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A15144 The vvay to the celestiall paradise Declaring how a sinner may be saued, and come to life euerlasting. Contained in three bookes.The first second third sheweth that a sinner may be saued, & come to life euerlasting. By faith, apprehending Christ for his iustification, & applying to himselfe the promises of the Gospell made in Iesus Christ. Repentance, hauing his sins washed away in the bloud of the lambe Iesus Christ. Prayer, calling vpon God in the name of Iesus Christ. By Robert Whittell, minister of the Gospell. Whittle, Robert, d. 1638. 1620 (1620) STC 25441; ESTC S120396 338,769 458

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Pet. 2. 20. 21. 22. If after they haue escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ they are againe intangled therein and ouer come the latter end is worse with them then the beginning For it had beene better for them not to haue knowne the way of righteousnesse then after they haue knowne it to turne from the holy Commaundement deliuered vnto them But it is happened vnto them according vnto the true prouerbe the dog is turned to his owne vomit againe and the Sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire This is a very dangerous falling away but yet heare and consider of a more dangerous backsliding and a more fearfull falling away The second vniuersall falling away is when a man 2 By sinning against the holy Ghost What it is to sinne against the holy Ghost hauing beene inlighted by the holy Ghost with the knowledge of God and his Sonne Iesus Christ and hauing made a profession of Christ doth afterwards deny the truth against his owne knowledge and conscience doth maliciously oppose himselfe against the knowne truth and euen persecute those that professe the truth This is properly called the sinne against the holy Sinne against the holy Ghost why so called Ghost not because sinne can be so committed against the holy Ghost but it is also against the Father and the Sonne and when the holy Ghost is offended the Father is offended and the Sonne is offended for the Godhead is one But it is called the sinne against the holy Ghost because this sinne is committed against the proper and immedrate working of the holy Ghost which is to inlighten the minds and vnderstandings of men with the true knowledge of God and his Sonne Iesus Christ Now when the holy Ghost hath inlightned any one with the true knowledge of Iesus Christ and afterwards he so fall away from the truth that he deny Iesus Christ and malicously persecute the knowne truth this is to sinne against God and against Iesus Christ but properly and after a speciall manner it is to sinne against the holy Ghost inasmuch as he sinneth against the immediate inlightning of the holy Ghost Of this sinne against the holy Ghost with the fearfull state of those which fall into this sinne the Scripture euidently speakes the Apostle to the Hebrewes saith i Heb. 6. 4. 5. 6. It is impossible for those who were once inlightned and haue tasted of the heauenly gift and were made partakers of the holy Ghost and haue tasted the good word of God and the powers of the world to come if they shall fall away to renue them againe vnto repentance seeing they crucifie to themselues the Sonne of God afresh and put him to an open shame Againe he saith k Heb. 10. 26. 27. 28. 29. If we sinne wilfully after that we haue receiued the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes But a certaine fearfull looking for of iudgement and fieric indignation which shall deuoure the aduersaries He that despised Moses law died without mercie vnder two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment suppose ye shall he be thought worthy who hath troden vnder-foote the Sonne of God and hath counted the bloud of the couenant wherewith he was sanctified an vnholy thing and hath done despite vnto the Spirit of Grace From which words of the Apostle two things may be gathered Two things herein to be considered The one is the nature and quality of the sinne against the holy Ghost The other is the punishment due to the same First the nature and qualitie of this sinne is set forth by sixe things 1 The nature qualitie of the sinne against the holy Ghost shewed in sixe things They that sinne against the holy Ghost are 1 First inlightned with the knowledge of the truth 2 Secondly they haue a taste of the heauenly gift 3 Thirdly they are made partakers of the holy Ghost 4 Fourthly they haue had a taste of the good word of God 5 Fiftly they haue had a taste of the powers of the world to come 6 Sixtly after all this they so fall away that they crucifie the Sonne of God afresh they trample and tread vnder foote the bloud of the Couenant and count it an vnholy thing and doe despite vnto the Spirit of Grace Heer 's the Sinne. The second thing is the punishment which vsually 2 The punishment of them that sinne against the holy Ghost befals those that sinne against the holy Ghost and that 's three-fold The first is finall impenitencie they that sinne against the holy Ghost are stricken with a marueilous hardnes of heart so that they cannot repent they are past repentance 1 Finall impenitencie wherefore the Apostle saith l Heb. 6. 4. 5. 6. it is impossible for those who were once inlightned c if they shall fall away to renue them againe vnto repentance The second is neuer to be forgiuen they that sinne against the holy Ghost can haue no remission no forgiuenesse 2 Neuer forgiuen of sinnes they can haue no mercie shewed them m Mat. 12. 31. 32. All manner of sinne and blasphemie shall be forgiuen vnto men saith our Sauiour but the blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall not be forgiuen vnto men And whosoeuer speaketh a word against the sonne of man it shall be forgiuen him but whosoeuer speaketh against the holy Ghost it shall not be forgiuen him nether in this world nor in the world to come And in St Marke it s said n Mar. 3. 29. he that shall blaspheme against the holy Ghost hath neuer forgiuenesse This second punishment followeth vpon the first one is the cause of the other they that sinne against the holy Ghost shall neuer haue forgiuenesse because they haue not grace to repent true it is the mercie of God is great aboue all our transgressions and God denieth mercie to no sinner that doth truly repent and therefore if a sinner whosoeuer or whatsoeuer he be haue grace to repent him truly of his sinnes to beleeue the remission of his sinnes and to call and cry to God for mercy he may haue mercie but he that sinneth against the holy Ghost his heart is so hardned that he cannot repent but dies without repentance and therefore cuts himselfe off from mercie and forgiuenesse and so is the cause of his own damnation The third is a miserable and fearfull end They that 3 A fearfull end sinne against the holy Ghost vsually die a fearfull and shamefull death We haue two memorable examples hereof the one is of Iudas Iscariot one of the twelue who was inlightned with the knowledge of Iesus Christ he was the Disciple of Christ he preached Christ and wrought myracles in the name of Christ and yet afterwards fell away and that fearefully for he betrayed Christ for money but what was his end He came to a shamefull end for when
Repentance presuming on Gods mercie PResuming on Gods mercy is the second impediment 2 Presuming on Gods mercy Where consider two things that hindreth many from Repentance The wicked man that liueth in sin leadeth an vngodly life because he feeles no iudgement of God fall vpon him for his sinnes presumes to sinne still and pleads for himselfe God's mercifull Christ dyed for sinners c. It is true God is mercifull He is a ●xod 34. 6. 7. the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and aboundant in goodnesse and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiuing 1 God is onely mercifull to penitent sinners iniquity transgression and sinne But vnderstand First that God is mercifull onely to penitent sinners to such as b Isay 1. 16. 17. 18. cease to doe euill and learne to doe well to such as c Isay 55. 7. forsake their euill way and returne vnto the Lord to such as d Ezek. 8. 21. turne from all the sinnes which they haue committed and doe that which is lawfull and right And although it be true that God hath mercy and plenty of mercy for sinners though neuer so wicked and vngodly if they truely and vnfainedly repent them of their sinnes yet the mercy of God is not extended to impenitent sinners to such as are obdurate and hardned in their sins not to such as are growne obstinate rebellious and disobedient against the Lord. Impenitent Kaine hard-hearted Pharao and despairing Iudas these find no mercy these dye in their sinnes without mercy onely penitent sinners find mercy Dauid Peter Marie Magdalene and such sinners as haue truely repented of their sinnes haue obtained mercy Secondly God is mercifull indeed but as he is mercifull 2 As God is mercifull so hee is also iust so is he also iust as he is mercifull he is very ready to pardon iniquity and to forgiue sinne but as he is iust he will punish sinners and will in no case spare them that presumptuously goe on in their sinnes As Moses tells the presumptuous sinner e Deu. 29. 19. 