes of Belial It 's a medicine True to draw out and dry up sinne being rightly applyed not to cure the bodily sicknesse of men or beasts It 's a pearle Mat. 13. 45 46. True to inrich and garnish the innobled soule of Gods children and therefore with all diligence to be laid up in the heart as a peerelesse gemme but not to be hang'd about the neck to drive away Divels 2. By talking reverently of the titles of God we honour our Father By speaking of these vainely we dishonour him Abus 1 Either by vaine admiration cursed imprecation or abusive benedictions I earnestly desire and wish that the vaine admirer who upon every unwonted accident breakes out into such like speeches O Lord O Iesus c. Would seriously consider Dissw 1 1. That he hath not the least warrant for this his folly in any parcell of Gods Bookes 2. That he is Iehovah a being of greatest Majesty and power who can consume him in a moment with the breath of his nostrils whose glorious titles he so fondly abuseth 3. That he dareth not so idly intermingle the sacred Names of his consecrated Soveraigne Humana sort redlit aqualis Salv. ● Gub. lib. 3. pag. 75. in his ordinary communication Abus 2 Dissw 1 Yet is he but a man the son of a woman as subject to death and judgement as himselfe Secondly that the cursed imprecatour and rash petitioner whose mouth is wont to belch out most hellish language wishing things evill and execrable to befall others or himselfe either absolutely or conditionally would be instructed that he hath no ground from the imprecations of those renowned Saints Paul and David These did imprecate others Psal 109. 2 Tim. 4. 14. True These were men of Ob. 1 extraordinary gifts being inabled to discerne the persons against whom they prayed to be incurable and they did imprecate out of a pure zeale to Gods honour and of his glory David did imprecate himselfe although conditionally Psal 7. 4 5. True But the matter was weighty and there was no other meanes to manifest the truth i. e. his innocency in that wherewith he was charged and therefore no warrant for such like horride and blasphemous speeches I would I was hang'd I would I was damn'd the divell take me c. And be advised premeditately to ponder in what a pitifull plight he was in should the Lord deale with him according to his wish Abus 3 And thirdly that the abusive blessers who thanke God for their unconscionable gettings and other execrable impieties like Micahs mother Iudg. 17. 2. and Saul 1. Sam. 23. 21. making God the author of such their
impieties Dissw 1 would abandon those blasphemous benedictions considering that God is the only and chiefe good goodnesse it selfe the author of all good from whom nothing but good And as for evill he doth prohibit the doing detests the act and punisheth the agent which he would not do was it his owne worke That God is wisedome sin is folly How can wisedome produce folly God is justice sinne injustice How can justice produce injustice God is mercy sinne is misery whose beginning is dolefull continuance toilesome and end shamefull and therefore that God cannot be the cause or author of their sinnes 3. By speaking reverently of his divine attributes as justice mercy wisdome c. That mighty Lord on whose hand the King of Israel leaned dishonoured the Lord in doubting of or questioning the plēty promised 2 king 7. 2. So Moses by shortning the Lords hand Num. 11. 21 22 23. diverse do no lesse daily complaining of their ill lucke bad fortune I wil for this time summarily and succinctly give a tast only in two justice and mercy For the first we honour the Lord declaring him to be as indeed he is most just and that 1. Simply and absolutely 1. Iustice as hee is of himselfe infinitely and perfectly righteous in himselfe and of himselfe 2. Respectively and relatively in regard of his office he being the most righteous judge of men and angels For 1. Knowledge and understanding of things and persons to be judged 2. Care of equity 3. Rightfull authority to determine and decide 4. Power and ability to punish offendours and free the harmelesse innocent which are in God infinitely and transcendently Abus 1 Surcease therfore O you sonnes of men to taxe God of injustice either Because he punisheth finite sinnes with infinite punishments for what though sinne as it is a transient action is finite and temporary yet in regard of the object against whom it is committed of the subject wherein it is resident mind of the sinner and law whereof it is a breach it is infinite Or because he loved Iacob and hated Esau before they had done good or euill Who art thou that darest reply against God Hath the potter power over the clay of the same lumpe to make one vessell to honour another to dishonour and hath not God May he not do with his owne what he will Rom. 9. 20. 21. Or thirdly by your overbold and saucy presumptiousnesse in sinning sealing to your soules a generall acquitt all from all those unutterable insufferable tortures the just judge of heaven and earth hath threatned against impenitents because he is mercifull so wholy dispoyling that glorious majesty of this divine attribute Iustice A good divine saith thus let fond presumption M. Yates I 〈◊〉 Ca●●r hope for parden without payment disjoyne mercy and justice in him to whom both are alike essentiall and say although I go on in sinne yet God is abundantly mercifull go on presume and perish Mercy 2 For the second we honour our heavenly father when wee rightly ascribe mercy to him The Lord is most mercifull his mercy being of such large and endlesse extent that in regard of continuance it doth equalize eternity Psal 103. 17. In regard of reach and compasse it extends it selfe to the highest hills clouds and heavenly habitations Psal 36. 5. to all persons yea created beings yet restraining it selfe in respect of spirituall and celestiall benefits to such as carefully observe the commandements of God Deut. 7. 9. Truely and intirely love him Ibid. Confesse their sinnes and forsake them Prov. 28. 13. And turne from their transgressions le 18. 8. To God Ier. 3. 12. Two sorts of people therefore as much as in them lies robbe our heavenly father of his due honour namely such Abus 1 1. Who make him lesse mercifull then he is and that 1. By rushing headlong upon that dreadfull rocke of desperation falsifying Gods promises Cayn-like crying out their sinnes are greater then can be pardoned Whereas could they but repent truly and savingly their most deepe died scarlet-like sinnes should be blotted out of Gods remembrance 2. By comparing Gods unparaleld mercy with mortall mans The Lords being everlasting constant free and rich Mens being momentany mutable mercenary and poore 3. By an overweening conceipt of their owne worth promising to themselves undeniably those blissefull joyes for their merits sake deeming their owne worthfull actions to be sufficient to purchase that matchlesse crowne of glory if not superabundant and superrogatory Secondly who make him more mercifull then he is casting the innumbred swarmes of intollerable prodigious oathes beastly drunkennesses and other their obstinate hellish enormities upon the mercy of God as if it was a common packhorse whereon to unload their willfull and unsupportable evils causing the creatures to groane and the earth to mourne and reele to and fro tottering and staggering like a drunken man little considering that as he is mercifull so is he just and those who will sinne because God is mercifull shall surely be plagued because he is just By speaking reverently of the unspeakeable workes of God both Immanent in himselfe acknowledging with the Apostle the depth of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God and that his judgements are unsearchable and his waies past finding out and Transeunt as his wonderfull workes of creation redemption and particular workes of mercy Exod. 15. and justice 1. Sam. 3. 18. Iob 1. 21. Let these short instances in few words now suffice We honour the Lord by talking of the works of Creation after this or the like manner Who created The Lord of hostes What he made All that is made How he did it With his Word To what end His honour and glory And heere I cannot omit to reprove a most vile although vsuall kind of dishonouring the Lord in laughing to scorne persons in body deformed or in minde defective The renowned maker of the world and not the workemanship being in my shallow apprehension derided Suppose a man for instance comming into the workhouse of some skilfull artist and there beholding some piece of worke lesse curiously wrought then other should therewith sport himselfe with scoffing derision wee could not but conclude That the artificer and not the artifice is reproached Secondly we may honour the Lord by speaking reverently of the worke of the worlds redemption it declaring Who redeemed The ever blessed Sonne of God From what The curse of the Law the wrath to come the divell the hands of our enemies Wherewith His owne pretious bloud Whom his pasture sheepe And why his owne honour and glory We may honour God with our tongues by the right vse of an oath sc The person rightly qualifyed having a warrantable calling thereunto the matter being true just and of great importance the manner time and causes rightly obserued Deut. 6. 13. 10. 20. For hereby we make the Lord a witnesse judge and revenger Two sorts of people I
