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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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high in our unworthy conceptions of his Justice Power Eternity Wisedome and Mercy For the second way of glorifying God What heart could stand before his holy presence if he should examine us in justice 1 For our language What man is hee that hath not cause to mourne for his want of language daily in expressing of the praises of God! When did we make his praise glorious have our mouthes been filled with his praise all the day long 2 For our extreame unthankfulnesse when wee meet with God himselfe we have beene healed with the nine Lepers but which of us have returned to give glory to God in the sound acknowledgment of his goodnesse to us It is required we should in all things give thankes and yet we have scarce used one word of praise for a thousand benefits 3 Our slight acknowledgments of sin our backwardnesse to search our waies our carelesnesse when wee know divers grievous faults by our selves either avoiding Gods presence and making confession for fashions ●ake neither out of true griefe for our sinnes and in a speciall manner doe we faile in those cases of trespasse or sinne that com● to the knowledge of others Do we knowledge our sinnes one to another Oh how hard it is to bring us to bee easie to give glory to God herein What man is hee that liveth and hath not failed of the glory of God about the Sabbath Do wee delight in Gods work Have we consecrated that day as glorious to the Lord Have not our mindes run upon our own waies After what an unspeakable manner have we slighted God in his Ordinances Lastly what shall we answer to the Lord for our neglects of Jesus Christ Have we glorified the Son or rather have we not shamefull wants still in our faith Which of us can say that he lives by the faith of the Sonne of God And are not our affections to the Lord Jesus extreamly dull and adverse Where is the longing desire after him and the fervent love of his appearing And for the last way of glorifying God by effect How unprofitably and unfruitfully doe the most of us live Who hath praised God in our behalfe Whom have we won to the love of God and the truth Where are our witnesses that might testifie that our good works have caused them to glorifie God But especially woe be to scandalous Christians that have either caused wicked men to blaspheme or Gods little ones to take offence and conceive ill of the good way of God if they repent not it had beene better for them they had never beene borne And as for wicked men that are openly so to give a touch of them and their estate they have reason to repent in sackcloth and ashes if their eyes were but open to see what terrour is implied in this doctrine and how God will avenge himselfe upon them both for their not glorifying of him and for changing his glory and for the opposing of his glory 1 In not glorifying God they have spent their daies without God they have either not conceived of him at all or in a most meane and vile manner they have not honoured him in his ordinances or in his Sabbaths they never loved the Lord Jesus in their hearts c. 2 In changing the glory of God they have done shamefully Some of them have turned Gods glory into the similitude of an Oxe or a Calfe that eareth hay Some of them have given his praise to Images and the workes of their hands Some of them have fixed the glory of their affections upon riches pleasures and favour of men Some of them have made their belly their god and some have given their bodies to harlots Thirdly in opposing Gods glory they have likewise offended grievously they have spoken evill of the good way of God they have abused his servants and so despised him they have set themselves against his Sabbaths c. to omit that they have opposed Gods glory in their hearts by setting up Idols there by allowing striving to maintain Atheisticall conceits against God The second use should be therefore to beget in us a care to use all means to dispose of and fit our selves that we might make God glorious and so amend and redresse our waies herein and that wee may the more effectually bee wrought upon herein I will consider of two things First I will briefly shew the reasons should stirre us to all possible care and diligence herein Secondly I would shew how wee may distinctly attaine to the glorifying of God in all the three waies before mentioned For the first Divers considerations should move us to the care of magnifying or glorifying of God by all the waies we can First it is a great honour that God doth unto us to account himselfe to receive glory any way from our endeavours Shall the creature be admitted in any sense to that glory to make his Creator to make him I say in his excellencie or glory God doth account himselfe to receive a new Beeing as it were by those inward conceptions of his glory and by those outward honours done unto him Shall the