20 And it come to passe when he heareth the words of this curse that hee blesse himselfe in his heart saying I shall haue peace though I walke in the imaginations of my heart to adde drunkennesse to thirst the Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his iealousie shall smoake against that man and all the curses that are written in this Booke shall lye vpon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from vnder heauen This serues to reproue those who by no admonition Vse or counsell will be brought to repentance and amendment Against those that presume on Gods Mercy of life but still liue in sinne doe wickedly goe on in sinne from day to day and say God's mercifull but doest thou not heare O man that God is mercifull only to repenting sinners And vnderstandest thou not that as God is mercifull so he is also iust A mercifull Father but also a iust God How then darest thou be so venturous so bold yea so presumptuous to do wicked●● 〈…〉 in thy euill course of life yet to ble●se thy 〈◊〉 in the euil● 〈◊〉 flatter ●●y selfe in thy sinnes 〈…〉 well Go●● mercifull because 〈…〉 wil● 〈◊〉 the●efore doe wickedly and 〈…〉 Nay ●●ther because God is mercifull 〈…〉 of our sinnes that we may 〈…〉 ●nd since mercy with the Lord. He that ●●●th 〈◊〉 mercifull and yet still sinne●h against God shall one day finde that God is a God of ●ustice and will not suffer the sinner to goe vnpunished Wh●●●fore the 〈◊〉 Sonne of Sir●ch giueth the presumptuous sinner 〈◊〉 admonition f 〈…〉 Say not his mercy is great hee will be 〈◊〉 for the multitude of my sinnes for mercie and wrath 〈◊〉 from him and his indignation resteth vpon sinners CHAP. XIIII Of the third impediment of Repentance Custome in sinning CVstome in sinning is the third impediment of 3 Custome in sinning Repentance A sinner hauing once gotten a habite and custome of sinning is loath to leaue and very hardly perswaded to forsake his sinne a Cons●●t●do est altera natura Custome is another nature Through long continuance in sinne sinne groweth to bee a vsuall thing with a sinner As it is vsuall and naturall with him to eate and drinke and sleepe so is it vsuall and euen naturall with him to sinne Custome preuailes with him The Lord greatly reprooues the Iewes for this their custome in sinning comparing them to the Ethiopian and Leopard b Jerem. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his skinne or the Leopard his spots then may ye also doe good that are accustomed to doe euill Letting vs thereby see the Custome in sinning and giuing vs to vnderstand what a great impediment and bind●●●nce custome in sinning is to repentance and 〈◊〉 of life Were it not an exceeding ●i●●●cult 〈…〉 for any one to take in hand to wa●● the 〈…〉 till it were white So i● it an excee●●●● 〈…〉 ●o alter and change 〈…〉 that h●●h accustomed ●●●selfe 〈…〉 to d●e euill 〈…〉 wi●l wa●● away the thicke 〈…〉 soule sa●e onely that pure and 〈…〉 the bloud of Iesus Christ which clea●●●t● vs ●rom all sinne What hinders the common s●earer from repenting 〈…〉 ●●earing what is the cause that he 〈…〉 ●●earing that euen in hi● ordinary communication 〈…〉 with him 〈…〉 as to speake but custome of s●earing what hinders the lyer tha● hee cannot leaue his lying but cust●●e and what makes the drunkard that he 〈◊〉 not lea●e his drunkennesse but custome drinking he hath so long continued in that course of life and so accustomed himselfe vnto its that now he cannot leaue it Whosoeuer then would truely repent him of his sins Vse let hi● take he●d of accustoming himselfe to any sinne Not ●● accust●●●●ur selu●● t● any sin●● and that hee doth not vse himselfe to any vicious and sinnefull course of life And to that end euery one of vs ought to be carefull to preuent sinne betime c 〈…〉 Stay the first beginnings of sinne Let not thy heart bee enti●ed to delight in euill thoughts suggested by Sathan or if thou pleasest thy selfe in those entising thoughts for a moment yet consent not vnto them Or if thou suffer thy heart to consent yet beware of the practise of sinne or if through the subtill suggestions of Sathan and the corruption of thine owne heart thou hast yeelded to commit iniquity and to doe the euill deed O repent betimes forsake thy euill way continue not in wickednesse lest by thy long continuance in sinne thou accustome thy selfe to doe euill and then it will bee hard for thee to leaue thy sinne hard for thee to do good which hast accustomed thy selfe to doe euill CHAP. XV. Of the fourth impediment of Repentance Hope of long life HOpe of long life is the fourth impediment of 4 Hope of long life Repentance This hope hinders many men
What knowledge of sin is required where consider that the knowledge of sin is two-fold 1. Generall p. 161. 2 Particular two-fold To know our sinnes 1. Which they are ibid. 2 What manner of ones they are known by their 1. Cause pag. 162. 2. Effects two 1. Shame ibid. 2. Death p. 163 3. Adiuncts three 1. Foule ibid. 2. Great ibid. 3. Many ibid. 2. How a sinner may come to the knowledge of his sinnes namely by the Law p. 164. Vse 1. To know our selues p. 164. which is necessary 1. For our humiliation p. 166. 2. To cause vs to seeke to the Lord for grace and mercie ibid. Vse 2. Against those who haue no sence or feeling of sinne ibid. 2. Godly sorrow chap. 5. Where is shewed that sorrow for sin is two-fold 1. Legall pag. 169. 2. Euangelicall ibid. two fold 1. Contrition Or Inward sorrow for sinne Wherein 4 things 1. What it is p. 170. 2. How it is wrought two waies by 1 The Spirit of God ibid. 2. Preaching Christ crucified p. 171. 3. Signes thereof s●●●● 1. Carefulnesse p. 173. 2. Clearing our selues ibid. 3. Indignation ib. 4. Feare ibid. 5. Desire ibid. 6. Zeale p. 174. 7. Reuenge ibid. 4. Motiues thereunto foure 1. God requireth it p. 175. 2. All penitent sinners haue had it ibid. 3. It s necessary for 1. Except the heart be rent sinne still remaineth in the heart p. 176. 2. Ezcept wee breake our hearts for our sinnes God will breake vs in his wrath ibid. 4. It s profitable for 1. It is a sacrifice to God ibid. 2. Godly sorrow hurteth not ibid. 3. Sorrowing for sinne in this life will keepe vs from sorrowing in the life to come p. 177. Vse Against those who breake their heart with worldly sorrow but haue little sorrow of heart for their sinnes ibid. 2. Outward sorrow for sin Chap. 6. And therein two things 1. How a penitent sinner may rightly mourn for his sinnes wherein foure things 1. For whom p. 179. 2. For what ibid. 3. The time when p. 180. 4. The measure of mourning for sinne And therin these Rules are to be obserued 1. Sorrow for sinne must bee greater then for any worldly want or losse For 1. Sinne is the cause of all euill pag. 180. 2. A man may be saued without riches but not without Repentance ibid. 3. The soule once lost cannot b● rec●uered pag. 181. 2. For great sinnes we must haue great sorrow ibid. 3. There must be a moderation in mourning for sinne ibid. 2. Motiues to persw●de to mourning and weeping for sinne 4. 1. God requireth it ibid. 2. Penitent sinners haue wept and mourned for their sinnes pag. 182. 3. It s necessarie 1. In regard of our sinnes which were the cause of Crucifying Christ ibid. 2. Our eyes con●ay much euill to the heart pag. 183. 3. Sinne is the cause of miserie ibid. 4. Either now wee must mourne and weepe or we shall hereafter ibid. 4. It s profitable For 1. Mourning and weeping for sinne is a meanes to obtaine mercy ibid. 2. Mourning and weeping for sinne is a meanes to pacifie Gods anger pag. 184. 3. Teares shed for sinne are pleasing to God and delightfull to the Angels ibid. 4. They that mourne shall be comforted ibid. Vse Against those who mourne and weepe greatly for outward crosses but v●rie little for their sinnes pag. 185. 3. Confession of sinne Chap. 7. two-fold 1. Publique two-fold 1. Of the whole Congregation pag. 187. 2. Of any one that hath offended the Congregation ibid. 2. Priuate two-fold 1. To Man In two respects 1. For satisfaction ib. 2. For consolation pag. 188. 2. To God and therein 4. things 1. What it is ibid. 2. The kinds of it two-fold 1. Generall ibid. 2. Particular pag. 189. 3. The manner of making confession aright And therein sixe things 1. That it be with premeditation pag. 189. 2. That it be in truth ibid. 3. That it be accusing not excusing pag. 190. 4. That it be a confession of sinne and iniquitie ibid. 5. That it be a confession of our owne sinnes ibid. 6. That our confession be made vnto God ibid. 4. Motiues to Confesse our sinnes vnto God 2. 1. It s necessarie For 1. God is principally offended by our sinnes pag. 191. 2. Without confession we can haue no remission ibid. 3. If we doe not confesse our sinnes vnto God yet God seeth and knoweth them pag. 192. 2. It s profitable For 1. By confession we obtaine remission pag. 193. 2. Confession of sinnes is a meanes to turne away Gods wrath ibid. 3. By confession the soule is eased and the conscience pacified ibid. Vse To reproue 1. Those who will not confesse but hide and couer their sinnes Which is 1. Foolish pag. 194. 2. Dangerous pag. 195. 2. Those that excuse their sinnes ibid. 3. Those that defend their sinnes pag. 196. 4. Fors●kin● of sinne Chap 8. therein two things 1. What things are required ●o the forsaking of sin Three 1. That we forsake all and euery sinn● pag. 197. 2. That we forsake the occasions of euill with the prouocations therunto p. 198. 3. That we forsake sinne with the adherents pag. 199. 2. Motiues t● perswade thereunto Three 1. The Scripture pag. 200. 2. The Necess●●y therof Two-fold 1. It puts a difference betweene true and false Repentance pag. 201. 2. Except wee forsake our sinnes nothing that we doe can please God pag 202. 3. The benefit there of Twofold 1. To a mans temporall state Prosperitie ibid. 2. To his spirituall state 1. Mercie pag 203. ● No more remembrance of sinne ibid. Vse To reproue 1. Those that continue in sinne Which continuance in sinne is d●ng●rous For 1. Continuance in sinne ouerburdeneth the soule pag. 203. 2. The soule groweth worse thereby ibid. 3. They that continue still in sin shall be seuerely punished pag. 204. 2. Those who leaue some sinnes but will not forsake all pag. 205. 3. Those who will not make restitution of their euill gotten goods pag. 206. 4. Those who leaue sinne for a season and afterwards fall to their sinnes againe pag. 207. 5. Reformation of life chap. 9. Therin three things 1. Meanes whereby a sinner may come to amendment of life two 1. working of the Holy Spirit pag. 208. 2. The Word of God p. 209. 2. After what manner Amendment of life is wrought in a sinner wherein three things 1. There must bee an vtter forsaking of our old conuersation ibid. 2. It must bee in the whole man ibid. 3. It must haue it beginning within p. 210. 3. Motiues to perswade to Amendment of life three 1. God requireth it ibid. 2. The Necessity therof is great For 1. By nature wee are in a corrupt state p. 212. 2. Except we be renued reformed we cannot see the Kingdome of God ibid. 3. A sinner that will not be reformed doth cast away his soule p. 213. 3. The Benefit thereof threefold 1. Outward prosperity ibid. 2. Spirituall happinesse p. 214. 3.