persons pacifie their guilty consciences justly galled for their wretched and irreligious actions like those wicked justiciaries Math. 7. 23. Who perswaded themselves but they were deceived being rejected for their workes of iniquity Verse 23. that by their prophecyings and such other good duties they should make amends for their foule enormities and procure for themselves an easie passage into the blissefull possession of the Lord of glory What and if diverse others deeme themselves and are so esteem'd by their neighbours the onely men under the Sunne because they do no hurt which alas is a poore commendation for a Christian man Yet happy would it be with our Kingdome if all Christians might be said justly to do no hurt for then it would be empty of all cut-throat usurers mercilesse depopulatours and an innumbred swarme of such like devourers for was this a sufficient commendation Why was the unprofitable servant cast into utter darknesse Why was the fruitlesse fig-tree withered Might not they have pleaded aswell destroy us not we do no hurt Might not those cursed goates Mat. 25. reply aswell although we did thee no good by relieving thy distressed members yet we did thee no hurt by impoverishing afflicting grieving oppressing Yet sure I am it is the property of Gods children to depart from evill and do good Psal 34. 14. Psal 1. 1 2. Iob 1. 8. Zach. 7. 9. He being a converted man He being of God He labouring for heaven Conforming himselfe to the precept of God and godly men Follow we therefore these shining Lamps in declining all evill and endeavouring to practise all good duties there being no mediocrity betweene well doing and evill doing For he who doth not good doth evil committing a sin of omission that so doing we may glorifie and honour our Father this other way sc in our conversations I having thus briefly and concisely declared how we are to honour our father I will now propound sixe inducements to perswade you to give our Heavenly Father his due and deserved honour both with your thoughts words and actions You will as you ought to render to all their dues tribute Mot. 1. Honour due to God to whom tribute is due custome to whom custome feare to whom feare honour to whom honour Rom. 12. 7. give to every one their right will you not Will you give unto Caesar the things which are Caesars and not to God the things which are Gods Shall Maisters servants husbands wives neighbours and strangers have that which is their due and shall not God Yea shall the Divell have his due for that I take it is no unwonted proverbe and must the Lord onely be patchingly dealt withall God forbid Glory and honour are the Lords through all eternity Rom. 11. 36. 1 Tim. 1. 17. Could you declare the glory of God not onely like those glittering heavens dockt with innumerable varieties of resplendent stars or that canopy-like firmament reaching all the world over and every where to be seen continuing from the creation without wearing fretting renting or tearing Or that swiftest runner whose Tabernacle is in the heavens of such swift celerity that in one day and night he whirles about the whole world 240000. Germane miles in one houre and whose glorious brightnesse is such that nothing can hide it from the heate thereof But with those foure beasts Rev 4. 8 9. whether the Angels of God which is most likely or such Ecclesiasticall persons the servants of God who have faithfully laboured to deliver to the Church the truth of Doctrine I will not stand to dispute also continually give glory and honour to him that sitteth on the Throne who liveth for ever and ever Yet could you not give to God more then his due for all honour and glory is due to him through all eternitie For what cause thinke you do you enjoy abundance of 2. We made to honour God unspeakable mercies from the bountifull hands of your mercifull Father Doe you imagine that you might spend your time in sportfull vanities seemingly delightfull as if you were placed upon the earth as Leviathan in the waters to play therein Deeme you the end of your noble creation to be to congregate heapes of dro●●ie dunghill and transitorie trash of earthly treasures No such matter Or doe you think you are sent into this world to devoure your poore brethren by cursed and cruell inclosure cut-throat usury or ravenous extortion Nothing lesse For the end of your creation yea of all created beings whether glorified Angels or infernall Divels whether magnificent starrie bodies or contemptible terrestriall wormes whether indued with reason or deprived of sense is the honour and glory of God The Lord hath made all things for himselfe Prov. 16. 4. I have created him for my glory Ezek. 43. 7. Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour and power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created Rev. 4. 9. 10. Must those splendent ornaments of the world Sunne Moone and Stars of light because he commanded and they were created Psal 148. 3. 5. Must hideous Dragons a terrour to men and other creatures inhabiting solitarie desarts Must fire haile stormy wind sNow and vapours Must mountaines and hils fruitfull trees and all Cedars Must beasts and cattell creeping things and slying fowles praise and honour God for their creation Much more ought mankind whether Kings of the earth or people Princes or Iudges of the earth whether yong men or maidens old men or childrē Ps 148. 11 12. For imagine we a creature compos'd of the very excellency of all creatures graunt it the best qualities of the rarest beasts and birds which excell in feature strength gesture swiftnesse voice or otherwise Give it the quintessence of the earths fecundity as the chiefest vertues of plants trees flowers and herbes good for meat and medicine the worth and value of pearles and precious stones the richnes of all the refined'st gold and chiefest treasure Infuse into the same the most odoriserous smell of all the sweetest perfumes decke it with the glory and brightnesse of the starres yet wanting an humane soule it would come farre short of the meanest reasonable creature It having a soule capable of those peerelesse graces of Gods Spirit interest in those unvaluable merits of the immaculate Lambe Christ Iesus and those immortall crownes of unspeakable glory Reason therefore thus Shall all the creatures inferiour and serviceable to me honour the Lord Am I made a creature so noble and excellent for this end Then surely I will honour the Lord my mercifull maker The glory of God is the end of your redemption 1 Cor. 6. 3. Redeemed to honour God 20. For you are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods Have you any interest in that painefull and unconceiveable redemption of Gods Elect which I hope you have then stirre up your selves after this or the
like manner Had I more then all other imaginable excellent qualities and dignities Did I excell in wisdome and understanding not onely those renowned Heathen Philosophers but even their fained Apollo and our Divine Salomon Had I the tongue of Angels and a body as beautifull as the Sunne Had I a Soveraigne command over men and all other inferiour creatures Could I enjoy the sweetest contentments of the most mellodious musicke richest robes costly cates Had I the full fruition of all the richest treasures in the whole world yet without Christ Iesus without redemption I had nothing Am I therefore partaker of that comfortable worke of redemption where justice and mercy met together whereby I am saved from the curse of the law the power of darknesse the divell the wrath to come the guilt guerdon due desert and punishment of sinne Was I redeemed not with corruptible things as silver and gold but with the pretious bloud of Christ as of a lambe without blemish and without spot Was I redeemed that I might serve him in holinesse c. Luke 1. 74. 75. that I should honour him Then surely I will not be so unmindfull of such a mercy nor unthankfull to such a benefactour but will honour him who hath thus honoured mee Gods honour ought to be the end of all our actions 1. Pet. 4. The end of all 4. 11. If any man speake if any man minister that God in all things may bee glorified 1. Cor. 10. 31. whether you eate or drinke or whatsoever you doe c. doe all to the glorie of God Doe we desire our owne advancement and benefit The 5. A meanes to be honoured way is not turke and popishlike like cruell Abimelech to build our deemed safeties upon the ruines and bloud of others or like faire tongu'd Absaloms by insinuating flatteries or like couzening Zeba●s by lies and falsehoods or by any such like Machivelian policies For could we such hopes such happinesses would proove like spiders webs But the onely meanes is by honouring the Lord 1. Sam. 2. 30. those that honour me will I honour saith the Lord. If none of these will prevaile yet let feare of punishment due to such which dishonour and deny honour to the Lord 6. Want dangerous perswade Why was Pharoah scourged with a tenfold plague was it not for dishonouring God Why was Herod eaten with wormes save because he gave not God his glory Acts 11. 23. Yea why was an entrance denyed to Moses and Aaron into the land of promise was it not because they sanctified him not in the midst of the children of Israel Deut. 32. 51. Wherefore did the Lord smite Davids childe with death save for dishonouring him 2. Sam. 12. 