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A45548 The first general epistle of St. John the Apostle, unfolded and applied the first part in two and twenty lectures on the first chapter, and two verses of the second : delivered in St. Dyonis. Back-Church, An. Dom. 1654 / by Nath. Hardy ... Hardy, Nathaniel, 1618-1670. 1656 (1656) Wing H722; ESTC R31526 315,886 434

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theef and the least noyse causeth a commotion in his brest Thus is it with wicked men many times they feare according to the Psalmists expression where no feare is though withall the truth is they have alwayes reall cause of feare in respect of the danger that deservedly hangs over their heads Indeed as men in the darke sometime not seeing Feare not the perill which they are very neere to So wicked men being secure are feareles and not considering what they deserve feare not till they come to feele but when once their sleepy conscience is awakened oh what horrid feares perplexing terrours invade them whilest the cloud of vengence is ready every moment to raine fire haile and brimstone upon them To end all what now remaineth but that this discourse of darknes serve as a light to discover to you where you are what you do and whither you are going That so being enlightened to see your utter darkenesse you may walke no further but with incessant cries beseech him who is the Father of lights that he would send his spirit to plucke you out of Sodom and by his mightie working deliver you from the power of darknes translate you into the kingdome of his deare sonne Amen THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. IOHN CHAP. I. Ver. 6. If we say we have fellowship with him and walk in darkness we lie and do not the truth THat Preface which I find in the beginning of one of Salvians books concerning Gods Government of the world I may here aptly make use of I suppose yea I am confident my discourse of this Scripture will be unwelcome to many auditors and that because it is a smart and sharp reprehension men naturally love to be tickled with applause not scratched with reproof we relish well the honey of commendation but know not how to digest the wormwood of increpation But beloved the diet which is not so toothsome may be wholesome that potion which is very bitter to the taste may prove healthful to the body and faithful rebukes though they be not so pleasing yet I am sure are profitable especially when they are seasonable and sutable such as this was to those in St. Iohns time and I would to God it were not as truly agreeing to many very many in our dayes who will be found one day among the number of those lyars If we say we have fellowship with him and walk in darknesse we lye and do not the truth Having already dispatched the impiety of those mens practice in that they walk in darkness that which followeth next in order is the eminency of their profession implyed in that supposition If we say we have fellowship with him for in this supposition there is a position couched namely That many who walk in darkness say they have fellowship with God For the better explication of which in its fullest latitude I shall briefly premise a double distinction and then pursue a double proposition The distinctions to be premised are of 1. A double Having this fellowship to wit in spe and in re in a confident expectation and in a reall possession 2. A double Saying we have it namely a saying within our selves and a saying to others that is inward in respect of our thought and opinion this outward in respect most properly of our words and not excluding gestures and all other wayes of external expression The propositions to be prosecuted are two 1. Many say they have fellowship with God in hope who yet walk in darkness they promise to themselves the future vision of Gods face whilest they go on in the wilfull breach of Gods Law This is that which they say in their hearts perswading themselves that their condition shall be happy though their conversation is wicked of such an one it is Moses speaketh who blesseth himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imaginations of my own heart This is that they say with their lips impudently laying as full claim to happiness as the uprightest and exactest Saint If you inquire whence this comes to pass I answer from the false reasonings which are in the minds of men concerning The freeness of Gods grace in electing The fulness of his mercy in forgiving The worthiness of Christs blood in redeeming 1. When presumptuous sinners hear that Gods election is without respect to any worthiness or qualifications in us they presently fancy to themselves that their names may be written in the book of life as well as any other yea they fondly imagine that being elected they shall have fellowship with God let them live as they list and hence they are emboldned to presume and boast of a future well-being not considering that Gods election though it be not conditional yet is ordinate to wit to the end by the means to happiness by holiness 2. When wicked men look upon the extent of Gods mercy whereby it is that he desireth not the death of a sinner that he is a God pardoning iniquity transgression and sin not onely few but many small but great all sorts of sin they promise to themselves a facility of obtaining forgiveness whilest yet they indulge to their sins not considering that God is just as well as merciful righteous as well as gracious and he is ready to pardon the penitent so he will by no