it hath beene for swearing and lying and slandering for railing and reuiling and filthy speaking are thy hands the same for hurting thy neighbour or any thing that is his are they as heauy vpon thy poore neighbour as they haue beene through violence oppression vnmercifulnesse or by any manner of vn●ust and vnconscionable dealing and perceiuest thou no change is there no reformation nor amendment of life is thy heart as corrupt as before thy eye as wicked as before thy tongue as diuellish as before and thy hands as cruell and catching as before iudge heereby in what a dangerous state thou remainest as long as thou thus remainest not changed not renewed nor reformed For whosoeuer findes in himselfe no alteration from euill nor reformation of his former euill course nor any good change of life hee is no new creature and if he be not a new creature then he is not in Christ if hee be not in Christ then hath hee no true faith in Christ whosoeuer hath not true faith in Christ cannot be saued So that without reformation there is no saluation By this then the prophane wicked vngodly man may see his danger the common ordinary swearer the prophaner of the Saboth the contemner of Gods Word the disobedient the cruell malicious and vnmercifull man the proud the formcator and adulterer the drunkard the couetous the oppressour the vsurer and extortioner the false accuser the slanderer c these and such like may all see their fearefull and dangerous state none of which as long as they are such can say truely that they are in Christ neither haue they true faith in Christ because they are not new creatures for had they true faith in Christ they would shew some good signe of their faith and this is a plaine and euident signe of faith to bee a new creature to forsake our old conuersation and hence-forward to liue in newnesse of life The consideration whereof ought to bee of force to rowze vp the dull spirits of all such as are yet a sleepe in sinne to awaken them and cause them earnestly to goe about this great and necessary worke of Reformation of life knowing this that our new-reformed life giues euident testimony of our faith in Christ CHAP. XXI Of workes of Mercy WOrkes of mercy are the third outward 3 Workes of Mercy signe and marke of true iustifying faith By workes of mercy and deedes of charity I vnderstand such workes as come a 1 Tim. 1. 5. out of a pure heart and of a good conscience and of faith vnfained as saith S. Paul For the faith whereof I entreat is that which as S. Paul saith b Gal. 5 6. worketh by loue And not that vaine and vnprofitable faith which S. Iames calls a c Iam. 2. 17. dead faith And that works of mercy and deedes of charity proceeding from a heart purified by faith and from such a one as is iustified by faith in Christ are good outward signes and euident testimonies of true iustifying faith the Scripture witnesseth S. Paul to Titus saith d Tit. 3. 17. These things I will that thou affirme constantly that they which haue beleeued in God might bee carefull to maintaine good workes S. Iames demands of vaine men which boast of faith without workes e J●m 2. 14 15 16 17. What doth it profit my brethren though a man say he hath faith and haue not workes can faith faith saue him if a brother or sister be naked and destitute of daily food and one of you say unto them depart in peace be thou warmed and filled notwithstanding yee giue them not those things which are needfull to the body what doth it profit euen so faith if it hath not workes is dead being alone If a man see a poore Christian naked and cold and hungry and say vnto him alas poore soule get thee to the fire and warme thee but doth not bring him to the fire if hee say get thee clothing to couer thee but giues him no garment if he say get thee meat and fill thy belly but giues him no meat these faire words profit the poore creature nothing at all these pitifull words doe neither warme him nor feede him nor cloath him Now if such a man say hee hath faith he is much deceiued his faith is a vaine and vnprofitable faith for hee sheweth no good signe of his faith by his workes Mary that deuout woman after that she had heard Christ preach and vpon hearing beleeued the Gospell and had true faith in the Sonne of God brought the f Matt. 26. 7. box of very precious oyntment and powred it on the head of Iesus as hee sate at meat And Christ testifieth of her saying g Vers 10. shee hath wrought a good worke vpon mee Zacheus after that the Lord had graciously looked vpon him after that he was conuerted and beleeued begiones to doe good workes to deale his goods to the poore h Luk. 19. 8. Behold Lord the halfe of my goods I giue to the poore before this we heare nothing of Zacheus giuing to the poore or if hee gaue any thing it was little auaileable to him he remaining in impenitency and vnbeleefe but being conuerted and beleeuing Christ now wee heare of his good workes now hee bestoweth almes now he giues to the poore yea now hee deales his goods liberally to the poore Halfe his goods he giues to the poore good workes are sayd to be i Externa testimonia inter●ae p●tatis outward testimonies of inward piety And good workes though they be not the meritorious k N●n ●a●sa regnandi sed via ad regnum B●rn cause of obtaining the Kingdome of Heauen yet they are the way to the Kingdome For as the Apostle saith l Ephes 2. 10. Wee are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which God hath before ordained that wee should walke in them Good workes are not the procuring nor the deseruing cause of saluation but they are the effects and fruits of true faith m Matt. 12. 33. The tree is knowne by his fruit saith our Sauiour a good tree is knowne to bee a good tree by the good fruit it beareth the good fruit which it beareth giues euident testimony to all men that it is a good tree now good workes are good fruits whereby a good christian giues euident testimony and a demonstratiue signe of his true sauing faith But here I would haue it vnderstood that I limit not workes of mercy deedes of charity only to giuing of The extent of Charity to all duties of mercy both corporall and spirituall almes to feeding the hungry and cloathing the naked c But I extend workes of mercy in the largest sence to all the duties of loue charity to our neighbour to the charitable helping and succouring of any one and euery one that is in any present misery distresse in any neede of helpe
the writers inkehorne by his side is appointed to b Ezech 9 4. goe through the midst of Ierusalem and set a marke vpon the foreheads of the men that sigh that cry for all the abhominations that were done in the midst thereof Giuing vs to vnderstand that there were some in the city which sighed and mourned for the abhominations that were done in the citie For the second what we are to mourne and weepe 2 For what for That which we are specially to weepe for is sinne In generall we are to mourne for all our sinnes great small knowne and vnknowne secret and manifest In particular for some one sinne by which we haue offended or doe still more grieuously offend God The Israelites hauing offended God by asking a King when the Lord God was their King and being reprooued for it by Samuel they sorrowed and lamented and said to Samuel c 1 Sam. 12 19. Pray for thy seruants vnto the Lord thy God that we die not For we haue added vnto all our sinnes this ●uill to aske vs a King So Dauid with great feeling of his sinnes and with great sorrow and mourning confesseth his sinne● to the Lord and craueth mercy d Psal 51. 1. haue mercy vpon me O God c. Yet is most sorrowfull for his heinous bloody sinne points that out in particular and praies against it e ver 14. deliuer me from blood-guiltinesse ô God The third thing herein is the time when we ought chiefely to mourne for our sinnes It is not vsuall with 3 The time whē men to mourne for their sinnes till the hand of God be vpon them a●●l●ct●ng them visiting and scourging them for their sinnes But the chiefest time of mourning for sinne is when we haue sinned that thereby we may preuent the iudgement of God iudging our selues that we be not iudged of the Lord. For as the Apostle saith f 1 Cor. 11. 31. M●roris tempus non tunc est cum aliquid p●●imur aduersi sed cum malè operamur Chrys de prouident l. 3. If we would iudge our selues we should not be iudged g The tim● of sorrowing and mourning for sinne is not as a Father saith when we are vnder the crosse and suffer aduersity but when we doe euill then it behooues vs to mourne for the euill that we haue done As when a man hath committed adultery murther or any other grieuous crime for which 4 The measure of mourning for sinne and therein these rules are to be obserued his soule is in danger to be depriued of the kingdome of heauen then is it a fit time for him to mourne and sorrow for his sinne that he may be reconciled to God winne the fauour of God againe When affliction is vpon vs for our sinnes necessity constraineth vs to weepe and mourne because the affliction calls our sinne to remembrance 1 Sorrow for sinne must be greater then for any wo●●dly want or losse For. but it had bene much better for vs to haue wept and mourned for the euill of sinne before the euill of punishment fell vpon vs for sinne The fourth thing herein to be considered is the measure of our outward mourning and weeping for sinne 1 Sinne is the cause of all euill Concerning which these rules must be obserued First that our sorrow for sinne be greater then for any wordly want or temporall losse for First Sinne is the cause of all euill that befalleth vs in 2 A man may be saued without riches but not without repentance the course of our life Secondly a man that hath want of wordly things or sustaineth losse in temporall things may notwithstanding be saued come to life euerlasting but sinne not repented of is able to cast soule and body into hell Thirdly wordly wealth may be procured and temporall 3 The soule once lost cannot be recouered losses may be recouered againe but the soule being once lost cannot be recouered The losse of the soule is irrecouerable and therefore farre greater cause haue we to mourne and weepe for our sinnes then for any wordly want or temporall losse whatsoeuer Secondly greater sinnes must haue greater sorrow 2 For great sinns we must haue great sorrow more mourning and more weeping Dauid was sorrie for his lesser sinnes but was exceedingly sorrowfull for his great transgressions h 1 Sam. 24. 5. Dauids heart smote him because he had cut off Sauls skirt but for his adultery and bloodshed he afflicted himselfe sore he i 2 Sam. 12. 16. psal 51. fasted and mourned he lay vpon the earth and made great lamentation Thirdly mourning weeping for sinne must haue 3 There must be a moderation in mourning for sinne it moderation that it exceed not As S. Paul speakes in the behalfe of that incestuous Corinthian whom he had excommunicated but vpon his repentance had forgiuen saying k 2 Cor 2. 7. Sufficient to such a man is this punishment which was inflicted of many So that contrariwise ye ought rather to forgiue him and comfort him lest perhaps such a one should be swallowed vp with ouermuch sorrow After this manner a sinner expresseth his godly sorrow outwardly by mourning lamenting and weeping for his sinnes There remaine the motiues which may perswade vs 2 Motiues to mourning and weeping for sinne to this Godly sorrow which is outward in mourning weeping for sinne and they are foure First God requireth it So saith the Prophet Esaias l Isa 22. 12 In that day did the Lord God of hosts call to weeping and to 1 God requireth it mourning and to baldnesse and to girding with sackloth The prophet Ioel also saith m Ioel 2. 12. Therefore now saith the Lord turne ye euen vnto me with all your heart and with weeping and with mourning S. Iames saith n Iam. 4. 9. be afflicted and mourne and weepe Let your laughter be turned to mourning and your ioy to beauinesse Secondly penitent sinners haue wept and mourned 2 Penitent sin ners haue wept mourned ●or their sin●es for their sinnes Dauid saith o Psal 6 6. I am weary of my groaning all the night make I my bed to swime I water my couch with my teares That penitent woman mentioned by S. Luke held by diuerse to be Mary Magdalen wept so abundantly for her sinnes that those two little fountaines her eies yeilded her water sufficient to p ●uk 7. 38. wash her Sauiours f●ete when Peter remembred himselfe how he had sinned in denying his master Christ he went out and q Luk. 22. 62. Wept ●●tterly Yea Christ Iesus the head of the Saints though he himselfe had no sinnes to lament and weepe for yet he oftentimes wept Comming to Ierusalem r Luk. 19 41. he wept ouer it At the raising of Lazarus ſ Ioh 11. 35. Iesus wept At his passion he wept sore for the Apostle saith that