14. Were your strength as sinewes of iron your wisedome and policy as exact as is possibly attaineable by mortall men your friends and fauorites many and mighty Had you the swaying of earthly scepters yet neither these nor any such like can possibly secure you from the irefull revenging hand of God if you either dishonour or deny him honour Witnesse these forenamed who were kings or as kings Witnesse that saying of the Prophet to Ely 1. Sam. 2. 30. Those that honour mee those that despise me will I despise or shall be lightly esteemed i. e. accounted vile in Gods sight Doe not thinke to avoid the judgement if you will not be perswaded To deny the truth of Scripture is blasphemy To thinke he will not doe what he hath said he being faithfull and so to make him a lyar or that he cannot punish although hee hath threatned hee being omnipotent is much more blasphemous CHAP. VI. Duty 5. Saints must doe Gods will IF God is our Father we ought to doe his will The doing Duty 5. whereof allieth men to Christ Iesus Mat. 12. 50. Makes men like Christ Ioh 6. 38. Is a meanes for man to prosper Ioh. 9. 31. Is the direct rode and pathway to heaven and happinesse 1. Ioh. 2. 17. Many men alas looke for heaven who never shall enjoy it Ignorant men because they meane no harme although the Lord will come in flaming fire against such 2. Thess 1. 8. Civill honest men because they doe no hurt and render to all their dues although they want holinesse without which none can see God Heb. 12. 14. Pharisees because in diverse things they excell other men although they want the pith and marrow of Christianity These such like hope for heaven But they being asleepe in sinne dreame of fulnesse but will arise empty of plenty awake poore of heaven finde nothing lesse Heaven is promised but not to all 1. Ioh. 2. 25. It is reserved but not for all 1. Pet. 1. 4. There is a broad way leading to death traced by the most There is a straight and narrow way leading to heaven not knowne of all and found onely by few Mat. 7. 13. 14. even of those who doe the will of God Mat. 7. 21. would we know who shall goe to heaven Aske not the ignorant man his cloudy and darke understanding cannot tell he onely hopes well that 's the vtmost of his skill Aske not the carnall man he is not able to discerne such things 1. Cor. 1. 14. no more then the blinde can judge of colours Aske not the civill man he walkes in a way which seemes good to himselfe but it is not right enough to bring him to heaven Aske not the Pharisee his golden shewes are too too weake our righteousnesse must exceed his But aske of Christ who is the Truth and cannot deceive us the Light void of ignorance and the Way it selfe leading to heaven by his example by his merits and by his doctrine and he will tell us we must doe the will of his father which is in heaven Mat. 7. 21. Thinke not O thou painted sepulchre with thy lording tongue and divelish heart Thinke not O thou carnall christian with thy Lord Lord living in iniquity to have the prerogatives of Gods sonnes but shew thy faith by thy workes thy profession by thy practise Ioyne with Lord Lord doing of Gods will so shalt thou declare thy selfe to be the childe of God so shalt thou obtaine the proper priviledge of Gods children the kingdome of heaven 1. Let the worldling doe the will of his god Mammon therefore as moles blinded in the earth or as the horse without understanding who knowes no greater felicity then plenty of hay and provender onely tune this note who will shew us any good whereas all his wished contentments bring him no true content being never able to satiate his soule witnesse Ahab 1. King 21. 5. he had a kingdome yet still hee needs something a garden of hearbes witnesse the rich man Luke 12. 17. who had so much that he could not tell what to doe yet still hee is in a pecke of troubles for having plenty hee wants roome he knowes not what to do yet for these unprofitable things which cannot add
out-cries against all such who question their society with God they having ever in a readinesse Lord Lord. At what time soever c. They are men of good meaning although they are not bookish They have a sure beliefe in God They love God above all and their neighbour as themselves God they hope did not make them to damne them all men are sinners as well as themselves They hope to be saved before or as soone as the strictest Saint-seeming Puritanes of them all These and such like traditionary conceipts being in their shallow apprehensions sufficient to quiet their guilty consciences from ever accusing them to put to silence and make mute those cutting conclusions and peremptory propositions of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6. 9. 10. Neither fornicators c. Gal. 5. 19 20 21. An Antidote sufficient to counterpoyse against the poysonfull venome of their infectious impieties A paime●t equivalent to countervaile the numberlesse debts of their hainous enormities And graces availeable to equalize them with the Saints and annexe them firmely to this Divine Society which is with the Father Yet I humbly intreate and beseech yea I charge and command in the name of the Lord Iehouah all you who either hope for have or hunger after this Coelestiall Society to have no fellowship with the fruitlesse works of darknesse to forsake and flee from sinne and iniquity Sinne is darknesse Rom. 13. 12. Cast off the workes of Mot. 1. darknesse Eph. 5. 11. Fruitlesse workes of darknesse 1 Thes 5. 4. Not in darknesse Darknesse it is in respect of its author who is the Prince of darknesse 2. Of its fountaine the darke heart of man 3. Of the nature of the nature of its author he hates the light 4. Of the time wherein done the night 1 Thes 5. 7. Of its fruits eternall darknesse Wicked men are walkers in darknesse 1 Ioh. 1. 6. Yea such wayes of darknesse that I am altogether ignorant whereunto to resemble it Should I paralell it with Cimerean darknesse that no whit comparable it being occasioned by the farre distance of the Sunne from that place and people and so but naturall an absence of light naturall this by the absence of the splendent rayes of the rich and radiant graces of the Sunne of righteousnesse therefore a spirituall darknesse containing the fearefull estate of unbeleevers in this world Or with that Aegyptian plague of darknesse which was palpable There is no comparison by that their bodily eyes were blinded by this of the soule 2 Cor. 4. 4. That was but for a short time of continuance this otherwise That kept them from mooving this hoodwinks and infatuates them so that although they go yet whither they know not 1 Ioh. 2. 11. But in God is no darknesse at all 1 Ioh. 1. 5. Sinne is death Math. 8. 22. Let the dead burie their dead Eph. 2. 12. Dead in trespasses and sinnes 5. 14. Arise from the dead 1 Tim 5. 6. Dead while she lives 1 Ioh. 3. 14. Passed from death Well may sinne be called death 1. It deserving death 2. Causing death Rom. 5. 12. 3. Being odious to a living soule as death to a living man 4. Bitter as death 5. It disabling the soule from well-doing And 6. destroying as death But God is life 1 Ioh. 1. 2. Is it a grounded axiome Omne dissimile est in sociabile That every dissimilitude is insociable Do we all know that light and darknesse can never accord but the one is ever a privation of the other Doth experience daily declare unto us that there is not the least society betwixt living and dead bodies although of the most intimate confederates Although the one a most compassionate mother the other an entirely affected child Yea although of the lovingest mates that ever were linked in the sacred bonds of conjugall society But the living as disjoyned from the dead parts them away by a speedy interring them in the earth And is it possible think for God and sin twixt whom there is the greatest repugnancy to accord Can any so much as dreame of yet dreames are but dreames having fellowship with those fruitlesse workes of darknesse which are dead works yea death it selfe and with the Lord of light and life Sinne doth inkindle the wrathfull indignation of the irefull sinne-revenging God making him so sore displeased that he threw downe Angels from his heavenly habitations into that infernall lake of endlesse woe exil'd our first parents out of Eden that Paradise of God brake up the fountaines of the great deepe and opened the floud-gates of heaven and destroyed all flesh wherein was the breath of life those few excepted which were in the Arke Destroyed utterly Sodome The Lake Sodome 180 furlongs which is 22. miles of ours in length ●50 in bredth which is 18. of our miles as some say some more Ios Weissenbig It hath no out-let or disburdening Gomorrah Admah and Zeboim with fire and brimstone from heaven In a word sinne is that which provokes the Lord to send upon a people or person his numberlesse and insupportable plagues and punishments hence come noysome beasts hence dolefull captivities hence destroying pestilences hence famine so tragicall yea all other greater or lesser temporall tortures Hence blindnesse of mind hardnesse of heart pertinacious obstinacy finall impenitency yea all those endlesse easelesse hopelesse helplesse torments of eternall damnation where their worme never dyeth and their fire is not quenched of which those other are but vaunt-courers or fore-runners And can we have fellowship with God except we abandon iniquity thinke we Sinne is that traiterous Iudas corrupt Pilate perfidious perjurers bloud-thirsty Iewes and torturing executioners yea as the thornes whips nailes mockings buffettings spittings and speare wherewith the head backe and cheekes so tender and lovely were bloudily and barbarously gored the harmelesse innocency derided and calumniated yea the hearts bloud of the Sonne of God more worth then millions of worlds spilt upon the earth This is that which grieves despights and quencheth the Spirit of God And can we perswade our selves of having fellowship with the Father if we delight in sinne which crucifies the Sonne and grieves if not wholly quencheth and despighteth the Holy Ghost Sinne transformes men into monsters making them Scorpions Ezek. 2. 6. Vipers Math. 3. 7. Cokatrices and Spiders Isa 59. 5. Dogges swine and such like foule and filthy creatures Ignatius saith I sight valiantly with beasts in Assyria even 〈…〉 to Rome not that I am devoured by bruit beasts For these as you know God willing ●●ared Daniel But of beasts bearing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in whom that cruell beast doth 〈◊〉 which doth daily sting and wound me St. Chrysostome saith Sometimes he calleth them 〈◊〉 for their saw●inesse and violence sometimes horses for their lust sometimes asses for their sottishnesse and ignorance sometimes lions and libards for their ravening end covetousnesse of having sometimes also aspes for their guile oftentimes serpents and v●pers for their secret