means clear the guilty Finally when secure sinners hear of the infinite merit of Christs blood how satisfactory it is for the sins of the whole world and therefore much more of a particular person they are willing to perswade themselves of an interest in that blood and thereby of reconciliation and fellowship with God not considering what our Apostle saith in the very next verse the bloud of Iesus Christ cleanseth from all sin but it is on●ly those who walke in the light Thus is the sweetest hony turned into gall by bad stomachs the most wholsome antidotes become poyson to wicked men and the pretious supports of a lively faith are abused to be props of presumption by arrogant hypocrites by reason whereof it is that they are so impudent as to say they hope to have fellowsh●p with God though they walk in darkness 2. Many who walk in darkness say they have actually this Divine fellowship and are in a state of grace As for the grossest sort of hypocrites who make pretences of religion and holiness a cover of their wickedness they cannot say it in their hearts because their consciences must needs tell them they are wicked and odious in God sight but they say it to the world that they may walk in the dark and accomplish their wicked designs the more secretly speedily and effectually But as for others they say it both in opinion and profession they think and accordingly boast themselves to have communion with God though they walk in the darkness both of sin and error Instances of this nature there want not many in all times of the
capacity of pardon till he have made confession nor of confessing a sin till he have committed it it plainly appeareth that God doth not antedate his pardons but till sin be past pardon is to come This being pr●m●sed we need no● doubt to affirm when God pardons one sin n● one sin is left unpardon●● Larga Dei bon●tas ven●am non dimid●ab●t the acquittan●● which mercy gives is not in part but in full indeed i● God shall pardon some sins and not others he would at the same time be a friend and an enemy and we should be at once both happy and miserable which are manifest contradictions besides God doth nothing in vain and it were in vain to cleanse from any if not from all sins one leake unstopped will sink the ship one sore not healed may kill the body and one sin unpardoned may destroy the soul no wonder that the Scripture still useth a word of extent thus it is said in the parable the Lord forgave his servant all his debt thou hast cast all my sins behind thy back saith Hezek●ah and wash me throughly from my sins and blot out all mine offences so David prayeth To enlarge this comfortable truth be pleased to observe both the wayes of expression here used and accordingly take it in a double variation 1. Sins in the plurall number he doth not only forgive one but many nor doth he only forgive once but often he will abundantly pardon saith the Prophet Isay or according to the original he will multiply to pardon the Rabbins say that if a man sin thrice it is pardonable but not the fourth God is far more rich in mercy he that cast out a legion of devils will cast out a legion of sins he that bids us forgive our brother not only seven times but seventy times seven will certainly be as abundant in forgiving us the Sea can as easily drown an whole Hoste of men as twenty souldiers and where God forgiveth sin he casts them into a Sea the Lord in the parable forgave his servant not one or ten or an hundred but ten thousand talents were all the sins of the world the sins of one man yet they were to his mercy but a drop of a bucket to the Ocean 2. All unrighteousness of what degree●●ever ●●ever all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven saith our blessed Lord yea that the sin against the Holy Ghost is irremissible it is not for the mal●gnity so much of the sin as the sinner because he that once commits it can never penitently confesse it not only pence but pounds moa●s but b●ames mi●●s but talents are within the compasse of r●mission there is a necessity of pardon to the least and there is one excepted a possibility of pardon for the greatest sin Christ cured all manner of diseases and God cleanseth all manner of sins the foulest rags may become white paper and mercy crosseth not only the black but the red lines of our scarlet sins out of Gods book to this purpose it is that in the name of God proclaim●d by Moses he is said to forgive iniquity transgression and sin where though there be neither the plural number nor an universal particle yet there is a three-fold noun which answereth both is not unfitly expounded as extending both to original actual to great as well as small sins And now my brethren what abundant consolation doth this afford us against the sense of our manifold and mighty sins so that we may well take up the challenge of St. Paul who shall lay any thing to our charge what singular admiration should ravish us in the apprehension of this multa m●●na mis●ricordia manifo●d and great mercy saying with the Prophe● Micah Who is a God like unto thee that taketh away iniquity and passeth by the transgressions of the remnant of his heritage what exceeding gratulation should flow from us if at any time God give us assurance of this general pardon exciting our selves with the Prophet David Blesse the Lord oh my soul and all that is within me praise his holy name who forgiveth all thy iniquity and healeth all thy diseases Onely let me close up with a needful caution God forgiveth and cleanseth all our sins but it