Wherefore Dauid saith of himselfe a Psal 32. 3. 4. 5. When I kept silence my bones waxed olde c. But I said I will confesse my transgressions vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the iniquity of my sinne Dauid after he had sinned for a time kept silence held his tongue and opened not his mouth to confesse his sinne but that was paine and griefe vnto him befound no comfort in it but when he acknowledged his sinnes and confessed his transgressions then the Lord shewed mercy on him and forgaue him and Dauid did not obtaine mercie and forgiuenesse at the hands of God till that hee confessed his sinne to the Lord. b Nos alit●r salui esse non possumus nisi confiteamur paenitentes quod iniquè gessimus negligentes Aug. We cannot otherwise be saued saith one but by humble acknowledgement of our sinnes which through our negligence we haue so wickedly committed Before the sicke man can finde ease and remedie for the recouering of his health he must make his griefe knowne vnto the Physitian and the Creeple is not ashamed to lay open his soares to the passenger to mooue him to haue pitty on him so likewise it 's necessarie for a sinner by confession of his sinnes to make knowne the inward diseases the infirmities and sores of his soule to the chiefe and best Physitian of our soules Christ Iesus and bee as earnest with the Lord to beg mercy and craue pardon and forgiuenesse of his sinnes as the poore beggar by the high-way side is importunate to beg a penny of the Passenger Thirdly Confession of our sinnes to God is necessary 3 If we doe not confesse our sinnes yet wee cannot hide them frō God for God both seeth knoweth them for if we doe not confesse them vnto God yet God knowes them and sees them yea c Quando i●●m● celat D●us ●●dat when sinners doe foolishly hide and couer their sins then the Lord layes them open to the view of the world The Lord said vnto Dauid d 2 Sam. 12. 12. Thou didst it secretly but I will doe this thing before all Israel and before the Sunne When thou didst commit thy sinne of adultery thou didst it secretly thou thoughts that no eye had seene thee but I beheld thy wickednesse which thou didst in secret and I will punish thee openly because thou hast sinned and not confessed thy sinne I will bring thy sinne to light and thy selfe to shame Secondly as Confession of sinne is necessary so is it 2 It 's good and profitable For also good and profitable for a sinner for First by Confession of sinne a sinner obtaineth remission and forgiuenesse of sinne so saith Salomon By confession we obtaine remission e Pro. 28. 13. Who so confesseth and forsaketh his sinnes shall haue mercie S. Iohn saith f 1 Iohn 1. 9. If wee confesse our sinnes hee is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes And Dauid witnesseth of himselfe g Psal 32. 5. I said I will confesse my transgression vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the iniquitie of my sinne h V●i Confessio ibi remissio Qua●d●●●mo det●gi● D●us ●egi● quando homo agnoscit Deus ign●scit Where there is true hearty and humble confession of sinne there is remission and forgiuenesse When a sinner vncouereth and layeth open his sinnes God couereth and hideth his sinnes When a sinner acknowledgeth and confesseth his sinnes God doth pardon and forgiue him his sinnes Vpon Dauids confession i 2 Sam. 12. 13. I haue sinned against the Lord Nathan the Prophet saith vnto Dauid in the word of the Lord The Lord hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not die Secondly Confession of sinne is a meanes to pacifie 2 Confession of sin is a meanes to turne away Gods turne away Gods wrath heauie displeasure the anger and to asswage the wrath of Almighty God Yea to auert and turne away the iudgements of God which ar● threatned against and hang ouer the head of sinners When Ionah the Prophet cried against Nineueh k Io. 3. 4. 8. 9. 10. Yet ●ortie dayes and Nineueh shall bee ouer throwne The Niniuites humbled themselues before the Lord with fasting and mourning confessing their sinnes and crying mightily vnto God and when God saw their workes that they turned from their euill way then God repented of the euill that be had said that he would doe vnto them and hee did it not Hereupon is that saying of Chrysostome l Niniuitae confitentur viuūt Sodomitae obdurantur pereunt Chry. in Psal 106. The Niniuites confesse their sinnes and liue the Sodomites are hardned in their sinnes and perish Thirdly Confession of sinne is profitable to a sinner for thereby his conscience is pacified and his soule eased Like as a man being discontent in his mind and sore troubled in his thoughts can take no quiet rest 3 By Confession the soule is cased and the conscience pacified his stomacke faileth him and his sleepe departeth from him till meeting with a faithfull trustie friend hee maketh his minde knowen vnto him layeth open the griefe of his heart and by mutual conference together findeth comfort and ease so a sinner that is greatly distressed in soule and afflicted in conscience with the remembrance of his sinnes by humbling his soule in secret before the Lord confessing his sinnes laying open his iniquities and not hiding his sinnes doth finde great case for vpon ●he sinner's humble confession the Lord who is the best friend that a poore sinner hath doth marucilousl● com●ort and refresh the soule of the sinner So that the heart of the poore sinner is now comforted his soule is cased and his conscience pacified Such benefit commeth by confessing our sinnes vnto God And s●●ing that Confession of our sinnes vnto God Vse is so necessarie and profitable the consideration hereof serues iustly to reproue First those who will not acknowledge and confesse 1 Against those who will not confesse but hide and couer their sinnes their sinnes vnto God but hide and couer them as Adam when he had eaten of the forbidden fruit m Gen. 3. 8. bid himselfe among the trees of the garden thinking to hide himselfe and his transgression from the Lord wherefore Iob saith n Iob 31. 33. If I couered my transgressions as Adam by hiding min● iniquitie in my bosome Iob counts it a haynous thing to couer his transgressions and to hide his iniquitie And indeed for any one to couer his transgressions and to hide his iniquitie is both foolish and dangerous Foolish for no man can so hide his sinne but God knoweth and seeth it A notable example hereof we haue in Dauid It is wonderfull to consider what deuises what 1 Foolish shifts and inuentions o 2. Sam. 11. Dauid vsed to couer and hide his sinne of adulterie with Bathsheba Whn Dauid committed that sinne of adulterie with Bathsheba
state Secondly Prayer also auaileth greatly for the good 2 In regard of the soule And that of the soule and that both for the Remoouing of euill and Procuring of good 1 Remoouing euill As First for the remoouing of euill And first prayer is a meanes to remooue away our sinnes from vs which stand as a cloud betweene God and vs to hinder good 1 Our sinnes things from vs separating betweene God and vs and prouoking Gods wrath against vs wherefore Hezekiah being recouered from his sicknes and praising God for his deliuerance saith t Isa 38. Ver. 2. 3 And 17. thou hast in loue to my soule deliuered it from the pit of corruption for thou hast cast all my sins behind thy backe Secondly Prayer is effectuall and powerfull to helpe 2 Temptations vs against temptations and to deliuer vs from that euill one So our Sauiour teacheth vs to pray u Mat. 6. 13. lead vs not into temptation but deliuer vs from euill And so he exhorteth vs to pray x Mat. 26. 41. watch and pray that ye enter not into temptation Thirdly Prayer is powerfull to helpe vs in the euill 3 The te●●our of death and iudgement and perillous times to free our soules from the danger of death and the iudgement to come that neither death shall suddenly come vpon vs nor the day of the Lord take vs vnawares Which our Sauiour sheweth vs in this exhortation y Luk. 21. 36. Watch ye therefore and pray alwayes that ye may be accompted worthie to escape all these things that shall come to passe and to stand before the Sonne of man Thus prayer auaileth for the remoouing of euill from the soule Secondly prayer auaileth much for the procuring of 2 Procuring Good As good things to the soule as first mercie pardon and forgiuenesse Dauid in his Prayer confesseth his sinne 1 Mercy pard●n and forgiuenesse saying z Psal 32. 5. I acknowledge my sinne vnto thee and mine iniquity haue I not hid I said I will confesse my transgressions to the Lord and it followeth thou forgauest the iniquitie of my sinne Dauid confessed his sinne and prayed for the pardon of his sinne and the Lord heard his Prayer and pardoned his sinne So S. Iames saith a Iam. 5. 15. the prayer of faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp and if he haue committed sinnes they shall be forgiuen him Secondly Prayer is a meanes to obtaine all graces necessarily 2 All graces necessarie for our saluation accompanying saluation For b Iam. 1. 17. euery good gift and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth down from the Father of lights Our Sauiour Christ saith c Mat 7. 7. Aske and it shall be giuen you and S. Iames saith d Iam. 1. 5. If any of you lacke wisedome let him aske of God that giueth to all men liberally and vpbraideth not and it shall be giuen him Thirdly Prayer is effectuall not onely for the obtaining 3 Increase of Grace of grace but likewise for the increase of grace the Apostles pray e Luk. 17. 5. Lord increase our Faith And S. Paul prayeth for the Ephesians that God would f Ephe. 3. 16. 17. 18. 19. grant them according to the riches of his glory to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man that Christ might dwell in their hearts by faith that being rooted and grounded in loue they might be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the loue of Christ Which passeth knowledge that they might be filled with all the fullness● of God And they that are strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man hauing Christ dwelling in their hearts by faith and are growing and increasing in grace in this life shall assuredly attaine to glorie in the life to come Prayer then as it remooueth euill ●o it procureth good to the soule mercie grace yea increase of grace and with grace glorie the perfection of Grace Such is the efficacie of Prayer The consideration of which efficacie and power of Vse Prayer may teach vs in all our necessities and tribulations To vse prayer in time of need as a sure defence to flee vnto God by Prayer to lay hold on prayer as a man would on his shield and buckler For prayer is a most sure defence in all troubles whatsoeuer It is a defence against tribulations outward and temptations inward It helpes the bodie and cures the soule it preuaileth both in heauen and in earth concerning which the exhortation of the Apostle S. Paul is to be receiued and embraced g Ephe. 6. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. take vnto you saith he the whole armour of God that ye may be able to withstand in the euill day and hauing done all to stand Stand therefore hauing your loynes girt about with truth and hauing on the breast-plate of righteousnesse and your feete shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace Aboue all taking the shield of faith wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fierie darts of the wicked and take the helmet of saluation the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Praying alwayes with all Prayer and supplication in the Spirit A Christian that is thus armed hauing the girdle of truth about his loynes hauing on the breast-plate of righteousnesse and his feete shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace hauing the shield of faith before him the helmet of saluation vpon his head hauing the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God and being prepared to pray with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit Such a one is able to stand against the aduersarie the Deuill and all spirituall wickednesse and such a one shall preuaile against his spirituall enemies yea such a one shall preuaile with God himselfe for any petition that he shall make so farre as it shall be good for him For the effectuall feruent Prayer of a righteous man auaileth much CHAP. XVIII Of the helpes and furtherances of Prayer Of the first helpe the Spirit of God THe ninth thing in the Treatise of Prayer is of 9 The helps and furtherances of Prayer Three the helpes and furtherances of Prayer and they are three The first is Gods holy Spirit of which Saint Paul saith a Rom. 8. 26. 27. Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities 1 Gods holy Spirit And for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh intercession for vs with groanings which cannot be vttered And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God For this cause the Spirit of God is called the spirit of supplications by the Prophet Zacharie b Zach. 12. 10. The holy spirit