lawfull and not gainsaid by higher authority and shall we refuse to obey the Divine and heavenly precept of the Lord whose will the creatures readily fulfill although it thwart and crosse the order of nature fire ceasing to burne lions laying aside their ravening disposition waters becomming unpaflable an asse speaking ravens officiously serving a Prophet and those swift runners in the firmament standing still the one upon Gibeon the other in the valley of Aijalon and shall we disobey an edict so just and profitable of a God so gracious and powerfull 2. Will the adventurous Merchant seeke for pearles the resolute souldier for honourable conquest hardly if ever attained And shall we neglect to seeke the Lord so easily found if rightly sought 3. Are all such lyable to the dreadfull wrath of God who neglect this duty And shall we incurre such fearefull plagues 4. Are the Lords gracious promises so ample and rich His rewards graunted to such as seeke him unspeakable for number and valuation And shall we refuse them No no since the Lord hath commanded us by his authority then which none more Soveraigne to do a thing neither impossible nor difficult the neglect whereof being perillous the performance whereof being very profitable we resolve hereafter through the assistance of his grace although worldly men with desires insatiable as hell seeke for either new-fangled toyes as the fantastique fashion-monger excessive dainties as the gourmandising glutton undeserved renowne as the ambitiously insolent earthly pelfe as the dunghill Mammonist or such like idle and unprofitable if not hurtfull things to seeke the saving knowledge of God of absolute necessity of excellent dignity and unspeakable utility to seeke the love and favour of God being both free and great tender everlasting and unparalel'd by obeying him So will we seeke that we may know him that knowing we may obey him that knowing and obeying we may enjoy him That thus seeking to please to pacifie and possesse we may obtaine and enjoy this fellowship with the Father CHAP. XII The seventh Meanes and Duty is sanctifying the Lords Day HAve we or desire we fellowship with the Father If 7. Meanes Duty we have declare it if we desire it seeke it By keeping Gods Sabbath choosing the thing which pleaseth God taking hold on his Covenant serving the Lord c. That all these are markes and duties of such who have fellowship with the Father and meanes for such to use who desire to get or keepe communion with the Father The Lord himselfe by the mouth of his servant Isaiah doth sufficiently declare 56. 3. In which chapter is contained a pre-occupation or removing of a secret objection or inward temptation made by the pious Proselites and godly Eunuches against themselves the former objecting separation from Gods people the latter their miserable estate the Law cursing the impotent and childlesse To which objection the Lord himselfe makes answer in which he plainely doth prohibite such reasonings and disputings and interdict such imaginations and collections let them not say and promise better and greater prerogatives then those which they wanted So bee that these strangers and Eunuchs were such who had joyned themselves to the Lord ver 3. and declared this conjunction by these practises of piety ver 4. 6. and therefore I may safely and warrantably adde to those former meanes markes and duties these following The keeping therefore of the Lords Sabbath is a signe and meanes of mans communion with God Although then there were many Sabbaths of the Lord called his to shew Justin cals it the day of the sunne because he writes to the Gentiles saith Wallaus Instinus diem solis appellat quia ad Gentiles scribit Wal. cap. 7. p. 147. Qui dies solis a profanis Dominicus a Sanctu dicebat●r Beza in 1 Cor 16. 1. Qui oli● dies solis nunc dominicu● dicitur Jdem Iun. Trem. bib who was the author of them and to what end and use ordained and to distinguish them from Idols Sabbaths or feasts of false gods or divels viz. 1. Eternall celestiall and glorious 2. Temporall and typicall which were shaddowes of the other Which temporall were some of yeares some of weekes and some of dayes yet in regard that onely of daies of the temporall is now remaining I purpose to confine my selfe to that And passing over those ceremoniall and Iewish Sacrifices which are wholly ceased as 2 lambes of a yeare old without blemish 2 tenth deales of fine floure mingled with oyle and one drinke offering thereof Numb 28. 9 ●0 I will onely point at some of these substantiall and morall duties which God once commanded and never since forbad Call the day what you please neither am I scrupulous or contentious about words 1. Either Sunday which is an ordinary Name of the day Dies Lu●● Di●s Ma●t● name of the day as Munday c. for the rest of the daies Saint Luke calling a certaine hill in Athens Mars hill Acts 17. 19. 2. Or the first day of the weeke as Saint Paul doth 1. Cor. 16. 1. 3. Or the Lords day because the Lord then Cannon 13. Tertul. lib de corona ●ilitis c. 3. Cyprian Epist 36. ad Fidum de infan●ib bab p. 231. Pri●us dominicus Propterea quod Dominus a morte ad vitam redierit dominicus appellatur T. 1. p. 105. 5. in Psal 118. rose as Saint Iohn Rev. 1. 9. The Canons of our Church our pious statutes made concerning this day in the reigne of our gracious Soveraigne King CHARLES This day was called the day of the sunne by the prophane the Lords day of the Saints saith Beza It was in time past called the day of the sun now it 's called the Lords day saith Beza So Tertullian saith Cyprian and others and the ancient Fathers as Chrysostome because the Lord in it returned from death to life it is called the Lords day 4. Or the Sabbath which name is used and is not Iewish 1. The name being morall not ceremoniall 2. It lively expressing the nature of the day 3. The rest being perpetuall therefore the name may although our Lords day hath not that name in the new Testament For 1. our Saviour could not speake of it at all it not being till his Resurrection And the Apostles called it the first day the Lords day for distinction sake the better to be understood not abolishing it therfore I hope I taxing no man for calling it by the name of Sunday none will fault me if I stile it the Lords day I having Statute Canon and divine law to warrant me And be intreated to keepe the day holy by doing such duties which remaine to be performed of us under the Gospell This keeping being a meanes of mans communion with God In that it is an occasion and meanes of hearing Gods Word whereby faith commeth and also of receiving the Sacraments and using of Prayer whereby we draw neere to God I will onely
and that concisely point at some of the Lords daies duties I handling them now onely by way of use to another doctrine That we may keepe the Sabbath or the Lords day we must observantly take notice of the negative and affirmative precepts Negative precisely prohibiting the doing of any manner of works 1. Servile wherein we serve our selves not God therefore all sinfull actions of body and soule for although these are strictly forbidden euery day yet it is a greater sin to do them upon this day it offering fewer vrging or alluring provocations and affording more helps and Per voce●●pus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non intelliguntur directè opera hominum vitiosa quia ea nunquam conceduntur sed opera servilia a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 servir● per qua scilicet ●●●squisque pro ratione vocationis suae victum ex●rcet c. Wallaeus de 4. precep pag. 7. meanes against them 2. All workes of minde or body needlesse or unnecessary By the word Thou shalt doe no manner of worke are not understood the vitious workes of men because they are never permitted but servile workes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to serve by which every one by reason of his vocation doth pursue his living saith Wallaeus But least I should wander in so wide and spacious a field I will therefore shew you what others which I have read say and then give mine answer onely to some questions Omnis Christi amator Dominicum celebret Diem Diem resurrectioni consecratum Dominicae Reginam Principem Dierum omnium in quà vita c. Epist 3. ad