King of glory vouchsafe to dwell in our hearts and shall we not be exceedingly desirous to entertaine him Secondly not to glorifie God is to sinne grievously it is not arbitrary but most dangerous to allow our selves either in inward neglects of God or in outward unfruitfulnesse Shall wee attribute so much every day to the creatures we deale with and shall we know or acknowledge so little of the Creator It cannot be safe to slight God Thirdly it is one of the first things that breakes out in the new Converts so soone as any of the Gentiles are visited of God in the same day they glorifie him by conceiving gloriously of him and by magnifying God in himselfe and his servants and service c. And therefore without singular danger of losing our evidence of our calling we must attend to this Doctrine how hard soever it seeme Fourthly wee are bought with a price and are Gods and therefore now both in soule and body we should be wholly devoted to his glory 1 Cor. 6 ult as God hath glorified us in our creation and the many treasures he hath given us in Jesus Christ and we hope the accomplishment of ma●chlesse glory in heaven and shall wee not bee zealous for the glory of the Lord Many glorious things bee spoken of us through his grace and shall wee thinke or speake meanely of God Fifthly the Lord our God exceeds all things in glory and therefore wee should extoll his praise above the heavens and the whole earth should shew it selfe to be full of his glory Sixthly he is our heavenly Father and can we thinke too well of him or doe too much to win him praise Matth. 5.16 Lastly thinke with our selves What make wee in Gods Vineyard or Orchard If we be trees of his planting ought we not to be filled with the
either of old or by the persecution about Stephen or at other times after 〈…〉 be the Apostle of the Circumcision Others thinke they were Gentiles converted to the Jewish Religion and so they take strangers and Proselites to be all one and to such Peter preached Acts 2. and converted many of them and they thinke he writes to them now Others thinke that this Epistle is so written to the Jewes as it is intended also for those elect Gentiles in those parts because he saith Chap. 2.10 that these people were not in times past a people nor under mercy but now were the people of God and had obtained mercy which words doe not so fitly agree to the Jewes and so all the Elect of God are strangers in this world and so the word is evidently used Chap. 2.12 and I thinke it is to be taken in this last sense Strangers Man may be said to be a stranger in five respects 1. In respect of absence from his naturall friends and his native soile so Abraham was a stranger in Canaan 2. In respect of the want of Gods favour and grace so wicked men are strangers from the covenant of promise from the Common-wealth of Israel and from the life of God 3. In respect of the contempt of the world so Gods children when they begin to feare God the world accounts them as strangers and avoids them so David was a stranger to his brethren and kindred 4. Some make themselves strangers by a wilfull rety●ing and discontentment for crosses that befall them 5. In respect of absence from the heavenly Canaan and the troublesome condition in this world and so all Gods elect are strangers Gods elect then are strangers in this world this point is abundantly confirmed in these places Gen. 47.9 1 Chron. 28.15 Psal. 39.13 Heb. 11. 12 13. 13.14 15. And it may teach us many excellent things for the ordering of our cariage both in our selves and toward others There are 12 things which may bee gathered out of this metapho●icall tearme to teach us with much life by the comparisons may be taken from thence Or there be 14 things wherein we should be like to strangers 1. A stranger is unacquainted and hath little to doe but with his journey so while we are in this world we should thinke chiefly on our journey and keep our selves estranged from the world dissolving our sinfull acquaintance and keeping our hearts from the cares of life 2. A stranger useth to be much affected with lesser courtesies in a strange place Ruth 2.10 so should we be thankfull to God for any kindnesse in this world it is enough it shall goe well with us in heaven we should say with David who am I and what is my people that we should c. for all things come of thee Now therefore our God we thanke thee and praise thy glorious name for we are strangers before thee and sojourners as were all our fathers our dayes on earth are as a shadow and there is no abiding 1 Chron. 29.14 15. 