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mercy_n pardon_v sin_n transgression_n 2,321 5 9.8948 5 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A41108 The danger of deferring repentance discovered by that reverend and faithfull minister of the word, William Fenner. Fenner, William, 1600-1640. 1654 (1654) Wing F684; ESTC R24033 19,518 47

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have answered and that the day of grace would ever remaine but God saith I will not hear them they would never have sought if they thought the Lord would not heare them but all their séeking was in vaine Ob. You will say at what time soever a sinner repenteth he shall have mercy An. It is true if thou repent from the bottom of thy heart but thou maist come with many a degrée of repentance and yet never repent whilest thou livest if thou repent from thy heart and root out thy sins then God will put away thy sins but thou maist go on in repentance and calling upon God and performing many duties of Religion and yet is hardened looke how much Religion will stand with selfe-love so much thou maiest have after the day of grace is gone selfe-love may make a man flie to prayer and run after Sermons and go on in many holy duties and give over many sins looke how farre selfe-love may drive thée unto holy duties so farre thou maist goe and yet notwithstanding remaine hardened O therefore let us not delay nor put off the time of grace nor let goe salvation while it may be had then shall they call but I will not answer he doth not set downe when this time is it may be 〈◊〉 is now it may be not this seven years it may be not till thy death Doct. 2. It may be this very day even this very Sermon this very houre may be thy day that art now in thy sins that if thou repent not at this very one Sermon thou neglectest eternall life for ever lose the benefit of this Sermon at this time and thou maiest lose eternall Salvation and never have it more The theife that rob'd this day how doth he know but this one robery may bring him to the gallows So the man that sins this day how doth he know but that this very dayes worke may bring him to hell Deuteronomy 32. 35. To God belongs vengance their feet shall slide in due time Therefore if a man sin against him he may stand to day and to morrow and many dayes but when the due time comes even the time which God hath set then up goes his héels he shall slide and break his neck thy houre-glasse runes in heaven and thou séest not when the sand comes to the bottome but when t is out then down thou goest to hell for euer There was one resolved to kill Julius Caesar such a day the night before a friend sent him a letter to acquaint him with it but being at supper and busie I will not look upon it now saith he to morrow is a new day The next day when he should have read his letter he was stab'd Whence this proverbe came in Gréece To morrow is a new day God sends thée a letter and a message from heaven to day repent and come out of your fins or for ever to hell to day he converted and sanctified or for ever be hardened Dost thou refuse to harken to day and puttest it off untill to morrow it may be to morrow may be a day of Gods wrath and then thou mayest be hardened seared and bound over unto the great day of Gods vengeance to morrow God may set the decrée upon thy soul that thou shalt never repent Therefore if thou refuse this thou refuseth all for what knowest thou but this very day may be thy day The reason is because Gods patience is in his owne breast and who can tell how long it will last Hast thou Momus his glasse-window to looke into Gods secret counsell hast thou a key-hole to looke into Gods treasurie canst thou stand on tiptoe to looke over Gods shoulder to looke into Gods decrée to sée how long his patience will last It may be God hath suffered thée till this day thou art guilty of ten thousand sinnes and yet he is patient towards thée God hath stayed thus long for thée that hast sworne I know not how many oaths God hath born thus long with thée that hast told I know not how many lyes prophaned I know not how many Sabbaths contemned I know not how many Ordinances and sleighted I know not how many Iudgements yet Gods patience is in his owne brest it is the long sufferance of God Thou maiest say I would faine have it to morrow and this seven yéeres but alasse it is his long sufferance and not thine and how dost thou know when he will conclude it it may be this day as well as to morrow Joel 2. 13. Rent your hearts and not your garments saith the Prophet for the LORD he is gracious and mercifull This word for hath a great deals of force in it First it is a descriptivum for he is gracious and a mercifull God therefore rent thy heart and let thy Soule burst within thée that thou hast sinned against him for he is a mercifull God and it may be he will pardon all thy sinns and heale all thy rebellions committed against him Secondly it is an upbraiding for upbraiding thée for thy sinnes rent thy heart therefore why he is a patient God wilt thou go on in thy sinns against such a patient God and rebell against such a loving Father that hath loved thée with so much compassion ●ent thy heart for he is patient Thirdly it is a comfort and incouraging for rent thy heart for there is encouragement for thée to repent give over thy sinns and goe to the Throne of grace For there is much mercie to welcome thée and great patience for to bid thée come home and aboundance of grace for to incourage thée therefore rent thy heart and come home unto the Lord for he is patient and long-suffering Fourthly it is a forewarning for rent your hearts for the Lord is gracious and mercifull slow to anger and of great kindnesse yet his mercy lasteth yea his patience endureth yet he hath all his attributes and yet he is pleased to manifest the same still tendring grace and mercy unto thee Oh! turne unto him while these endure or else thou shalt perish for ever Fiftly it is a threatning for now he is gracious now he is mercifull but his mercy will end his patience will end and then if thou hast not rent thy heart before it will be too late then Therefore as ever thou lovest thine own soule now rent thy heart and turne unto God It is Gods own proclamation The Lord slow to anger and of great mercy forgiving iniquity and sin Yea what man soever he be that humbles his soule before him he shall find grace and mercy with him yea aboundance of mercie pardoning iniquity transgression and sinne yea any thing Let but a soule come prostrate before him humbling his soule he will pardon his sinné But as it followeth in the words He will by no meanes cleare the guiltie if notwithstanding all Gods patience and mercie thou goe on in thy sinnes the Lord will never forgive thee but will visit thy