soules Consider with your selues that y 2 Sam. 12. 16. Dauid a King fasted mourned when his child was sicke and lay all night vpon the earth that z Esth 4. 4. 16. Esther a Queene fasted and did neither eat nor drinke three daies night nor day and that a Luk. 2 36. 37. Anna a woman of great age serued God with fastings and praiers night and day But where is our fasting or where shall we finde one of an hundred fasting truly after the right manner and to the ●ight ends that can say with S. Paul I haue bene b 2. Cor. 11. 27. Infastings often or can say with Dauid c Psal 109. 24. My knees are weake through fasting and my flesh faileth of fatnesse Some hope to excuse themselues from fasting saying each one for himselfe though I cannot fast yet I can pray but tell me not of thy deuotion in praying except thou canst also tell me of thy daily abstinence and of some time set a part for the taming of thy rebellious flesh and bringing vnder thy bodie by fasting for fasting is as hath bene declared a great helpe and furtherance to prayer and therefore where abstinence is not vsed and fasting neglected there doubtlesse praier either is not or is verie weake cold and formall And this of Fasting as it is a help and furtherance to praier CHAP. XX. Of the Third help and further ance of prayer Diuine Meditations GOdly Meditations are a third help and furtherance to our praiers which I will make manifest 3 Di●ine Meditations considered two waies First in generall Secondly by a particular enumeration of sundry profitable meditations For the First All godly meditations are a helpe and 1 Generally furtherance to our praiers as appeareth by the words of the prophet Dauid saying a Psal 39. 3. 4. My heart was hot within me while I was musing the fire burned then spake I with my tongue Lord make me to know mine end c. and againe he saith b Psal 77. 1. I cried vnto God with my voice euen vnto God with my voice he gaue eare vnto me But before he called cried vnto the Lord he declareth what thoughts meditations he had he c Ver. 3. remēbred God he could not sleepe for thinking vpon God he d Vers 6. 7 8 9. Communed with his owne heart his spirit made diligent search wil the Lord cast off for euer wil he be fauourable no more c. To this agreeth the saying of the sonne of Syrach e Ecclus. 39. 1. He that giueth his mind to the law of the most high and is occupied in the meditations thereof will seeke out the wisdome of all the ancient c. and it followeth f Vers 5. He will giue his heart to resort early to the Lord that made him and will pray before the most high and will open his mouth in prayer and make supplication for his sinnes Thus holy and diuine meditations generally considered are a helpe and furtherance to our praiers Secondly that diuine meditations are a great help 2 Particularly Twofold furtherance to d●uout praier I will manifest by the particular enumeration of sundry diuine meditations which I reduce to these two heads Godly meditations concerne either God or Ourselues 1 Concerning God Threefold Those that concerne God are of three sorts The first concerne his nature or Attributes The second his word The third his workes Touching the First The consideration of the attributes 1 Concerning the Attributes of God as of God may stirre vs vp to Inuocation either to pray to God or to praise God as First when we thinke vpon the eternitie and immortalitie of God the consideration of this that God is eternall 1 Eterniue of God and immortall that he is euerlasting without beginning and without ending may raise our thoughts to thinke on the life euerlasting which the eternall and euer-liuing God hath prepared for his elect and then to pray that we may liue eternally with God in his eternall and euerlasting kingdome Secondly when we meditate on the power of God 2 Power of God consider that he made the world of nothing and that he doth what soeuer it pleaseth him both in heauen and earth this should teach vs to pray that we may depend vpon Gods prouidence for the things of this present life because God is al sufficient to pray that in time of trouble we may waite vpon God for deliuerance because he is a God of might and power able to doe all things yea and to pray that we may feare that powerfull God to seeke to please him and to glorifie him both in our bodies and in our solues because he is g Mat. 10. 28. able to destroy both soule and bodie in hell Thirdly when we meditate on the iustice of God and 3 Iustice of God consider how iust the Lord is in all his waies that he is a iust God hating sinne and iniquitie and punishing the transgressors h Exod. 34 7. That will by no meanes cleare the guilty i Nahum 1. 3. And will not at all acquit the wicked the consideration hereof should mooue vs to pray that we may alwaies k Psal 4. 4. Stand in awe of his maiesty and not sinne against him lest we prouoke his wrath and indignation against vs. Fourthly when we thinke on the mercy of God and 4 Mercie of God consider with our selues that God is l Ioel. 2. 13. Gracious and mercifull this meditation should moue vs to pray that the Lord would be gracious and mercifull vnto vs that he would shew mercie vpon vs and pardon our sinnes as Dauid prayeth m Psal 51. 1. Haue mercy vpon me ô God according to thy louing kindnesse according to the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions Fiftly when we thinke on the patience long suffering 5 Patience of God and forbearance of God considering how long we haue liued in our sinnes how often we haue done wickedly and still the Lord hath shewed his patience and long suffering and waiting for our repentance hath forborne to cut vs off in our sinnes then we should pray that this n Rom. 2. 4. Goodnesse of God in forbearing vs might be a meanes to lead vs to repentance Sixtly when we thinke on the wisedome of God and consider how wisely the Lord hath made all things and 6 Wisdome of God how prudently he ruleth and gouerneth the world this meditation should bring vs into admiration of the Lords wisedome and cause vs to lift vp our hearts on high praising the Lord and saying with Dauid o Psa 104. 24. O Lord how manifold are thy workes in wisdome hast thou made them all Thus the deuour soule may be carried aloft in heauenly meditations concerning these and the rest of the Attributes of God and in all he may be stirred vp
one to venture the saluation of his soule vpon the extraordinary working of God when as God in great wisdome and mercy to mankinde hath appoynted ordinary means to beget faith and to worke our saluation which ordinary meanes is the hearing of the Word for faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the Word of God CHAP. XV. Of the meanes by which true sauing Faith may be increased continued and preserued AS Faith hath it meanes whereby it is begotten and procured so hath it also meanes whereby it is nourished increased continued and preserued This is the ninth point in the Treatise of Faith 9 Meanes wherby true faith is increased and preserued Three The meanes whereby Faith is nourished increased and preserued are three The Word Sacraments and Prayer 1 The Word of God And that by Touching the first The word of God is a meanes to increase faith and that diuerse waies First by reading the word the diligent reading of the Scriptures is necessarie for them that doe beleeue to 1 Reading the Scriptures the increasing and preseruing of their faith St. Paul writing to the Colossians who had receiued the faith and did now beleeue giues them commandment concerning the reading of his Epistle and chargeth that others should read it also for he saith a Coloss 4. 16. When this epistle is read amongst you cause that it be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans and that ye likewise read the Epistle from Laodicea and S. Paul chargeth young Timothie to b 1 Tim. 4. 13. giue attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine Secondly by hearing the word of God for as the 2 Hearing the word of God hearing of the word of God is an effectuall meanes to beget faith so is it also a powerfull meanes to nourish strengthen and preserue faith It is a rule in nature c Ex ijsdem nutrimur ex quibus sumus we are nourished by the same things of which we are begotten Now spiritually we are begotten by the word of God as saith S. Iames d Iam. 1. 18. of his owne will be gate he vs with the word of truth and therefore we are spiritually nourished by the word of God For this cause the word of God is said to be the meate of the soule it is both milke for young babes and strong meate for strong men They that are but young children in religion babes in grace may suck milke out of Gods word to nourish their soules they that are strong in faith and growen in grace may from the word of God receiue strong meat to strengthen them more Of which the Apostle speakes to the Hebrewes e Heb. 5. 13. 14. euery one that vseth Milke is vnskilfull in the word of righteousnesse for he is a babe but strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age S. Peter giueth this exhortation f 1 Pet. 2. 1. 2. Therefore laying aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisie and enuies and euill speakings as new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that ye may grow thereby as a new borne babe desires the mothers breasts and by sucking wholsome milke out of her breasts is nourished and growes thereby so a Christian though he be but newly begotten by the word of truth be but a young christian a beginner and be but as yet a weake christian yet if he diligently heare the word of God and if his soule doe earnestly desire to sucke the sincere and wholsome milke of the word this is a powerfull meanes to nourish his soule to strengthen his faith and make him grow in grace Thirdly by deuine meditation It is noted to be a property of a godly man to meditate on the word of Diuine Meditation God g Psal 1. 2. His delight is in the law of the Lord saith the Psalmist and in his law doth he meditate day and night the word of God is compared to meate which to the end that it may giue nourishment to the body its necessarie that it not onely enter into the mouth and be chewed with the teeth but that it go downe into the stomacke and be digested so likewise to the end that the word of God may giue true and substantiall nourishment to our soules its necessary not only that we heare the word with our outward eares but suffer it to enter into our heart and inwardly digest it by meditation It was one propertie of cleane beasts mentioned in the leuiticall law to h Leuit. 11. 3. chew the cud and he is such a cleane creature who hauing heard the word of God and committed it to his memorie doth afterward meditate vpon the same ponder it in his mind to the end that his faith may be increased that he may be nourished in the truth grow in grace Fourthly by Godly conference the two disciples to 4 Godly conference whom Christ appeared after his resurrection and talked with them said one to another i Luk. 24. 32. did not our heart burne within vs while he talked with vs by the way and while he opened to vs the Scriptures the spirituall communication and heauenly conference which Christ had with the Disciples did heate them inwardly and made their hearts burne within them godly conference spirituall speech and heauenly communication doth inflame the heart with the loue of God doth stirre vp the affections and kindle good desires yea increaseth knowledge and strengthneth faith thus the Word of God which begetteth faith doth also increase nourish and preserue the same The second meanes of increasing faith is the vse and 2 Vse of the Sacraments partaking of the Sacraments For First the Word and Sacraments are as the two brests of the Church whereout the faithfull soule suckes spirituall 1 Nourishing the soule nourishment strength of faith and increase of grace Baptisme giues a Christian admission and entrance into the Church of God whereby he is ingraffed into the mysticall body of Christ and made a member of Christ and by the Sacrament of the Lords Supper the members of Christ are nourished to eternall life Of which nourishment receiued spiritually by faith it is that our Sauiour saith k Ioh. 6. 53 54. Except yee eat the flesh of the sonne of man and drinke his bloud yee haue no life in you Who so eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud hath eternall life Secondly the Sacraments are a meanes of increasing 2 Confirming the promises of the Gospell and strengthening our faith for they confirme the promises made vnto vs in the Gospell for which cause they are called Seales for like as a man making a grant to another in writing of house or lands for the better confirmation and strenthening of the deede he puts to his seale so the Lord our God to his gracious and mercifull promises made vnto vs in his written Word hath annexed the Sacraments as seales to assure vs of