3. A stranger is wont to be glad of any good company that will go with him though it were but a part of the way How should wee then with all joy and dearenesse entertaine Gods servants into our inward and perpetuall society These are they will goe with us to heaven 4. A stranger will be carefull to inquire his way feares to misse it seekes best directions and that every day yea and at every turning It will not serve his turne once or twice or seldome in his iourney to take generall directions yea he is glad to aske of any body even children when he is out of his way or doth but feare it or is in danger of it And shall not this teach us to 〈…〉 should we goe to God to seeke a way of him yea going and weeping we should go and aske the way with our faces thitherward Ier. 51.4 Ezra 8.22 How should we be glad of guides and make our selves also equall to them of the lower sort that by conference and all good helpes from Ministers and godly people we might receive daily directions It is a horrible plague to have a heart that is not willing and forward to aske questions about the way to be saved and intolerable pride not to make use of any that can give us counsell O the incredible stupidity of our spirits we that cannot travaile in a road-way that perhaps we have gone before without every houres questions yet thinke our selves wise enough to finde the way to heaven with little or no directions 5. A stranger lookes not for great things for himselfe he doth not seeke honors and offices and possessions in the City he travels through his care is onely for necessaries for his iourney And are not wee strangers on earth and is it now a time for us to take up our dwellings here and to seeke great things for our selves in this world Ier. 46 5. a stranger never pleads any priviledge in the place he comes to and this was the ancien● minde of the godly Patriarks they quitted all claimes and confessed plainly they were but pilgri●●s and embraced the promises as their portion and so set up their rest in their hopes Heb. 11.3 6. A stranger can endure wrongs Hee staies not his iourney to turne againe to every d●gge that ba●kes at him nor to seeke revenge for every indignity He lets not his iourney for every showre of raine and should it not be thus with us Why doe we feare reproach what stand we still at every slander why busie we our heads for projects of revenge or our hearts with indignation at every currish caitife or dogged Doeg that will falsely accuse our good conversation in Christ When will we come to our journies end if we every day trouble our selves with the indignities we receive in this strange world let the curres barke ride thou on and minde thy way What if thy crosses fall like raine ride on it is but a showre it will be over 7. A stranger or traveller so thinkes of his travai●e in the day that hee looks for rest at night and so takes his rest at night as he resolves to travaile againe in the morning so should we be minded In prosperity to provide for adversity and in adversity to hope for prosperity againe as assured that man abideth in no certaine stay here 8. A stranger never measures his owne worth by what he findes in the way but by what he shall possesse when hee comes home so should a Christian doe he should live by faith and not by sight It matters not what the world thinkes of him his greatnesse is in the kingdome of heaven 9. A stranger will be glad to send home upon any opportunity and to get any friend to provide for him against hee come should not wee then bee glad of any opportunities to send home to heaven by our prayers
God in the day of Christ. But I rather choose to understand it of the Christian. Some think the three words should note the three waies of exalting Christians and so they should have praise in words honor in gesture and glory in deeds but I think they are but severall words to expresse joyntly one and the same thing Before I come to the maine doctrine here are divers things to be noted which are implyed both concerning Honor and the appearance of Christ. Concerning Honor these thing● may be noted First that faith and sincerity in this world for the most part want praise and honor and glory from men and therefore he promiseth them that howsoever it goe yet in the day of Christ saith shall not want praise c. It is here no wonder to be made as a signe or wonder even in Israel Esay 8. If men refraine from evill one beast or other will prey upon them Esay 9 15. To be reviled with all man●r of evill sayings is ●upposed by our Saviour M●t 5.11 They that are after the flesh have done it and ever will persecute those that are after the spirit Gal. 4.29 Secondly it seemes the Lord taketh a power unto himselfe and his word even to judge and determine the cases of Honor. It is a fond conceit that our great Gallants have that they think that in defence of their Honor they are not bound to the word but they are deceived and they doe well perhaps to shun the sentence of Scripture in the case of their monomachies or single fights for it yeelds them but small comfort to embolden their great spirits For these are the words of the holy Ghost It is a mans honor to cease from strife but every foole will be medling Prov. 20.3 Thirdly perfect Honor will never be had till the day of Judgement which should the more confirme us in a contempt of the honor of this world In this world they are many times praised whom God abhorreth and men say to the wicked thou art righteous It is an usuall thing that they that forsake the law themselves praise the wicked Psal. 10.3 Prov. 24.24 Secondly earthly honor is wonderfull deceitfull many get it by ill meanes and men may be praised by them that curse them in their hearts and besides earthly Honor will not abide nor can man continue here to enjoy it long Eccl. 8.10 Psal. 49. 