is if we confesse them and as we expect that his remission so he expecteth that our confession should be proportionable to our comissions now our confession is then answerable when our sorrow which ever attendeth confession is in some measure correspondent to our sins beleeve it brethren the pardon of many of gr●at sins is not to be had upon the sam● easie terms with that of infirmities and seldom offences as our sins are more our teares must be more as our transgressions are greater our humiliations must be deeper If our offences have been not Gnats but Camels our sorrow must be not a drop but an ocean Scarlet sins call for bloody tears and if Peter sin heynously he must weep b●tterly If then thy former life hath been a cord of iniquity twisted with many threds a writing full of great blots a course spotted with various and those grievous sins multiply thy confessions and enlarge thy humiliations double thy fastings and treble thy prayers poure out thy teares and fetch deep sighs in a word iterate and aggravate thy acknowledgements though yet as the Apostle saith in another case I say in this grieve not as without hope that upon thy sincere and sutable repentance divine goodnesse will forgive thee thy sins and cleanse thee from all unrighteousnesse THE FIRST EPISTLE OF S. IOHN CHAP. I. Ver. 9. If we confesse our sins he is just and faithful to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousnesse THe Text is a promise and promises are the most comfortable part of Scripture the whole word of God is according to Saint Peters metaphor sincere milk and these are the creame of that milk according to St. Pauls similitude a treasure and these are the pearles of greatest worth in that treasure according to Davids comparison a light and these are the brightest beams of that light in them all our good is centained by them all our hope is sustained through them all our comfort is attained The promise of the Text is one of those which 〈◊〉 Apostle Peter calls exceeding great and precious promises because of that which is an exceeding great and precious blessing the remission of our sins that which is the sole spring of our comfort so that all waters which flow not from this spring though they may be sweet in the mouth will prove bitter in the belly that which is the Queen of mercies so that wheresoever she goeth a train of blessings attend upon her since if sin be pardoned we have grace from peace with accesse to joy in God yea all needfull comforts both for this life and that which is to
God is reconciled to us thus Durand asserteth that God forgiveth by himself releasing us from the bond of our sins and the Priest absolveth by declaring that remission to be granted And F●rus though a Jesuite saith that man doth not properly forgive but only assure that God hath forgiven look as the Priest in the law was said to cleanse the leper because he did pronounce him clean saith the Master of the sentences so do the Ministers of the Gospel forgive b●cause they pronounce to us that God forgiveth and in this sence our Church understood it and therefore saith in the form of absolution he hath given power and commandment to his Ministers to declare and pronounce to his people being penitent the absolution and rem●ssion of their sins Thus the Ministers are instrumental in this work and their power as appeareth by what hath been said is partly declarative and partly operative but stil● the princial efficient conferring this benefit is God and God alone The use therefore which we are to make of this truth is for direction and imitation 1. Be we directed whither to addresse our selves for pardon in the sence of our sins with the prodigal let us resolve to go to our Father and after Dav●ds pattern let us implore Gods mercy Indeed since God hath set Ministers in his Church for this end that by their help we may obtain the pardon of our sins and the comfortable assurance of it we must not neglect much lesse despise their assistance and whereas what others do only in a way of charity they do in a way of authority having power committed to them for this end we must prefer their help before what private Christians can afford us In which respect I dare boldly affirm that many people want that comfortable sence of the pardon of their sins which they might attain to did they consult with a faithful Minister declare their sins together with their rep●ntance to him earnestly and humbly desiring a declarative absolution from him But yet before and above all other means let us seek God by prayer and wrestle with him for this great mercy our Church hath taught her Ministers when they absolve to prefixe a prayer to Christ that he would absolve a poor penitent and as you desire absolution from the Minister so you must direct your prayer to God that he would speak peace to you so much the rather because though he is pleased ofttimes by his Ministers to give case to burthened sinners and accordingly we are to make use of them for that end yet the conscience can find no ease from the Minister unlesse he be pleased by the inward testimony of his spirit to seal a pardon to it so true is that of Elihu when he giveth quietnesse who then can make trouble and when he hideth his fa●e who then can behold him 2. Be we exhorted to imitate God in this gracious act he forgiveth our sins against him let us forgive the injuries others do against us this was S. Pauls counsel to the Ephesians and that upon this very ground Be you kind one to another tender-hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you