Magnefianos Die vero qui Dominicus vocatur quem Hebraei primum vocant Graeci autem Soli distribuunt qui ante septimum est sancivit a judicijs alijsque causis universos habere vacationem in eo tantum orationibus occupari Honorabat sc Constantinus autem Dominicum Diem quia in eo Christus resurrexit à mortuis Sozomen Histor Eccl. Tripart lib. 1. Cap. 10. pag. 275. Dominicum ergò Diem Apostoli Apostolici viri ideò religiosâ solemnitate habendum sanxerunt quià in eodem Redemptor noster à mortuis resurrexit quique ideò Dominicus appellatur ut in eo à terrenis operibus vel mundi illecebris abstinentes tantū Divini● cultibus sErviamus ipse est primus dies seculi in ipso formatasūt elementa mūdi in ipso creati sunt Angeli in ipso quoque resurrexit à mortuis Christus c. Serm. 251. d● tempore Vide●mus ne sed di●i dominici sequestrati a rurali opere ab omni negotio soli divin● cultui vacemus Ibid. Neque venatione se occupet diabolico mancipetur officio cirumvagando campos sylvas clamorem cachinnum ore exaltans Ibid. Tunc ipsi foris aut causas dicere aut diversis student calumnijs impugnare aut videlicet in alea vel in jocis inutilibus insidiari quatenus unus punctus di●i ad dei officium reliquum diurnum spatium cum nocte simul ad eorum deputetur v●luptates Idem Ibid. Melius vtique toto die foderent quam toto die saltarent Con. 1. part 1. in Psal 32. Melius enim arare quam saltare in Sabbato illi ab opere bono vacant opere nugatorio non vacant in titul Psal 91. Non hoc autem solum ratione aptum est tempus ad benignitatem prompto alacri animo exercendam sed quod habet quietem remissionem immunitatemque vacationem a laboribus Chrys Tom. 4. pag. 545. in 1. Cor. Homil. 45. Primo die qui dominicus appellatur celebres Magistri ac doctores Sancti patres nostri nobis canendum Psallendum centesimum decimum octanum Psalmum tradiderunt T. 1. Pag. 1055. Ignatius that ancient Bishop of Antioch in his 3. Epistle which is none of his 5. counterfeit Epistles saith Let every one that loveth Christ keep the Lords Day which is the Queene of dayes in which death is overcome and life is sprung up in Christ Renowned Constantine ordained as followeth That day which is called the Lords Day which the Hebrewes call the first day which the Grecians attribute to the Sun which is before the 7. day he ordained that all should cease from suits and other businesses and to be only occupied in prayers upon it and indeed hee did honour the Lords Day because in it Christ rose from the dead St. Augustine saith the Lords Day the Apostles and Apostolicall men have ordained with religious holinesse to be kept because in the same our Redeemer rose from the dead and therefore is called the Dominicall or Lords Day that in it we may onely attend on the Divine Service this is the first Day of the world in it were created the elements and the Angels upon this Day Christ rose and the holy Ghost was given Manna first descended from heaven upon this day And againe Being sequestred from all rusticall works and businesse wee give our selves wholly to the worship of God Neither let him busie himselfe in hunting and enthrall himself in any devillish work in wandering about the fields and woods making a loud noise and laughter c. And in the same Sermon reprooving certaine disorders on the Lords day hee saith Then scil in the time of the publique worship of God without doores they tel tales or study to fight against others by slanders or to take great paines at dice or other unprofitable sports as if one period of the day was set apart to the service of God and the rest of the day and the night to their own pleasures The same father saith thus in one place They might better digge all the day then dance all the day And in another place It is better to plow then to dance upon the Sabbath they rest from a good worke rest not from a vaine and triffing work And S. Chrysostome speaking of the fitnesse of this day for workes of mercy saith It is a fit time to practise liberality with a ready and willing mind not only in this regard but also because it hath rest ceasing freedome and vacation from labours And in another place he saith Our reverend teachers and instructers our holy fathers have given us the 118. Psalme to sing the first day which is called the Lords day Leo the first commanded Sunday to bee kept holy And that all Christians should behave themselves godly and vertuously all the day long in preaching hearing and remembring the Word of God visiting the sicke and poore and comforting the comfortlesse Leo the third at a Counsell in Ments decreed that Sundaies should be kept holy with all reverence and that all men should abstaine those daies from all servile worke and worldy businesse and that there should be no faires markets or any buying or selling on the Sundaies I have read that in a Counsell at Nice order
was taken that those who either kept court bought or sold or otherwise prophaned the Sabbath should be prohibited the Communion because To●o hoc die tantummodo vaca●dū quia toto hoc die ma●u● d●o expan d●●dae that whole day we ought onely to rest and spread abroad our hands in prayer to God The ancient Waldenses and Albigenses who were Luthers and our forerunners in a short Commentary upon the Commandements say They that will keepe the Sabbath must bee carefull of foure things 1. To cease from all worldly labours 2. Not to sin 3. Not to bee idle 4. To doe things for the good and benefit of the soule Our owne Canons enjoyne us to celebrate the Lords day according Can. 13. to Gods will i. e. in hearing the Word of God read and taught in private and publike prayers in acknowledging our offences to God and amendment of the same in reconciling our selves charitably to our neighbours where displeasure hath bene In oft receiving the Communion of the body and bloud of Christ in visiting the poore and sicke and using all godly and sober conversation Thus saith our Canon 1. An Act made in the first yeare of our gracious Soveraigne King CHARLES saith thus Keeping of the Lords day Anno C●roli is a principall part of the true service of God which in very many places of this Realme hath bene and now is prophaned and neglected by a disorderly sort of people in exercising and frequenting Bearbaiting Bulbayting E●terludes Common playes c. Vpon the Lords day There shall be no meetings of people out of their owne Parishes Another S●tute 1628. on the Lords day for any sports or pastimes whatsoever nor any Bearebayting Bulbayting E●terludes Common playes or other unlawfull exercises or pastimes used by any person within their owne Parish The mulct for every breach of this statute is 3 shillings 4 pence Our Homily concerning the first part of the place and Page 138. time of prayer saith God hath given expresse charge to all men that upon the Sabbath which is our Sunday they should cease from all weekely and work day labour even so Gods obedient people should use the Sunday holily rest from their common and daily businesse and give themselves wholly to heavenly Page 139. exercises of Gods true Religion and service In the same Homily It is lamentable to see the wicked boldnesse of those who will be counted Gods people these are of two sorts The one sort if they have any businesse to doe though there be no extreme need they must not spare for the Sunday they must ride and journey on the Sunday drive and carrie rowe and ferrey buy and sell on the Sunday The other sort is worse although they will not labour yet will they not rest in holinesse as God commandeth but rest in ungodlinesse and filthinesse pransing in their pride pranking and pricking pointing and painting themselves to be gorgeous and gay they rest in excesse and superfluity in gluttony and drunkennesse like rats and swine they rest in brawling and railing in quarrelling and fighting they rest in wantonnesse and toyish talking c. So that God is more dishonoured and the divell better served on the Sunday then on all the daies of the weeke besides And in the conclusion of the second part thus Come with an heart sifted and cleansed from worldly and carnall affection and desires shake off all vaine thoughts which may hinder thee from Gods true service the bird c. Bishop Babington writing upon the fourth Page 319. verse of the 31. Chapter of Exodus saith thus A place never to be forgotten touching the Lords commandement of the Sabbath for he will not have his owne worke medled with on that day Oh what can we thinke of our workes His tabernacle builder must be forbidden and our buildings must goe on Reade and feele that place in Ieremy 17. 