13. neither will it content the mind of man if it be had Eccles. 6.2 and for the most part it makes men sensuall man in honor understands not but they live and die many times as the beasts that perish Psal. 49. ult Now concerning the revelation of Jesus Christ we must know that it is taken sometimes actively and sometimes passively Actively and so for that work of Christ by which hee reveales his Father and his will to his members so Mat. 11.23 Gal. 1.12 Now passively there is a threefold revelation of Christ 1. In his flesh 2. In his spirit 3. In his glory In his flesh for so godlinesse is a great mysterie in that God was revealed in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 In the spirit so Christ was revealed in Paul in that by the spirit the grace of Christ was revealed in him Gal. 1.16 Thirdly Christ shall be revealed at the last day in his glory from heaven and this revelation is meant here as it is also 1 Cor. 1.7.2 Thes. 1.7 The doctrines implyed are three First that Christ shall come againe and be revealed from heaven and therefore woe to those mockers that walk after their lusts and aske when his comming shall be Secondly that Christ is as it were hid till his second comming and so he is in sixe respects 1. First in respect of the sense of our mortall eyes the heavens like a curtaine hide him from us Act. 1. 2. Secondly in respect of the admirable glory of his person For at that day his glory shall be revealed which now is as it were hidden 3. Thirdly in respect of the estate of his members our life is hid with Christ. He is not glorious in the outward glory of his members Col. 3.3 4. In respect of the manifestation of his love he hath not shewed himselfe to wicked men Ioh. 14.22 nor fully revealed himself to the faithfull it doth not yet appeare what they shall be 1 Ioh. 2.3 5. Fiftly in respect of the secrets he shall then break open little doe we know or heare of what he will then discover when hee shall break open the everlasting counsels of God and discover the depths of Gods providence and the deeds of all both good and bad and the glory of the Elect and the eternall misery of the damned 6. Sixtly in respect of the suddennesse of his comming Luk. 17.30 All which should make us the more to long for his appearing for that shall be such a time as never was The third thing implyed is that the thought of the day of Judgement is a sure refuge to a Christian minde when many other comforts for the present faile But the maine doctrine is that faithfull and patient Christians shall have a great deale of praise and honor and glory in the day of Christ. Christ will be made marveilous in them 2 Thes. 1.11 they shall shine as the stars of heaven and as the sun in the firmament Dan. 12. Mat. 13. they shall appeare in singular glory when Christ appeares Col. 3.4 But shall Christians have no glory till that day Yes For first there is a naturall glory stamped upon their very persons Col. 2. ult Secondly they are already vessels of glory in Gods decree Rom. 9. Thirdly true honor is restored them in the kingdome of gra●e for God acknowledgeth them so doe the Angels of God and they have honorable priviledges and such graces as will bring to glory And lastly God many times doth honor them with speciall Honor before men Hest. 8.16 Psal. 64. 3. to the end Act. 28.10 The Uses follow And first the consideration of this great praise and honor and glory in the revelation of Christ should serve for instruction in divers respects For it should quicken us to faith and good works seeing our labour shall not be in vaine 1 Cor. 15. ult Men will say in that day Oh blessed was he or she that beleeved It may also perswade us to cheerfulnesse and patience under afflictions and the scornes of the world we shall then have praise enough what need we care for a little disgrace in the meane time and shall we ever be ashamed of Christ and his truth that will thus honor us at the last day Finally we may here learne of Christ how to esteem of tryed Christians we should learn of him to praise them and honor them Secondly this doctrine should wonderfully comfort Gods servants How should they exult in the glory and honor they hope for They shall then have so much honor as the Kings of the earth