where the as is both modall and causall As to wit in the same manner as God doth forgive us we must others Indeed the parallell holds not every way for whereas God doth not forgive sins but to those that conf●sse and bemoan them we are bound to forgive those who do not confesse but persist in their offering wrong to us according to the precept of blessing them that curse us And this by the way would be taken notice of in Answer to that Socinian argument against satisfaction from the parallell of Gods forgiving and mans since by the same reason that they say God should forgive without satisfaction because he requires man to do so they may as well say he should forgive without confession It is not then in every respect that this sim●litude agrees bu● as God when he forgiveth is fully reconciled forgetting all that is past as if it had not been without any desire of nay resolving against all future revenge ita purè perfectè so purely perfectly saith Anselm ought we to forgive our brethren And as thus in the same manner so likewise on this ground and so the as is causal because God for Christs sake forgiveth us we for Gods sake ought to forgive one another we find the Lord in the parable wroth with his servant to whom he had pardoned all his debt because he was so cruel not to forgive his fellow-servant and we pray in the Lords prayer for forgivenesse of our trespasses as we forgive others so necessary a connexion is there betwixt these two that our forg●venesse is a condition of Gods and Gods is to be a cause of ours Thus God doth seem as it were to put it in our power whether or no we will have our sins forgiven by making our forgivenesse a condition of it and as at first he made us after his own likenesse so he still taketh care that we may become like to him And surely as it is Gods goodnesse to require no more from then what he performeth to us so is it but reason we should at his command perform that to others which we expect from him and so much of the first the principal efficient He. 2. The internall impulsive causes here specified are two to wit Gods faithfulnesse and justice and these I may well call the two pillars which like Jachim and Boaz support our faith compare to the two Cherub●ns which look toward the mercy seat whence pardon is vouchsafed resemble to the two olive trees whence floweth the oyle or the two breasts which yield the milk of heavenly consolation to troubled consciences 1. The first here mentioned is Gods fidelity he is faithfull for the opening whereof be pleased to observe 1. That God hath made many promises of forgiving sins and cleansing from iniquity to those that acknowledge them to this purpose St. Cyprian saith Christ teaching us to pray for assures us God hath made promise of forgiving our trespasses Indeed God hath no where promised peccan●●●rastinum to morrow to the peccant but every where poenitenti veniam pardon to the repentant If my people shall humble themselves and pray I will hear from heaven and forgive their sins so we read in the Chronicles ●et the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon so runs the promise in Isaiah If the wicked will turn from all the sins that he hath committed all his transgressions they shall not be mentioned to him so saith God by the Prophet Ezechiel Thus I might bring forth a Iury of textual witnesses to prove this assertion but those already mentioned
being the impulsive cause from within moving God to make that Covenant But though it be of grace yet it is still a Covenant and therefore as in all Covenants there is a mutual obligation on both parties between whom the Covenant is made so is it in this wherein is signified as what God will do for us so what he will have done by us Hence it is that we find not only in the Law but Gospel commands as well as comforts precepts as promises yea these promises still proposed conditionally for so we may observe among other places in this Chapter and particularly in this verse wherein remission is annexed to confession If we confess our sins he is faithful c. Having already dispatched the duty in an absolute consideration as it is the matter of a precept we are now to handle the relative as it is the condition of a promise the prosecution of which shall be done two wayes 1. Negatively it is not a cause but only a condition of the promise and therefore it is not said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because but if we confess our sins indeed if confession be a cause of remission it must be either meritorious or instrumental but it is not it cannot be either of these 1. Confession is not cannot be a meritorious cause of forgiveness it is satisfaction not confession which merits remission and therefore with men forgiveness upon meer acknowledgment is an act not of equity but of charity in this regard the merit of remission is Christs not ours his blood whereby he hath made satisfaction not our tears which are only the concomitant of confession True it is there is a congruity in confession inasmuch as it maketh us fit for but there is no condignity to render us deserving of this mercy of forgiveness It may perhaps be here inquired why since the commission of sin is meritorious of punishment the confession is not of pardon for if the sin be therefore of so great a desert because against God why shall not the acknowledgement be of as great merit because to God The answer to which is iustly returned partly that whereas our Commissions are purely sinful our confessions are not