25. with a tender heart Then shall gates i. e. the government shall stand and flourish ver 27. Kindle a fire i. e. the Lord will overturne all with great destruction He is the same now he was then and his glory is as deare to him The same reverend Divine in his 8 Page 259. note upon the 16 Chapter of Exodus saith thus Forget not to marke the great care that God had of his Sabbath that it might be kept holy May not a good soule thus reason Good Lord what doe I upon the Sabbath day this people of his might not gather Manna and may I goe to faires and markets to dancings and drinkings to wakes and wantonnesse to bearebaitings and bulbaitings with such like wicked prophanations of the Lords day May I bee absent from the Church walking about my closes and grounds sending my servants and cattell to townes with corne which I have sold before are these workes for the Sabbath Can I answer this to my God that gives me sixe daies for my selfe and takes but one to himselfe Of which I rob him also c. Bishop Bayly in the Practice Page 442. of Piety saith we are to cease from all civill workes generally from the least to the greatest instanceth in these seaven 1. Works of our calling 2. Carrying of burdens 3. Keeping of Faires and Markets 4. Studying any Bookes but Scripture and Divinity 5. All recreations and sports which at other times are lawfull 6. Grosse feeding and liberall drinking 7. Talking about worldly things I need not therefore say with learned Sir Walter Rauleigh I rather chuse to indure the 1. Booke 2. Chapter wounds of those darts which envie casteth at noveltie then to go on safely and sleepily in the easie waies of ancient mistakings seeing to bee learned in many errours or to bee ignorant in all things hath little diversitie I having such a cloud of witnesses Neotericke and of hoare-headed antiquity which defend the same in substance some in one thing some in another which I purpose to propound to your considerations I hope therefore that none will taxe me of Sabbatarian paradoxes Apocalipticall frensies or Herterodoxe opinions I being guided by the light of truth and that light which Writers ancient and moderne have set up to lead me In a word therefore consider for I purpose to propound onely foure things to your considerations not peremptorily concluding hegatively or affirmatively Whether it can be lawfull for us to do any bodily workes 1. Consid 1 Reg. 19. 8. upon the Lords Day such onely except which present necessity compels unto for preservation of life thus Elijah by flight the Macabees by fight did and we may and must preserve our lives the recovery of health convenient preservation of health as the ordering of meate for the day the Disciples plucked and rubbed the eares of corne for if we may water and fodder the beast Luc. 13. 15. which yet could live a day without that so it might be a comfortable day to it no doubt but we
may dresse food for our owne comfort Decency of the body as clothing the same Preservation of goods by taking out of or defending from dangers Luc. 13. 15. And giving necessary provision to them Luc. 14. 5. Yea to the fatling beast to feed him 1. Because else he could not live so chearefully 2. The labour is the same in giving much or little 3. All creatures may then have the ordinary provision of the weeke at the least 4. Else to the hurt of the creature so losse of goods Necessity is sanctified and may stand for just excuse when we cannot keepe the rest of the commandements without breach of one of the rest e. g. I am bound to preserve life a man or beast is in danger of death I may breake the rest to save life God will have mercy and not sacrifice mercy is a worke of sanctification sacrifice a meanes we must leave the meanes and do the worke Tertullian saith God forbad humane workes not Tertul. lib. 2 contra Marcyonem pag. 185. Nec Sabbatt inspicis legem opera humana non divina prohibintem Non facies opus Quod Vt●que tuum Arcam vero circumserre neque quoti li enum opus vileri potest neque humanum sed bonum sacrosinctum ex ipso Dei praecepto utique divinum Divine Thou shalt do no manner of worke What manner of worke What kind of worke Namely thine owne But to carry about the Arke sc about the wals of Iericho can neither seeme a daily worke nor an humane but a good and a holy work and therefore from the very commandement of God Divine Those therefore I meane which may be forborne without breach of charity sinning against nature or hurt of the creatures And therefore 1. Whether those are not blame-worthy who trot about for gaine or pleasure buy and sell grinde and bake patch and mend or do any other outward or inward worke of man or woman which may be done before or stay till afterward 2. And if it be not good for each man to reason thus or after the like manner with his owne soule 1. Is the fourth Commandement a precept which is morall as it must needs be For 1. Else there would be but nine morall Precepts 2. It being delivered in mount Sinai at the Nec ejus observatio capit Lege data in Sinaised aute celebrabatur ut apparet ex Mannae pluvia Exod. 16. Martyr in Gen. 2. Ex hoc loco probabilis conjectura elicitur Sabbathi sanctitatem suisse priorent le ge ceric quum aute narravit Moses vetito● fuisse die septimo Manna colligere videtur ex recepta notitiâ usu sumptum Cal. in 4. Precep same time by the same Law-giver after the same manner with more motives and a speciall Memento 3. Given in Paradise observed from the beginning before any Ceremoniall Law was given Neither did the observation of the Sabbath begin when the Law was given in Sinai but it was solemnized before as appeares by the raine of Manna Exod. 16. saith P. Martyr From this place a probable conjecture is fetched that the sanctification of the Sabbath was before the Law and truly when Moses did shew before that they were forbidden to gather Manna upon the seventh day he seemes to conclude that it was taken from received knowledge and use saith Mr. Calvin 2. Did our Saviour Christ Iesus confirme the morality of it comming to fulfill not to breake one jot or title of the Morall Law 3. And do the same reasons which bound the Iewes oblige me to the performance of such duties as in it are enjoyned and restraine me as well as them 1. God giving me sixe dayes as he gave them 2. Being my God as he was theirs 3. Proposing his example for my imitation And 4. I needing his blessing as much as they And doth this commandement precisely inhibite the doing of any manner of worke insomuch that those holy followers of Christ Luc. 23. 5 6. and their puritannicall precisenesse is commended abstained from so good a worke as to embalme the body of our Saviour their spices and oyntments being already prepared and shall I gad to faires and markets shall I walke about my closes or grounds except it be to meditate or to praise God for his bounty towards me shall I send my servants and cattell with corne c. Are these workes for the Lords Day Is the day none of mine and shall I spend it about mine owne affaires and profits Dread I to rob men and shall I presume to rob God yea him who is my God of his Day of his Holy-Day No no I will not trouble me therefore no more O rebellious flesh with thy many idle and godlesse pretences Thy covetous carkings formerly have made me with those worldly minded to go and see my grounds which I had purchased to prove mine oxen which I had bought when the Lord did graciously and earnestly invite me to him Thy mistrustfull diffidence hath pricked me forward with remerarious rashnesse to do many un-needfull actions thou having abashed me with a fearefull timidity of losse of undoing hast made me negligent to seeke principally the kingdome of heaven and to care for the morrow when it might sufficiently and time enough take care for it selfe Thy savage cruelty heretofore hath made me unmercifully bloudy to my precious soule servants and beasts fore-casting and fore-providing something for them to do on the Lords day Cease henceforward to molest me with these temptations I have now learned to be content with Gods allowance to me and dealing towards me I am now resolved to depend on him and on his gracious providence and by Gods helpe wil be so mercifull to my selfe servant and beast that we will not do any servile worke on Gods Day wherein we serve our selves and not God Whether sports and recreations yea such as at other 2. Consid Augustine Batly Babings Homil. S●at times may be lawfull are not demonstrated to be unlawfull upon the Lords Day By many of those I have named before amongst whom S. Augustine is one who in another place as I have read not in him but cited speaking of some who rested to sports toyes hunting and nets saith It is to keepe a Qui vacabant nugu lud●s venatio nibus retibus c. Sabbath to the golden Calfe the Idoll of Aegypt not to the God of heaven To which I will adde Gualter who saith Therefore they cast farre away the impure workes of the flesh and the Proculergo abjiciunt impura carnis opera insanum studium voluptan dupeccant qui diem hunc superbiae sustus aleae poculu impuro voluptae tum slu lio tribuunt Dies fellos Majestati Aleissimi dedicatos nullu voluptanbus occupart Nec huj●t religiosi diet otia relaxantes obscrenis qutbuslibet patimur voluptatibus detiners nihil eodem die vindicet sibi scena theatralis aut Circense certa men tui