thoughts and be yeelded to and delighted in and that constantly they seeke the pleasure of contemplative wickednesse and doe not resist it by praying against it even vaine thoughts may dead the affections and poison them Psal. 119.113 Fourthly sometimes it is neglect of mortification the s●ule will gather aboundance of humors as well as the body and therefore Christians should not goe too long especially if they ●eele a kind of fulnes to grow upon them but take a purge that is seriously and secretly set time apart to humble themselves before God purging out their most secretest corruptions with all hearty confession before God Fiftly sometimes it is want of practice or want of an orderly disposing of their waies in godlinesse If they rest onely in hearing their affections cannot last long sincere and besides the most Christians burden their own harts for very want of order and that they goe not distinctly about the works of godlinesse but rake together a great heape of doctrine which they know not what to doe withall Psal. 50. ult Sixtly sometimes againe it is occasioned by inordinate feeding when Christians begin to affect novelties and seeke to themselves a heape of teachers they scape not long without fulnesse and the fits of l●athing 2. Tim. 4.3 Seaventhly sometimes very idlenesse is the hindrance The want of a particular calling to imploy themselves in the sixe dayes breeds a generall kinde of wearinesse and satiety which extends the heart of it not only to the times of private dutyes in the working dayes but to the very Sabbath also They cannot worke at Gods worke with any great delight that had no more minde to their owne worke Eighthly sometimes it is neglect of preparation and praier before we come to the word Ninthly sometimes it is a violent kinde of ignorance and unbeliefe when a Christian knowes not this right to the word and will not be perswaded of the fatherly love and presence of God in his ordinance If Preachers must say I have beleeved therefore I will speake so must Hearers say I have beleeved therefore I will heare They should know that they are welcome to Christ and may eate and drinke Cant. 5.1 And that their heritage lieth in the word Psal. 119. Tenthly sometimes it is a very disease in the body as melancholy or some other which doth so oppresse the heart that it doth not take delight in any thing But of this more in the next Use. Lastly any of the sinnes mentioned in the former verse will hinder affection Malice Hypocrisie or Envy or any of the rest Vse 3. The third use may be for instruction to teach us to strive for affection to the word and to provide to order our selves so as we be not wanting in the direction of the Apostle and so two sorts are to be taught that is such as want appetite and such as have it that they may keepe it aright Quest. What must such doe as finde either want of appetite or decay of it Ans. Such as would get sound affections to the word must doe sixe things First they must refrain their feete from every evill way It is impossible to get sound affections without sound reformation of life Psalm 119. Secondly they must pray for it they must beseech the Lord to quicken them Psal. 119.37 and to inlarge their hearts verse 32. especially to give them understanding verse 34. and to open their eyes to see the wonderfull things of his law verse 18. Thirdly they must chuse an effectuall Ministery to live under it such as is executed with power and demonstration to the conscience 2. Cor. 4.2 Fourthly they must remember the Lords day and that they doe when they empty their heads and hearts of all cares of life which might choak the word diligently doing their owne works on the sixe daies and finishing them that they may be free for the Lords work on the Lords day The cares of life choake the word Matthew 13. Fiftly they must converse much if it be possible with affectionate Christians For as yron sharpneth yron so doth the exemplary affection of the tender-hearted whet on the dull spirits of others Sixtly they must purge often they must be frequent in the duties of humiliation by solemne fasting and prayer and sound confession striving when they feele fulnesse to grow upon them to disturden their hearts and to quicken their spirits more forcibly to the love of Gods name and word Quest. But what must such doe as have gotten some affections to the word that they neither lose them not be unprofitable in them Ans. They must looke to diverse things First they must hate vaine thoughts take heed of those secret vanities of imagination and that delightfull contemplation of evill in the minde Psalm 119. 113. Secondly they must trie all things and keepe that which is good they must heare with judgement and make speciall account of such parcels of doctrine as doe most fit their particular needes labouring by all meanes that such truths run not out 1. Thess. 