purely penitent since even when we confess our sins we sin in confessing partly that whereas the demerit of the fault is chiefly respectu objecti in regard of the person to whom the injury is done the amends for the fault is respectu subjecti principally considerable in respect of the person by whom it is made and hence it is that though the sin committed by us bee of infinite demerit because against an infinite justice yet nothing done by us can bee of infinite merit because wee are finite persons 2. Confession is not the instrumentall cause of forgivenesse to clear this the more be pleased to know that there is a great deale of difference between that which is meerely conditionall and that which is so a condition as it is withall an instrument that may be a necessary condition which is onely required to the qualification of the subject on whom the thing is conferred but that which is not onely a condition but an instrument hath some kinde of influence into the Production of the thing which is conferred and this being well observed will serve excellently to clear that Orthodox doctrine of justification by faith alone we are justified a chiefe ingredient whereof is forgivenesse of sinnes onely by faith not by repentance not by charity nor by any other grace or work because it is onely faith which concurreth as an instrument to this work in as much as it is the hysope sprinkling the soul with the bloud the hand applying to the soule the righteousnesse of Christ for which wee are forgiven and justified and hence it is that the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is onely used concerning faith hee is the propitiation for our sinnes through faith and we are justified by faith whereas it is never said wee are justified by confessing or forgiving or repenting though yet still these are conditions of justification and forgivenesse in as much as they are necessary qualifications required in the person whom God doth justify and to whom sinne is forgiven 2. Affirmatively it is a condition and that both exclusive and inclusive 1. It is an exclusive condition this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this si as nisi if otherwise not there is no forgivenesse to bee had without confession though it be not that for which no nor yet by which yet it is that without which no remission can be obtained I thinke it is needlesse to dispu●e what God could doe by his absolute power it is enough hee cannot doe ●t by his actuall because he will not truly though the●e is no need of any yet there is abundant reason of this divine pleasure since it is that which his justice his purity and his wisedome seem to call for Justice requireth satisfaction much more confessiion If God shall pardon them which doe not confesse but conceal and goe on in sinne it would open a gap to all prophanesse and impiety which cannot consist with his purity finally it cannot stand with Gods wisedome to bestow mercy but on them that are in some measure sitted for it and wee are not cannot be sitted for rem●ssion till we have practised confession None are fitio● mercy but they who see the●r need of it hunger after it and know how to value it whereas if God should offer pardon to an impenitent he would scarce accept it how ever hee would not prize it It is confession which maketh us taste the bitternesse of sin and so prepareth us for a relish of the sweetnesse of forgiving mercy The exclusivenesse of this condition is that which Solomon expresseth when hee opposeth hiding to confessing and as hee assureth mercy to the one so hee flatly denyeth it to the other he that hideth his sin shall not prosper and to this purpose it is that Almighty God threatneth I will goe and returne to my place till they acknowledge their offence and seeke my fa●e in which done● is manifestly intimated a nisi untill that is unlesse they acknowledge I will not vouchsafe my gracious presence to them yea this is that which David found verified in his own experience where he saith when I kept silence my bones waxed old day and night thy hand was heavy upon mee I acknowledged my sinne and thou forgavest unlesse the sore be opened and the corrupt matter let out the party cannot be healed when the ague breaketh forth at the lips then there is hope of its cessation If the Apostume break and come not forth at the eares or mouth the patient is but a dead man till that which oppresseth the stomach be cast up there can bee no ease and unlesse there be a penitent laying open of our sinnes
THE First general EPISTLE OF St. JOHN The APOSTLE Unfolded and Applied The First PART In two and twenty Lectures on the First Chapter and two Verses of the Second Delivered in St. Dyonis Back-Church AN. DOM. 1654. By NATH HARDY Minister of the Gospel and Preacher to that Parish Orig. hom 2. in divers O Beate Iohannes non immeritò vocaris Iohannes id est cui donatum est cui enim Theologorum donatum est quod tibi donatum est abdita videlicet summi boni penetrare mysteria ea quae tibi revelata declarata sunt humanis mentibus ac sensibus intimare London Printed by E. Tyler for Nathanael Webb and William Grantham and are to be sold at the Black Bear in Pauls Church yard 1656. AQuilae Theologi Christo Discipuli conjunctissimi Fidei Martyris meruenti Charitatis praeconis Ecclesiae insignis Columnae D. Johannis Apostoli Perspicaci Mystae Servo Fideli Confessori invicto Spectatissimo Exemplo Reverendo Patri Johanni D no Episcopo Roffensi In primam Epistolam has Commentatiorum primitias D.D.N.H. In perpetuum grati animi