serarum lachrymosa spectacula -Iiaec olim Christiani Principes curarunt At hadiè esta vix Episcopis curae sunt Gualte● in Hom 33. in Mar. 3 pag 33. Theodoslus Valentinianis Arcadius Leo Antonius à quibus prohibitum est paenis exhibere hoc die spectacula aut voluptatibus dare operam Wall ex Bucero p. 74. Vt omnis profinitas carnalis oblectatio ex eu exulet Deinde hoc necessarium est ne aut ejusmodi oblectamenta usurpentur quae fructum auditi Verbi aut reliquorum pietatis extrcitiorum intercipiant aut etiam miumtat sed potius ut eis inserviant ad ea majori cum vigore resumenda hominem disponam Wallaeus pag. 133. peevish exercise of sporting They offend which apply this day to pride disdaine dice cups and impure studie of pleasures Neither do we suffer Festivall Dayes dedicated to the Majestie of the Highest to be occupied to any pleasures either to be detained refreshing the vacant time of a religious day in any filthy delights Let the stage play or the Circensian exercise or the lamentable spectacles of beasts challenge nothing to themselves on that day c. This was a Law of Leo and Anthemius Emperours In times past Princes did see to these things but now Bishops scarce regard them And Wallaeus who saith Theodosius Valentinian Leo and Antonius forbade by punishments to behold plaies on this Day Againe That all profane and carnall delights be banished from them and then this is necessary either that such recreations be not usurped which prevent or weaken the profit of the Word heard or of other exercises of pietie but rather that they may do service to them and frame a man to begin againe the same with more livelinesse 2. And whether they have not an absolute inhibition by that authority which is without contradiction Isa 58. 13. Not doing thy pleasure on my Holy day Mans pleasure signifying sometimes any manner of sinfull delight agreeable to our corrupt nature as 2 Tim. 4. 1. lovers of pleasures Sometimes honest delights serving for the solace and comfort of mans life Gen. 49. 20. Giving pleasure for a King 3. And by these reasons The first drawne from the greater to the lesser I reason 1. Rat. thus Where lawfull labours and profitable workes are forbidden as unlawfull there lustfull and wanton actions of sports and delights much more But lawfull labours c. are forbidden upon the Lords Day as unlawfull Therefore lustfull and wanton actions of sports c. much more The former Proposition I take it may be avowable thus 1. Where such actions which are strictly commanded by the Lord in the generall course of mans life are forbidden there those actions much more are forbidden which are never so strictly commanded onely sparingly permitted But where lawfull labours in mens callings are forbidden there such actions are forbidden which are strictly commanded in the generall course of c. Therefore much more sports which are never commanded only sparingly permitted 2. Where the more lawfull and lesse distracting are forbidden there the lesse lawfull and more distracting are much more forbidden But where lawfull labours c. are forbidden there the more lawfull and lesse distracting are forbidden works are more lawfull because commanded by the Lord lesse distracting sports wholly possessing the mind with desire of masterie c. I thinke each mans experience will say his mind is more free for heavenly things when he rides a journey then when he rides in hunting when he plowes then when he wrestleth rings playeth at cudgels c. Therefore sports and delights lesse lawfull and more distracting c. 3. Lawfull labours and profitable workes as little if not lesse breake the rest of the Lords Day by equall comparison as sports and recreations e. g. To ride in hunting breakes the rest of the Day as much if not more as to ride in travell to labour at a bell as to labour at the plough to strike with a cudgell as to strike with a flaile From the name of the Day and duties commanded for the 2. Rat. Sanctificare est ad usus sanctos applicare Wallaeus de Sob pag. 105. Day it is called Gods Holy Day 1. Because separated by God 2. Because a meanes of holinesse we are enjoyned to remember to keepe it holy i. Wholly to spend it in his service i. in holinesse I reason thus Those things which are impediments and lets of holinesse cannot lawfully be done upon that day which is Gods Holy Day and ought to be kept holy But sports and recreations are lets and impediments of holinesse this is evident to every mans experience which will tell him if he will permit it freedome of speech that these inchaunting Syrens do so charme and bewitch these insatiable ingrossers of time do so extraordinarily distract if not wholly possesse the mind that it is wholly estranged and alienated from holy duties so that they seeme tedious and irksome to it Who knowes not how those make pensive the heart when they are called to these Who knowes not how they exhilerate the heart when these in publique are ended Who knowes not how those like vene mous weeds and choaking thornes suffocate and strangle these intruding themselves into the roome of and shoulder out Divine contemplations heavenly communications and godly and Christian actions Therefore sports and recreations cannot lawfully be done upon the Lords Day And therefore whether it is not needfull for us whom it concernes so farre as in us lyeth to disswade and draw people from such courses and if it be not good to this end for every Christian soule to reason after this or the like manner Are these things so Yea moreover 1. Hath the Lord Dissw 1. of his free favour and bounteous liberality allowed me sixe whole dayes for my pleasure and profit some little part of each day except to sanctifie my self family and calling in lieu whereof he allowes me back part of his Day for refreshing works of charity necessity and decency and reserved only one Day for his service and worship and shall I allow my selfe or mine sports upon this Day which is the Lords not mine nor theirs 2. Hath the Lord provided me sweet recreations heavenly refreshments for his Holy Day and shall I preferre the huskie drossie delights of un-needfull carnall sportings before those truly solacing melodious rejoycing 3. Wold good S. Paul never eat any flesh while the world stood rather then offend his weake brother a man a sinfull and mortall man like himselfe and shall I play and sport my selfe in needlesse exercises whiles the Lords Day lasteth and so offend the Lord a God so mercifull a Father so loving and a Iudge so fearefull 4. Should the Lord come to judgement upon that Day as some thinke would it not be farre better for me to be then found serving him in spirituall exercises then my selfe in carnall sports Let other men do as they please I am as
and gladnesse suffer all your hellish indignities even when you plow upon our backes and make long furrowes our bettering by your scourgings comes not from you aiming at nothing lesse being helpers forward of our afflictions when our Father was but a little displeased with us Zach. 1. 15. But from our Fathers love and bounty making all things worke together for our good Rom. 8. 28. You shall therefore smart for grieving us you being our Fathers rods shal be plagued with indignation after by you he hath corrected us Witnesse the hard-hearted Aegyptians Ahab Iezabel the three Herods the first butchering the harmlesse Innocents the second beheading Iohn the Baptist and the third Saint Iames. Witnesse cruell Nero bloudy Domitian Iohn de Roma Minerius stinking Gardiner witnesse the forty two children mocking the Prophet Ishmael scoffing at Isaac cursing Shimei railing Rabshakeh and others And do you thinke to escape who harme and hurt with your utmost abilities these sheepe which are of Christs fold such members who have Christ their head yea such who so many wayes have such intimate and inseparable society with Iesus Christ that what is done to these is done to him Math. 25. 40. And he who persecuteth them persecuteth him Acts 9. 4. CHAP. III. Vse 2. Disswading from hurting the Saints PResume not O you sonnes of men to harme or hurt those Vse 〈◊〉 Of 〈◊〉 who have fellowship with Iesus Christ Be it they are generally hated of all sorts and conditions Be it that most mens mouthes are open against them loading them with all manner of reprochfull nick-names yet do not you therfore imagine that you are priviledg'd to inveigh against them But consider in coole bloud advisedly 1. For what cause the world is so extraordinarily incenst against them and you shall find it to be because they runne not with the world to the same excesse of riot 1 Pet. 4. 4. Because their workes are righteous and worldlings wicked 1 Ioh. 3. 12. Even as the ancient Paynims in Tertullians time ●onus vir Caius Seius sed ●al●● tantum quod christianus Tertul. Apol. pag. 810. could fault Caius Seius for nothing save for being a Christian which in their apprehensions was sufficient to make him an evill man So the prophane ones of the world thinke it as great a crime as may be to be a professour to whom we may say as Tertullian to the forenamed Heathens With you it Apud vos quodv● C●ler●●us est pr●t●r Deum verum Tertul. Apol. pag. 860. is lawfull to worship any God except the true God with you it is lawfull to be a swearer lyar drunkard any thing except a sound and sincere professour 2. Who they be which barke so bitterly against Professours Tertullian long since in his Apologeticall Discourse Qui fort● verè de Christia●●rum sterilitate conqueri possunt primi sunt le●o●●● productores aquariols sic car●j v●●●●rij Magi c Tertul. Apol. pag. 885. reasons thus Who in very deed do complaine of the unfruitfulnesse of Christians The chiefe are Bawds Merchants for whores Wittals privy Murtherers Poysoners Magicians c. Even so might I reason and say who are they which are so enraged against the most upright-hearted Professours The chiefe and principall are swinish Drunkards cut-throat usurers prodigious swearers uncleane whore-mongers c. 3. Although I confesse you may find some Iudasses and Demasses amongst the Saints and why not aswell as a Devill in Christs selected Twelve a sacrilegious couple and an Apostaticall worldling in the Apostles company Yet for the generall I dare say of Puritannicall Christians what Puritanes I disclaime what I apologize for I have formerly shewed in briefe such which will not be prophane such who are professing and practicing Protestants as Tertullian of the Primitive * Quis illi● Si●ari●● quis manticularius quis sacrilegus aut corrupt●r aut lavantium pr●do quis ex illis Christia●● ascribitur aut cum Christiani f●o titul●●ff●runtur quis ex illis talis quales t●s n●ce●tes de vestris 〈◊〉 carcer semper de vestris semper metalla suspirant de vestris ●esti● saginantur N●m● illic Christia●● nisi planè tantum Christia●● aut si aliud jam nec Christianus Tertul. Apol. pag 886. which of them is a privy murtherer Who is a cut purse Who is a sacrilegious person or a depraver or a robber of washers who of them is counted a Christian or when Christians are brought forth with their owne title which of them is such as many guilty persons of yours with which the prisons alwayes waxe hot the mines do sigh with yours with yours the beasts are fatted No Christian is there except for being a Christian or if otherwise then he is no Christian which of them is a drunkard swearer lyar Which of them is a defrauder Which of them is as many of yours O thou world which yearely fill the prisons make worke for the hang-man Which of them live prophanely and wickedly 4. How neare and deare they are to Christ Iesus Such they are which are 1. Given by the Lord Iehovah to his beloved Sonne Christ Iesus Iohn 6. 