5.21 Thirdly they must take heed of itching eares For where mens desires are still carried after new men they are in great danger of fulnesse or of declining and which is worse of being carried about with diverse doctrines and at length to be a prey to deceitfull mockers Fourthly they must preserve by all meanes the feare and trembling at Gods presence and humiliation of minde For so long as we can dread the presence of God in his ordinances we are in no danger of losing our love to the word Psalm 119.120 Lastly in Esay 55.1 2 3. wee may note diverse things that God requires in such as have the same thirst 1. They must come to meanes 2. They must buy and bargaine with God by prayer and vowes 3. They must eat that is they must apply it to themselves 4. They must be instructed against merit in themselves and bring faith to beleeve success though they deserve it not they must buy without mony 5. They must hearken diligently 6. They must eate that which is good that is they must apply effectually that doctrine they feele to have life in it 7. Their soules must delight in fatnesse that is they must be specially thankfull and cheerefull when God doth enlive his promises and sweeten his words to their tastes 8. They must after all this incline their ear and come to God they must make conscience to strive against dulnesse and distractions and seeke God in his word still or else their affections may decay and then if they doe this they shall live and enjoy the sure mercie● of David by a perpetuall covenant Quest. But what shall such godly persons as are afflicted with melancholy doe in this case of affections Ans. They must attend these things First they must be perswaded to see the disease in the body which extends the oppression of it to the very affections Secondly they must remember times that are past
are bound not onely to get grace but they must labour to encrease in the gifts they have received it is not enough to begin the worke of God but we must labour to abound in it and increase in well doing we must goe on and finish the measure of the worke required of us these places evidently prove that God looks for growth at our hands 2. Pet. 3.18.1 Cor. 15.58.1 Thessa. 4.1 Prov. 4.18.1 Cor. 14.12 Secondly for the second before I number particulars I might tell you of divers kindes of growth or increase in the kingdome of Christ. Christ himselfe is said to increase Ioh. 3.10 The word is said to grow Act. 6. and in other places and Christians are said to grow and so either first joyntly in the mysticall body Ephes. 4. 16. Col. 2. 19. or secondly severally every one by himselfe Christ was said to increase not onely in stature and the declaration of his gifts Luke 2. 40 but also in the glory of his kingdome and the advancing of his dominion amongst men The word grew when the number of faithful labourers was increased and when the light of the truth was more glorified received by the people Christians are said to grow chiefly in two respects First in the number of beleevers when there are daily added to the church Secondly in the power and practice of their gifts and this last is here intended the word rendred Thereby might be read either in him or in it or as it is thereby In him that is in Christ In it that is in the word or thereby that is by the word this last is intended here in all probability Now then to the point there are certaine things wherein a Christian should strive to grow it is true wee should grow in every good gift and worke but if we marke the Scriptures these things in particular are especially to be laboured after as being things that doe wonderfully honour God and credit the Gospell and bring a singular increase of happines to a Christian mans life and it is wonderfull profitable to keep a Catalogue of these particulars still before us that wee may every day bee put in mind of what we should especially labour after These are the things then we should distinctly labour to grow in First we should labour to grow in wisdome Gods people should appeare to be a wise people above all the people of the earth Christ grew in wisedome Luke 2.40 Now wisedome hath two things in it First knowledge and secondly discretion In both these we should grow For knowledge the word of God should dwell plentiously in us Col. 3. 16. and we should encrease in the knowledge of God Col. 1.10 and for discretion we should abound in knowledge yea and saith the Apostle in all judgement too Phili. 1.10 Secondly we should grow in faith that which is lacking to our faith must be made up 1. Thess. 3.10 and we should still bee praying with the Apostles Lord increase our faith Luke 17.5 2. Thess. 