Testimonium Obnixè rogans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut illi res omne genus prosperas Ecclesiae Anglicanae aerumnis erroribus heu penè obrutae antiquam veritatem splendorem pristinum pro summa sua misericordiâ largiri velit THE Epistle to the Reader THE Mahumetans say that the first thing God created was a pen Sure I am the best thing which ever was conveyed to us by a pen is the Bible nor can the one be better exercised then about the other I have often wished that every one of St. Pauls Epistles yea every Book of holy Writ might have a Davenant to draw forth its lineaments nor do I know any work that would be of more general and singular use then a practical Commentary upon the whole Bible Vpon a small yet choice piece of this sacred Volume I have made an essay wherein if any thing be well done let it be ascribed to divine assistance and whatsoever is amisse to my ignorance The chief design of this work is explication of the Text yet I have still annexed a brief application of the doctrine that I might not only enlighten thy mind but enliven thy affections In the prosecution of this design I am sometimes engaged in controversies which are calmely debated and according to my measure of knowledge hope truely stated if thou hast a Starre-light yet contemne not my Candle The prefixing of the prayer is that to which I am necessitated for my own vindication having met with my name affixed in print to a broken prayer made up of some scraps which a scribling pen hath taken from my mouth and phrases which anothers fancy hath added What mistakes misplacings omissions or additions of words thou mayest observe in perusing these discourses pardon and correct those especially which are taken notice of to thy hand If these labours find any acceptance with the pious orthodox and judicious I shall be encouraged to a progresse and the remaining parts may in due time see the light Thy candid censure of and devout prayer for is earnestly desired by him who is Thine in the common Saviour NATH HARDY The Prayer commonly used before Sermon ETernall Jehovah in whose presence the glorious Angels vaile their faces as being not able to behold thy brightness How shall we who are men and not Angels wormes and no men yea dust and ashes rather then wormes dare to appear before the Oh Lord we acknowledge there is an infinite distance between thee and us by our Creation as far as is between the high Heavens and the low Earth Thou art Infinite and we finite Thou art immutable we changable Thou art the Potter and we the Clay Thou our Maker and we all the worke of thy hands But far oh far greater is that distance which we our selves have made between thee and us by our corruption even as far as is between the highest Heavens and the lowest hell Thou art Purity add we Filthinesse Thou ●rt Majesty and we Misery Thou a God of purer eyes then to behold iniquity without fury and we such in whome dwelleth nothing but sin and iniquity We were at first Oh God concluded in sin and in iniquity did our Mother bring us forth and ever since we have conceived nothing but sin and that iniquity hath been a fruitfull Mother of all uncleanesse we are by nature deprived of all good and depraved with all evil throughout the whole course of our life we have neglected much good and committed more evill Which of thy righteous lawes Oh God have not we often violated by impiety against thee and iniquity against man in our thoughts and affections in our words and actions Before we knew thee we knew how to offend thee and ever since thou hast set up a light of knowledge in our minds we have not ceased to act the workes of darknesse in our lives Thy patience hath spared us and our wickednesse hath provoked thee thou hast forborne to punish and we have therefore gone on to R●●ell The raine of thy Word hath not fructified our barren lives The beames of thy love hath not melted our frozen hearts The thunder of thy wrath have not awakened our sleepy consciences but we still continue to adde sin unto sin and thereby treasure up wrath against the day of wrath We confesse O God our just deservings of thy fury yet are we bold to implore thy free bestowings of mercy We have abundantly sinned but thou canst abundantly pardon with us there have been numerous Rebellions but with thy Son Christ Jesus is plenteous redemption According to the freenesse of thy mercy and the fulnesse of his merits the greatnesse of thy compassions and the meritoriousnesse of his passion have mercy upon us be reconciled to us that all our sins may be blotted out of the booke of thy remembrance Do thou Oh God forget our sins but let us remember them doe thou cast them behind thy back but let us set them before our faces open our eyes that we may see open our hearts that we may consider how glorious a Name we have dishonoured how gracious a Father we have provoked how deare a Jesus we have crucified how Holy a Spirit we have grieved how just a law we have transgressed how great salvation we have despised what long suffering patience we have abused what precious opportunities of grace we have mis-spended what Hainous sinnes we have committed that by all these considerations we may be melted into tears of godly sorrow for our sins that so mourning we may loath loathing we may leave leaving we may strive against and striving against we may obtain power and victory over them Be it enough O God for it is enough nay too too much that we have played away so great a part of the candle of our lives in the pleasures of sin oh