37. As branches to be grafted into him as Brides to be married to him stones to be built upon him as members to be nourished by him 2. For whom Christ Iesus Gal. 2. 20. gave himselfe for me for us Eph. 5. 2. 3. To whom Christ is given Isa 9. 6. Eph. 1. 22. Gave himselfe to the Church 4. Such who give themselves to Christ as living sacrifices Rom. 12. 1. As sheepe to be fed schollers to be taught subjects to be ruled 5. Such whose union with Christ Iesus is the nearest and surest in the world Cantic 2. 16. My beloved is mine and I am his nearer then the body and branches of a tree members of a naturall body boards or stones of the same building then of man and wife for they are but one flesh whereas Christ and these are one flesh Eph. 5. 30. And one spirit 1 Cor. 6. 17. 1. Then reason and conclude thus 1. Are those who are the principall laborious instruments to irritate and incense tumultuous turbulent spirits to pursue with deadly hatred and all implacable and impetuous despightfulnesse-sincere-hearted Nathaniels informing them although falsly that such Scripture-men Bible-bearers Sermon haunters c. are all notorious hypocrites and vile dissemblers and are all such which enragedly exclaime against the sincerest worshippers of God 1. Either sottish ignorant lossels speaking against those things which they know not as currish dogges barke against the Moone and at those they know not 2. Or simple meaning men misled by certaine usuall yet untrue and Diabolicall maxumes commonly applauded and credited sc no men are so bad as Professours they are all of them naught 3. Or else the rude rabble of prodigious swearers braine-sicke drunkards and such like deboist ruffians and stigmaticall varlets 2. Yea doth this malignant or misled company pursue with all
he is well pleased 7. By this imitation we the members shall please our Head we the subjects shall content our King we the sheepe shall delight our shepheard 8. By this conformity we are assured that we are predestinated Rom. 8 29. 9. And ascertained that we shall be glorified for if we beare the image of the earthly we shall beare the image of the heavenly 1 Cor. 15. 49. 10. Be we followers of Christ who if we hunger is our Celestiall bread if we thirst is the water of life Be we as he was in this world this imitation being a forcible meanes to obtaine an infallible demonstration that we have and a necessary duty which we owe for this lovely and desireable fellowship with Gods Sonne Iesus Christ. CHAP. IX The second Marke and Duty Such must have faith who have fellowship with Christ DEsire we fellowship with Christ Iesus We must have 2. Marke Duty faith Not the worldlings fancied faith which he suckt from his mothers brest believing ever since he was borne Nor his painted fruitlesse faith he believing as well as the best yet abhorring or not loving or little or no whit regarding the Word preached prayer and other sanctified meanes whereby faith is begotten and increased He believing yet living prophanely or at the least onely civilly Which is not a true faith That faith which brings forth evill Hom. of sal E. 1. workes or no good workes is not a right pure and lively faith but a dead divellish counterfeit and fained faith They that Ibid. E. 1. continue in evill living have not true faith Lively faith is not without hope and trust in God nor without the love of God and of our neighbors nor without the feare of God nor without desire to heare Gods Word and to follow the same in eschewing evill Hom. of faith A 1. and doing gladly all good works But the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ Iam. 2. 1. The faith of the Elect Titus 1. 1. That faith of which Salvian speakes Quid est igitur Fides opinor fideliter hominem Christo credere 1. fidelem esse hoc est fideliter Dei mai●data servare Salv. lib. 3. p. 60. saying What is faith therfore I think for a man faithfully to believe in Christ i. to be faithfull i. to observe Gods Commandements faithfully That faith 1. Which is of a growing and thriving nature from faith to faith Rom. 1. 17. 2. That two-handed faith which by confidence the one holdeth the Lord and receiveth good and by love the other imbraceth the brethren and doth good Gal. 5. 6. 3. That faith which yeelds obedience to Gods Commandements even the most repugnant to flesh and bloud by this Abraham left his country and offered Isaac Heb. 11. 4. That faith which doth instrumentally justifie Rom. 5. 1. And sanctifie Acts 15. 9. This is the faith we must have if we would have interest in this happy association 1. By this faith we are built upon the foundation and coupled to the Corner-Stone Christ 2. By this faith we are married to our Husband 3. By this faith we are ingrafted into the Vine Christ Iesus Eph. ● 17. 4. 13. So that 1. As by the mortar the stones cleave to the foundation so by this faith which is like a strictive mortar we are cemented and united to Christ 2. As by the nerves or sinewes the parts receive sense motion yea and life from the head so by this faith we receive quickening and vitality from Christ as the members from the Head Ioh. 1. 16. Gal. 2. 20. 3. As by the true love-knot the husband and wife are made one flesh so by this faith we have spirituall familiarity with Christ as the wife with the husband Rom. 5. 1. Heb. 11. 6. Faith is the hand of the soule which applyeth the sacrifice M. Burton Truths triumph over Trent cap 7. pag 99. of Christ for sinne it is the hand which puts on the robes of the righteousnesse of Christ our elder Brother upon us Faith is the ligament or sinew which fasteneth and uniteth every faithfull member to the Head Christ Iesus Faith is the life of our lives Pag. 100. and the strength of our soules 1. This is that prevailing Champion which quencheth the fiery darts of Sathan Eph. 6. 16. Overcommeth the world 1 Ioh. 5. 4 5. Prevaileth with God and is overcome of nothing not by carnall sense not by humane reasons not by bitter tortures Heb. 11. 35 36 37. 2. This is the mother and fountaine of all good gifts the originall of justice beginning of devotion the head of sanctitie Fidet est origo institiae sanctitates caput devotionis principium Religionis fundamentum Chrysost Ser. de fide Tom. 4. pag. 574. A. M. Burton pag. 198. cap. 12. Pag. 201. and foundation of Religion Prayer is the proper worke of faith Rom. 10. 14. Confession to salvation is the speech of faith Rom. 10. 10. Good works of all sorts are the fruits of faith Faith gives life and being to every grace forasmuch as every grace is radically in faith because where faith is Christ is Holy faith is the foundation whereon all graces are built the ground whereon they grow 3. This is that so necessary grace that whosoever wants it 1. Hath no spirituall life with Christ the just living by faith Rom. 1. 17. And by the faith of the Sonne of God Gal. 2. 20. Neither is he a true Christian he wanting that whereby Christ dwels in the heart Eph. 3. 17. Neither can he do any good thing without this all being sinne Rom. 14. 23. And unpleasing to God Heb. 11. 6. 4. This is that which mounts and elevates a man into so high and honourable holy and happy condition that he hath such heavenly priviledges and transcendent prerogatives as to be Gods Sonne Iob. 1. 12. Christs and his Fathers friend to be a free Denison of heaven as to come to Christ to go to God to hasten to heaven to be inseparably inserted and indissolubly compacted into this incorporation with Iesus Christ of incomparable value and ineffable excellencies Is faith so preciously excellent 1. Why O you sonnes of men do you so much sleight it and neglect it 1. As not to labour at all for it 2. Or lesse then for temporary fading favours you 'le ride and run farre and neare toyle and travaile early and late for health and sanity of your bodies for increase and augmentation of your substance for food to eate and clothes to put on but so carelesly and negligently for this that were your endeavours no more earnest for bodily health death so dismall would soone smite you for food and rayment your tender backs and pampered bellies would quickly beshrow you for worldly wealth beggery so base would out of hand overtake you 3. Or more regardlesly then for any thing of base esteem in regard of it you take not cattell for your use at a venture but