it selfe maketh intercession for vs with gronings which cannot bee vttered This is also that which S. Paul hath to the Galatians g Cal. 4. 6. And because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father By all which it is manifest that it is a sure and certaine signe of true faith if the Spirit of God worke this grace in vs to stirre vp our hearts by deuout prayer and supplication to seeke vnto God to runne vnto our Heauenly Father and to cry Abba Father A childe in time of sicknesse paine and griefe or being in any perill and danger whither doth he run or to whom doth he cry but to his father he hopes his father will helpe him and therefore calls and cryes to his father complaines and makes his mone to his father Like as the Shunamites sonne when he was sore grieued with a paine in his head came to his father and sayd h Luk. 4. 19. My head my head So the sonnes and children of God in time of their heauinesse of soule when they are sicke with sinne diseased in soule and troubled in conscience with the burthen of their sinnes or whether they bee in any outward affliction or trouble whither doe they run but to their Heauenly Father and as the Shunamites childe sayd to his father My head my head so they euery one cry My soule my soule My conscience my conscience my soule is in heauinesse my conscience is sore troubled and burdened with the heauy waight of my sinnes And then in hope of the mercy of God in Iesus Christ they humbly confesse their sinnes they hide not their iniquities they earnestly craue mercy and sue for the pardon of their sinnes aboue all things they seeke ease to their afflicted soule and comfort to their distressed conscience building vpon those gracious word of our Sauiour i Matth. 11. 28. Come vnto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will giue you rest And thus to call vpon the name of the Lord is a signe of saith The fist is an inward conflict betweene the Flesh and 5 Conflict between the flesh and the spirit Two-fold the Spirit and that is two-fold The one is a striuing against sinne The other a striuing against doubtings Touching the first no man in this life is perfectly 1 A struing against sinne sanctified but hath neede to pray more and more for the Spirit of sanctification that he may bee wholly sanctified Hence it is that though a naturall and vnregenerate man bee wholly carnall yet a regenerate man is not all spirituall but partly carnall and partly spirituall For although a Christian regenerate and sanctified hath his heart purified by faith yet naturall corruption is not altogether purged out of the heart that remaines in vs k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to exercise vs. This in the children of God now regenerate and sanctified is called flesh and the sanctified part in them is called spirit And in the regenerate there is a great combat a spirituall fight and great striuing betweene these two the flesh and the spirit which shall get the victory The manner of which combat and inward fight S. Paul describes thus l Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the spirit the spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that ye cannot doe the things that ye would A Christian regenerate and sanctified is in the way to Heauen and the spirit that is the sanctified part drawes him on to God-ward and hastens him forward towards the Kingdome of Heauen but the flesh that is the corruption of nature rebels and labours to draw him backwards to the world and would if it were possible draw him downe to hell Hence it is that a Christian findes in himselfe pride of heart lust of the flesh filthy desires vncleane thoughts couetous desires anger hatred enuy malice grudgings and desire of reuenge c. haling and pulling him one way and against these he feeles humility temperance loue patience meeknesse and other graces drawing him another way Now if a man doe finde grace striuing against corruption good motions of the good Spirit fighting against bad motions of the euill Spirit and if a man doe indeede and in truth finde that he doth earnestly striue against sinne that he labours to mortifie his affections to crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts to subdue sinne and wickednesse this is a signe of grace and a sure marke that faith is in the heart at least in some measure According to that saying of the Apostle m Vers 24. They that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts As n Gen. 25. 22 23. Rebecca knew her selfe to bee quicke with childe by the struggling and striuing of the twins in her wombe so a Christian may know whether he be quickned by grace and liue by faith in the Sonne of God by the inward conflict and striuing betweene the Flesh and the Spirit The second kinde of inward conflict betweene the 2 A striuing against doubtings flesh and the spirit is an inward striuing against doubtings and distrusts in Gods mercy It is the Deuils policy either to cause men whiles they remaine in their naturall state without true faith and repentance to presume on Gods mercy or else hauing faith and repentance to set before them their sinnes and to suggest into their hearts doubtings of the remission of their sins doubtings concerning their faith and repentance and doubtings concerning their vocation and sanctification And thereby would if it were poss●ble extinguish their faith and bring them to despaire of Gods mercy But against all these difficulties true iustifying faith if it be in the heart will shew it selfe though perhaps in these temptations but weakely yet truely to striue against temptations and to fight against all these doubtings It is true I confesse the children of God may be troubled with doubtings but not ouercome of doubtings Dauid is driuen to this expostulation o Psal 77. 7 8. Will the Lord cast off for euer And will he be fauourable no more Is his mercy cleane gone for euer Heere are great doubtings in Dauid a seruant of the Lord but he ouercame his doubtings for neither Dauid nor any of the children of God continue still in their doubtings They are neuer with Cain and Iudas brought to such desperate doubtings a● vtterly and finally to despaire of the mercy of God They may for a time haue distrustfull thoughts and doubtfull speeches but faith in the end gets the vpper hand Windes and flouds may beat vpon the house grounded vpon the rocke aswell as vpon the house built vpon the sand but cannot make it fall And many p Dubitationes fidem in nobis oppugnant non tamen expugnant Polan distrustfull doubtings may beat against the faith of a Christian but cannot beat it downe they may fight against
cannot escape the iudgement of God And many in this agonie being not able to deliuer themselues and their soules refusing comfort are swallowed vp with abundance of worldly sorrow and without the great mercy of God are plunged into the gulfe of despaire But there is also an Euangelicall sorrow for sinne 2 Euangelicall Two-fold which is properly Godly sorrow and this is twofold Inward and Outward Inward sorrow for sinne is called Contrition Outward is mourning lamenting and weeping for sin First of Contrition or inward sorrow for sinne In 1 Contrition or inward sorrow for sinne handling whereof I will shew First what Contrition is Secondly how it is wrought in vs. Thirdly the signes and markes of it Fourthly the motiues to perswade vnto it For the first Contrition or inward sorrow for sinne 1 What Contrition is is a sorrow of the heart specially for this that a sinner hath offended God and being truely humbled with a sence and feeling of his sinnes is displeased with himselfe for his sinnes and doth now not onely dislike but from his heart detest and abhorre sinne This is properly called c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrow according to God or sorrow after a godly sort and godly sorrow and sorrow to repentance It is called d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 7. 9 10. compunction of heart It is also called the e Acts 2. 37. renting of the heart And it is called a f Ioel 2. 17. broken spirit g Psal 51. 17. a broken and a contrite heart For the second How Contrition is wrought in a sinner The meanes whereby a sinner is brought to Contrition 2 How Contrition is wrought in a sinner and inward hearty sorrow for his sinnes are two The one is the gracious working of the Spirit of God giuing a sinner a liuely sence and feeling of his sinnes giuing him grace to see and know how by his 1 By the working of the Spirit of God sinnes he hath offended God and grieued the Holy Spirit of God so●ming also his hard heart that hee may greeue lament and mourne for his sinnes after a godly manner This is that which the Lord saith by his Prophet Zachary h Zach. 12. 10. I will powre vpon the house of Dauid and vpon the Inhabitants of Ierusalem the spirit of grace and of supplications and they shall looke vpon me whom they haue pierced and they shall mourne for him as one mourneth for his onely sonne A sinner looking vpon Christ whom by his sinnes he hath pierced and wounded and hauing a true feeling of his sinnes greeueth and mourneth he is sorry after a godly manner but how is this godly forrow wrought in him the Lord saith that he will powre the spirit of grace and of supplications vpon the sinnefull soule and when the Lord hath put such grace into the soule of a sinner to see his sinnes and to perceiue how that by his sinnes hee hath offended God and pierced the Sonne of God then hee is inwardly grieued at the heart then his heart melts into teares This is the first meanes whereby a sinner is brought to Contrition The second meanes is the preaching of Christ crucified 2 By preaching Christ crucisied as appeareth in the example of those first Conuerts to whom Peter preached Christ crucified For hauing testified against them that they had crucified Christ i Acts 2. 37 38. They were pricked in their hearts and sayd vnto Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall wee doe their consciences were so stricken with the terrour of this that they should be guilty of shedding the innocent bloud of the Sonne of God that they were at their wits end they knew not what to doe yet were they desirous to finde ease to their troubled consciences but knew not how till they called to remembrance the words of the Apostle how that Iesus of Nazareth whom they had crucified and slaine was the Sonne of God whom God raised vp who ascended to Heauen and is exalted at the right hand of God and hearing also that he is Iesus the Sauiour that he is the true Messias Christ the Anoynted of the Lord heereupon they are pricked in their hearts and touched in their consciences with a feeling of their sinnes yet so as they doe not despaire of all mercy but trusting in the goodnesse and mercy of God through Christ and being desirous to know how they may finde comfort to their troubled consciences they said to Peter and to the rest of the Apostles Menand brethen what shall we doe ô teach vs what we must doe to be saued Now they are sorrowfull after a godly manner now they are of a contrite spirit and an humble soule now they are exceeding sorrowfull that they haue crucified the Lord of life now they haue bleeding hearts for that they haue shed the bloud of the innocent Lambe of God now they are exceedingly displeased with themselues for that they haue done so wickedly and now they so abhorre their sinnes and wickednesse that they purpose neuer to doe wickedly againe So that their compunction was not onely a bare pricking of the heart such as Cain and Iudas had but as they had a feeling of their sinnes so also had they a feeling of the mercy of God in Christ Iesus Moreouer to the compunction and pricking of their hearts there was ioyned a readinesse to obey the will of God and to doe whatsoeuer the Lord should command them and therefore it is that they say Men and brethren what shall we doe to the end that a sinner may be brought to Contrition its necessary that the Word of God which is k Heb. 4. 12. quicke and powerfull and sharper then any two-edged sword piercing euen to the diuiding a sunder of soule and spirit and of the ioynts and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart doe pierce the heart and wound the conscience making the sinner to feele his sinnes to know that by his sinnes he hath offended God who hath beene so gracious a God and so louing and mercifull a Father vnto him and to acknowledge that by his sinnes he hath pierced and wounded the Sonne of God who was content to be pierced and wounded yea and to suffer his bloud to be shed for his sinnes The Adamant the hardest stone which will neither bee bruized with iron nor melted with fire is notwithstanding dissolued with l Gemin lib. 2. cap. 26. Goats-bloud What heart is there so hard and stony so adamant-like that will not bee mollified and softned that will not be rent and broken yea dissolued into teares being washed and soaked in the bloud of Christ this ô man this must or nothing will soften thy hard heart Thus Contrition is wrought in the heart The third thing is concerning the signes and marks 3 Signes of contrition or inward godly sorrow of Contrition Contrition or
if they haue left of to be such as they were before though they bring forth no good fruits meete for repentance whereas the Scripture requireth not onely a departing from euill but also a doing of good Not onely a ceasing from euill but a learning to doe well It had not bin sufficient for Manasseh to haue left worshipping of Idoles except he had worshipped the true God It had beene small praise in Peter to haue wept bitterly for denying Christ and to haue denied him no more except he had also boldly confessed Christ And it had beene but small commendations in Paul to haue left off persecuting Christians except he had also laboured to doe good by preaching Christ seeking to winne soules and to bring men to Christ as before he had laboured to driue them from Christ If any one hath heretofore despised the preaching of the Gospell made light of it and thought basely of the Ministers of the Gospell the messengers of God what great thing doth he if he onely cease to be such a one except he now loue the word of God and embrace it except with his heart he desire it and long after it except he also loue and reuerence the Ministers of the Gospell the Messengers of glad tydings And except he esteeme the Preachers of the Gospell highly in loue for their workes sake If any hath offended with his tongue by swearing cursing lying slandering c. What true repentance doth such a one shew except he so leaue swearing and cursing and taking of Gods name in vaine as that hee learne to vse the name of God ●i●h all 〈◊〉 And that with his tongue he olesse and prayse God except he so leaue lying as ●ha● he lea●ne to speake the truth And so cease from slandering and backbi●ing as that he learne to speake either well of others or no ill So likewise whosoeuer hath beene an oppressour of the poore vnmercifull cruell hard-hearted or any way iniurious to others what great thing doth he if he onely cease to be cruell vnmercifull iniurious any more except he also shew mercie and compassion to the poore except he be liberall to them that are in want And except with Zacheus he giue part of his goods to the poore For as Chrysostome saith i Nihil boni facere hoc ipsum est malum facere Chrys in Ephes Hom. 16. to doe no good is to doe euill The very omitting to do that good which we ought to haue done is euill and deserues punishment And many shall be condemned at the last day for not doing of good for not k Math. 25. 41. 42. 43. feeding the hungry c. Wherefore learne to doe well and be thou exercised in doing that which is good or else thou hast not truly amended thy life CHAP. X. Of perseuerance in grace and continuing in goodnesse to the end THe sixt and last step of grace whereby a Sinner 6 Perseuerance in grace or continuing in well-doing to the end in his returning from sinne riseth higher and continueth neerer vnto God is perseuerance in grace and goodnesse when a Christian hauing begun well holds on his good course and continues therein to the end Concerning this perseuerance I will Therein two things First prooue that a Christian may perseuere and continue to the end Secondly vse motiues and perswasions to mooue euery good Christian to labour that hee may perseuere and continue in goodnesse euen vnto the end For the first That a Christian hauing faith to beleeue 1 A Christian may perseuere and continue to the end For and grace to repent of his sins hauing forsaken his sinnes and amended his life and now being in the state of grace may so perseuere and continue to the end is euident for First the Scripture testifieth that such a one shall not 1 The Scripture affirmeth that a good and sound Christian shall not be mooued be mooued from his standing in grace a Psal 15. 5. Hee that doth these things saith Dauid shall neuer be mooued And againe b Psal 125. 1. They that trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Syon which cannot b● remoeued but abideth for euer Secondly God that hath begunne the good worke of grace in his children will finish it So saith the Apostle to the Philippians c Phil. 1. 6. Being confident of this very thing that he which hath begunne a good worke in you will performe it 2 God that hath begunne grace will finish it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Thirdly God will glorifie them that are iustified from their sinnes As Saint Paul also speakes to the Romanes d Rom. 8. 30. Moreouer whom he did predestinate them he also called 3 They that are iustified shall be glorified and whom he called them he also iustified and whom he iustified them he also glorified Fourthly An inheritance in heauen is reserued for the elect and they are kept by the power of God vnto 4 The elect are reserued vnto saluation in heauen saluation So saith S. Peter e 1 Pet. 1. 3. 4. 5. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which according to his abundant mercie hath begotten vs againe vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and vndefiled and that fadeth not away reserued in heauen for you who are kept by the power of God through faith vnto saluation Now this being prooued that a Christian may perseuere 2 Motiues to perswade to Perseuerance and continue to the end In the second place it is expedient to vse perswasions whereby euery good Christian may bee mooued to labour for perseuerance that hee may continue in his good state of grace and hold on his right course of godlines euen vnto the end And the perswasions hereunto are these First God requireth it When the Israelites had shewed 1 God requireth it their good affections to heare and obey the word of the Lord the Lord commended them saying f De●t 5. 27. 28. 29. They haue well said all that they haue spoken And then wishing their perseuerance teacheth them what they ought to doe and sheweth them what God requireth at their hands O that there were such an heart in them that they would feare me and keepe my commandement alwayes Saint Pauls exhortation is g 1 Cor. 9. 24. So runne that you may obtain● In a race though many runne yet one receiueth the prize and he onely receiueth the prize that continueth to the end of the race So in the course of godlinesse hee that so runnes his race that he continues to the end and with S. Paul doth h 2 Tim. 4. 7. finish his course shall obtaine the crowne of righteousnesse And to the Galathians he saith i Ga● 6. 9. Let vs not be weary in well-doing Secondly holy and religious men Saints on earth 2 Holy men haue continued in their goodnes
God daily doe vs good feeding and nourishing vs prouiding things needfull for vs graciously preseruing and defending vs and shall we still vexe and grieue the Lord by our sinnefull course of life hath he not mercifully giuen his Son Christ Iesus to die for vs to saue our soules and shall we foolishly runne headlong into sinne to the vtter destruction and willfull casting away of our soules O consider this yee that set light by the benefits which God hath done for vs. As Moses vpon the rehearsall of the benefits of the Lord done for Israel speakes thus vnto them i Deut. 10. 12. And now Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to walke in all his wayes and to loue him and to serue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule So I say vnto thee O man to whom the Lord hath shewed great mercy and goodnesse vpon whom hee hath bestowed incomparable benefits whom God hath created redeemed and doth continually preserue what doth the Lord thy God require of the● for creating redeeming and preseruing thee but to repent of thy former sinnefull life and to turne to th● Lord thy God What doth hee require of thee but to feare the Lord thy God to walke in all his wayes and to ●oue him and to serue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule CHAP. XVIII Of the patience and long-suffering of God and how it ought to lead vs to Repentance SEcondly in regard of the patience and long-suffering 2 The patience and long-suffering of God of God its necessary for a sinner to cease from his sinnes to repent to turne from sinne and to turne vnto the Lord for the patience and long-suffering of God is exceeding great towards a sinner The Scripture witnesseth the great patience of God Dauid saith a Psal 103. 8. The Lord is gracious and mercifull slow to anger Of the Iewes the Lord saith thus by Esay b Isa 65. 2. I haue spread out my hands all the day vnto a rebellious people St. Paul plainely calls God c Rom. 15. 5. the God of patience The patience of God was great to Niniuch giuing them d Ioh. 3. 4. fortie dayes space to repent And to the Iewes e Act 13. 18. fortie yeares suffering their manners in the Wildernesse But his patience was exceeding great to the olde world giuing them an f Gen. 6. 3. hundred and twenty yeares space to repent How patient the Lord is to sinners how slow hee is to wrath and how he forbeares to punish sinners Chrysostome sheweth comparing the destruction of Iericho with the Creation of the world g Cum struit Deus velociter struit When God build●th saith hee hee buildeth swiftly but when he destroyeth he destroyeth slowly Cum destruit tarde destruit velox Deus struens tarde destruens c. Chrys de panit Hom. 5. God is swift in rearing vp slow in pulling downe In six daies he made the world in six daies he created heauen and earth the Sea and all things therein but God who in a short time made such a great and glorious frame of Heauen and Earth and created such an innumerable companie of Creatures ye● purposing to destroy but one Citie in the world Iericho hee tooke the space of seauen daies h Quare num potentia imbecillier sed clementia diutius tolerat Chrys ibid. What was it because hee could not destroy lericho in shorter space No. Hee could haue destroyed it in a moment but hereby he shewed his clemencie his patience his forbearance and long-suffering Now whereas the Lord is so patient and long-suffering towards sinners it should be a forcible motiue to perswade euery sinner to repent of his sinnes to liue no longer in sinne but to turne from sinne and to turne to the Lord that so the Lord might be gracious and mercifull vnto him Thus saith the Prophet Esay i Isay 30. 18. Therefore will the Lord waite that hee may bee gracious vnto you The Lord is gracious and mercifull hee waiteth for our repentance and expecteth when a sinner will turne vnto him that vpon his repentance the Lord may be gracious vnto him and shew mercie vpon him So exhorteth the Prophet Ioel k Joel 2. 13. Rent your heart and not your garments and turne to the Lord your God for hee is gracious and mercifull slow to anger and of great kindnesse and repenteth him of the euill So S. Peter saith l 2 Pet. 3. 9. The Lord is not slacke concerning his promise as some men count slacknesse but is long-suffering to vs-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance Wherefore is it that the Lord is patient and long-suffering it is because the Lord is so gracious and mercifull that hee would not haue sinners to perish in their sinnes but rather that they should come to repentance and be saued So then the patience and long-suffering of God should bring sinners to repentance Which serues to reprooue those who abuse the patience Vse and long-suffering of God to licenciousnesse to Against those who abuse the Patience and long-suffering of God wantonnesse and wickednes Because the Lord is gracious and mercifull patient and long-suffering therefore sinners ought to repent and turne to the Lord that he might shew mercy vpon them but wicked and vngodly men perceiuing that they doe wickedly and that God layes no punishment vpon them but suffers them to goe vnpunished Hence they take occasion to sinne the more and so abuse the patience of GOD which should lead them to repentance as the Apostle reasoneth against such a sinner m Rom. 2. 4. Despisest thou the riches of his goodnesse and forbearance and long-suffering not knowing that the goodnesse of God leadeth thee to repentance The sinner that despiseth the patience and long-suffering of God being nothing mooued to repentance for all the patience and long-suffering of Almighty God shewed vnto him is like to an vngracious Childe who hauing done euill and being reprooued of it by his Father and admonished to amend regardeth not his Fathers admonition maketh light of his words and the more that his Father fauours and spares him the worse he growes So a wicked and vngodly man liuing in sinne regardeth not the admonition of the Lord setteth light by the word of God calling him to repentance despiseth the patience and long-suffering of God yea and the longer that the Lord suffers him forbears to punish him the worse he growes It is as the Prophet Esay saith n Isay 26. 10. Let fauour be shewed to the wicked yet will he not learne righteousnes The Iewes in their affliction remembring their sins say o Lam. 3. 22. It is the Lords mercies that we are not consumed And surely if we call to mind our manifold sins iniquities which wee daily commit
against the Lord by thought word deed we cannot but acknowledge that it is of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed The Lord might in his iustice cut vs off for the very first transgression for one euill thought for one wicked word for one sinnefull deede and when we find the mercy and goodnesse of God so much shewed towards vs as to spare ●s and suffer vs to liue notwithstanding our vile wicked and sinnefull life O how ought wee to acknowledge the goodnesse of God herein and how ought wee to praise the Lord for his mercy and patience towards vs in suffering vs so long Wherefore a sinner should be so far from making the patience of God to be an occasion of deferring that it ought rather to hasten his repeatance And he should reason thus hitherto I haue liued in sinne and done wickedly and yet the Lord hath beene ●o gracious vnto me that he hath spared me he might haue cut me off in the midst of my sinnes it is of the Lords mercies that I am not consumed and now I know not whether the Lord will forbeare me any more Wherefore I will delay the time no longer I will now repent I will now returne vnto the Lord the patience and long-suffering and the goodnesse of the Lord shall lead me to repentance CHAP. XIX Of the shortnesse of our life of the certaintie of death and the vncertaintie of the day and houre of death and how in regard of these its necessarie for a sinner to repent THirdly its necessarie for a sinner to repent of his sinnes and to amend his life in regard of 3 The shortnesse of mans life the shortnesse of our life In the first age of the world men liued long because as yet sin was not multiplied in the world for as one saith a D●c●r●●tus est 〈…〉 dec●●sus s●●●●dum 〈…〉 cap. ●6 the course of mans life was shortned according to the increase of some For when sinne beganne to be multiplied on the earth when the wickednesse of man was great in the earth then did God drowne the world of the vngodly and shortned the dayes of man so that whereas in the beginning of the world and before the stood men liued eight or nine hundred yeere after the floud they attained not two hundred for Abraham liued but an b Gen. ●5 7. hundred threescore and fifteene yeeres And Iacob counteth his dayes to be c Gen 47. 9. an hundred and thirtie And in the time of Moses the dayes of mans life were counted but d Psal 90. 10. threescore and ten The Scriptures speake thus of the shortnesse of mans life Iob saith e I●b 14. 1. Man that is borne of a woman is of few dayes Dauid thus f Psal 39. 5. behold thou hast made my dayes as an hand-breadth and mine age is as nothing before thee verily euery men at his best state is altogether vanitie Our life for the shortnesse thereof is compared to things of great swiftnesse and short continuance Iob compares our life to a g Job 7. 6. Weauers shuttle to a running h Iob. 9. 25. 26. Post to the swift Ships and to the flying of an Eagle hasting to the prey to a i I●b 14. 2. flower of the field that is soone cut downe and withered as al●o to a shaddow that fleeth and continueth not Dauid to the k Psal 103. 15. grasse and slower of the field which in the morning flourisheth and groweth vp in the euening is cut downe and withereth St Iames to a l Iam. 4. 14. vapour that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth away The woman of Tekoa in her parable compares the life of man to m 2 Sam. 14. 14. water spilt on the ground which cannot be gathered vp againe and indeed n Pret●reunt ann●m refluentis aquae our yeeres passe away as the running waters For as all Riuers runne into the sea from whence they came so doe all men runne and hast to the earth from whence they came Our life is nothing else but a passing from life and a tending to death For from our infancie we passe to child-hood from childhood to young age from yong age to middle age from middle age to old age and from old age to death Now the shortnesse of our life ought to be a great motiue to perswade vs to repentance and amendment of life And to be warie how we spend our dayes This Moses the man of God teacheth vs from the consideration of the shortnesse of our life for hauing told vs that the length of our dayes is but threescore yeares and ten hereupon prayes and therein teacheth vs to pray o Psal 90. 12. so teach vs to number our dayes that we may apply our hearts vnto wisedome This reprooues the great folly of those who spend their daies in vanitie and wickednesse liuing at ease passing Vse away their time in eating and drinking and making Against those who spend the sho●t time of their life ill merrie considering not how short their life is nor how soone and suddenly they may be cut off and their daies come to an end It is with manie as Iob saith p Iob. 21. 13 they spend their dayes in wealth and in a moment goe downe to the graue It is the prayse of Moses that when he was in Pharaoh's Court and might haue liued there in all worldly honour and enioyed his pleasures at full yet q Heb. 11. 25. he refused to be called the sonne of Pharaoh's daughter chusing rather affliction with the people of God then to enioy the pleasures of sinne for a season Letting vs thereby vnderstand two things first that the pleasures of sinne are but for a season secondly that a wise man as Moses will not aduenture the losse of felicitie in heauen which is euerlasting for the enioying of the pleasures of sinne for a season Sinne is committed in this present life and this life is but short we are but of small continuance here and therefore if a man should giue himselfe to all sports and mirth that could be inuented and solace himselfe in all worldly delights and earthly pleasures euen to satietie yet these pleasures would be but for a short time but for a season now no wise man none but a very foole will buy his pleasures so deare as for the enioying of his earthly pleasures to loose heauenly ioyes and for the winning of things temporall to loose things eternall Fourthly its necessarie for a sinner to repent and amend 4 The certaintie of Death his life if he consider the certaintie of death Our life is but short and death is certaine God hath determined the end of mans dayes vpon earth After that Adam had finned God said vnto him r Gen. 3. 19. dust thou art and vnto dust shalt thou returne Iob saith ſ Iob 14. 10. Man dieth and wasteth away yea man giueth
two sorts 2 The sorts and kinds of it Two-fold Generall and Particular Generall when a Sinner doth onely in a generall manner confesse that he is a sinner that hee hath offended 1 Generall God that he hath broken Gods commandements and done wickedly c. Particular confession of sinne is an acknowledgement 2 Particular of our particular sinnes when hauing made diligent search by the law of God to finde out our sinnes we doe then confesse those sinnes which our owne conscience witnesseth against vs that we are guilty of as Dauid when hee had committed adultery with Bathsheba confessed his sinne in particular saying d Psal 51. 4. Against thee thee onely haue I sinned and done this euill in thy sight The Iewes confessed their sinnes both in generall and particular In generall e Isa 59 12. Our transgressions say they are multiplyed before thee and our sinnes testifie against vs for our transgressions are with vs and as for our iniquities wee know them And in particular they confesse and say f Vers 13. in transgressing and lying against the Lord and departing away from our God speaking oppression and reuolt conceiuing and vttering from the heart words of falshood The third thing in Confession is the manner how a 3 The manner of making Confession aright sinner is to make confession of his sinnes that his confession may be acceptable to God Dauid saith g Psal 32. I said I will confesse my transgressions vnto the Lord. The vulgar Latine translation readeth it thus g Psal 32. I said I will confesse against my selfe mine vnrightousnesse vnto the Lord. From whence sixe things are obserued to bee necessary in the confession of sinne First that our Confession of sinne be done with premeditation 5 h Dixi confitebor aduersum me iniustitiam meam Domino Six things are necessary in the Confession of Sinne. that we doe not rashly and rudely thrust our selues into the presence of the Lord but first search our hearts try our wayes finde out our sinnes take notice of them view them consider them and haue them before our eyes when wee come to make confession of them This is noted in the beginning of the sentence i Dixi. I said before I confessed my sinnes I first thought with 1 That it be with premeditation my selfe I considered in my minde the sinnes which I was to confesse I said within my selfe I will confesse my sinnes Secondly Confession of sinne must be in truth without 2 That it be in 〈◊〉 guile not hiding sinne but plainely and truely confessing our sinnes wherfore he saith k Confit●bor I will confesse I will make knowne my sinne I will hide nothing I will search euery corner of my heart I will lay open all and euery sinne I will confesse my sinne Thirdly our Confession must be accusing not excusing 3 That it be accusing not excusing noted in the next words l Aduersum me against my selfe Our confession must be against our selues Howsoeuer it be dangerous for any one to accuse himselfe before men yet euery sinner must accuse himselfe before God iudge himselfe to haue broken the commandements of God and condemne himselfe to be worthy of death For this cause a sinner must come before the Lord in all humility and lowlinesse of mind with shame and confusion of face being ashamed to lift vp his eyes to heauen for the multitude of his sinnes and transgressions saying with Ezra m Ezra 96. O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift vp my face to thee my God for our iniquities are encreased ouer our heads and our trespasse is growen vp vnto the heauens And must be like the penitent Publican who comming before the Lord to confesse his sinnes n Luk 18. 13. Stood a farre off and would not lift vp so much as his eyes to heauen but smote vpon his breast saying God be mercifull to me a sinner Fourthly Confession must be made of sinne and iniquity 4 Confession must be of Sinne and iniquity noted in the word o Iniustitiam vnrighteousnesse or transgresgressions Wee must not with the Pharisee boast our good deeeds and praise our well-doing but with the Publicane confesse our sinnes and our selues sinners and earnestly pray for the pardon of our sinnes Fiftly Confession must be made of our owne sinnes 5 That we confesse our owne sinnes wherefore he saith I will confesse against my selfe p Meam mine vnrighteousnesse or my transgressions S●xtly Confession of our sinnes must be made vnto the Lord our God wherefore he saith I will confesse my 6 That our confessiō be made vnt● God transgressions q Domino vnto the Lord. Confession must be made vnto God to the honour of God that God may haue the glory and we the comfort Of this Dauid speakes thus in another place r Psal 51 4. Against thee thee onely haue I sinned So also when he had numbred the people his heart smote him and Dauid said vnto the Lord ſ 2 Sam. 24. 10. I haue sinned greatly in that I haue done Daniel said t Dan. 9 4. 4. I praied vnto the Lord my God and made my confession and said O Lord we haue sinned and committed iniquitie and haue done wickedly c. Chrysostome taught the same doctrine u De● s●luendis pe●catum Chrys de pae●it Hom. 9. Tell thy sinne onely vnto God Againe he saith * S●lu●te Deus confi●ent●m vid●a● Chrys de pae●it conf●s Let God onely see the confessing of thy sinnes After this manner we are to make Confession of our sinnes In the fourth place I come to the motiues which may perswade vs to confesse our sinnes vnto God Which I take 4 Motiues to cōfesse our sinnes vnto God First from the necessity Secondly from the benefite thereof For the first Confession of Sinne vnto God is necessary 1 〈◊〉 necess●ry For for First God is chiefly and principally offended by our sinnes wherefore it is that Dauid hauing committed 1 God is principally off●nded by our sinnes adultery and thereby hauing not onely offended God but wronged man comming to make confession saith y Psal 51. 4. Against thee thee onely haue I sinned Now because sinne is chiefly and principally committed against God therefore it 's necessary that wee make our confession chiefly and principally vnto God Secondly without confession of sinne we can looke 2 Without Confession we can haue no remission for no remission of sinne Salomon saith z Pro. 28. 13. He that couereth his sinnes shall not prosper but who so confesseth and forsaketh them shall haue mercy Giuing vs to vnderstand that he onely obtaineth mercie of the Lord that confesseth his sinnes but if any one will not confesse but hide and couer his sinnes he shall not prosper it shall not be well with him the Lord will shew him no fauour nor mercie