1.11 Now there bee two things distinctly which we should grow in about faith viz First assurance and secondly the exercise of it For assurance we should he●eunto give all diligence that we might get the full assurance of faith and hope to the end we should never be quiet till it bee established and rooted and soundly grounded in our particular assurance of Gods favour in Jesus Christ and our owne eternall salvation Heb. 6.11 Col. 2.6 7. And for the exercise of faith we should strive to learne every day to live by faith in all the occasions of our life spending the remainder of our lives in the faith of the Sonne of God holding fast our confidence and not withdrawing our selves Heb. 10. Gal. 2.20 yea we should strive to be examples one to another in our faith in God 1. Tim. 4.12 Thirdly we should abound in love one to another and towards all men this the Apostle praies earnestly for and this we should shew by all diligence in preserving peace and unity amongst our selves so as there should bee but one heart and mind amongst us to this end bearing and forbearing and supporting one another wee should grow also in the tendernesse and heartinesse of our affections one after another longing one for another and delighting one in another yea our love should grow even in seeking to enlarge our acquaintance with such as feare God but especially in the labour of our love to doe good to such as feare God should we grow c. Fourthly we should grow in mercy and that both in the bowels of pitty and in the abundance of the fruits of mercy Col. 3.12.2 Cor. 8.2 7. and 9.11 Iames 3.18 Fiftly we should grow in patience and meeknesse and lowlinesse of mind Patience should have his perfect work and it wonderfully would become us if we could increase in the image of Jesus Christ for meeknesse and lowlinesse to be free from passions and pride oh how it would adorne us It is that one grace Christ so much urgeth upon us and was most eminent in himselfe Matth. 11.29 Iames 1.4 Sixtly We should grow in praier and the gifts that concerne our communion with God we should labour to be mighty and powerfull in praier able to wrastle with God himselfe and overcome him as Iacob did and to this end we should pray alwaies and learne to pray all manner of praiers in all things making our requests knowne to God with supplication especially we should strive to abound in thanksgiving to God in all things giving thanks this is the greatest honor we can doe to God 1. Thessa. 5.18.19 Philip. 4.7 Psal. 50.23 Col. 1.11 Ephes. 6.18.2 Cor. 4.15 Seventhly we should grow in the contempt of the world and the lesser estimation of the things of this life we should strive more and more to expresse a mortified conversation using the world as if we used it not setting out affections on the things that are above and having our conversation in heaven confessing our selves to be strangers and pilgrims and with all eagernesse embracing the praises of a better life Hebrews 11.13 Philip. 3.20 in nothing being carefull Philip. 4.6 hastning to the comming of Jesus Christ. 2. Pet. 3.11 Eighthly We should exceedingly strive to grow in the holy and reverent use of Gods ordinances striving to come with more feare and sense of the glorious presence of God This is a wonderfull hard lesson and little heeded of the most Oh that we could get it to serve the Lord with feare and to rejoice but yet with trembling Oh blessed is the man that can feare alwaies and worke out his salvation with feare and trembling Ninthly there is another gift we should grow in and it is marvelously necessary and comely and yet extreamely neglected and that is utterance of which the Apostle makes mention in his short Catalogue 2. Cor. 8.7 Utterance I say to be able to speake one to another with profit and power
God and mans salvation and so it is an argument taken from the hat●●ulnesse of the flesh and her working in us The lusts and desires of the flesh ought to be hatefull and we should suspect and abstaine from the projects of the flesh if we consider 1 That the flesh savoureth not the things of God Rom. 8. 2 That she opposeth all good wayes partly by objecting against them and partly by making evill present when we should performe them 3 That her wisdome is against God her fairest reasons are pleaded for things that are hatefull to God such also are her excuses and extenuations and promises 4 That if shee be followed she will lead us by degrees into all abominations as whoredomes murders debates heresies c. these are her fruits Gal. 5. 5 She will betray us to Sathan that he may by himselfe set up strong fortifications in our soules and her treason is the more dangerous because shee is a domesticall enemy and by his working in secret our hearts may become a very cage or stie of uncleane spirits 6 She hath already spoiled the Image of God in us and made us looke most deformedly 7 If shee once get power shee is most tyrannicall no respect of credit profit no nor salvation it selfe can stirre shee will be served whatsoever come of it 8 We should abhorre her for the very mischiefe she doth to our posterity we cannot looke upon our children but wee may see what wofull hurt shee hath done by the infection they received in their propagation Uses The use may be First for reproofe of such as lay the blame of their faults upon their evill lucke or evill counsell or the divell whereas they ought to lay the fault upon their o●ne fles● even their owne ill nature The divell no● the world could never hurt us if the flesh did not betray us by defect or consent or evill action Secondly for information We may see what we should mortifie and abstain from Religion doth not binde men to mortifie the substance of the flesh but the lusts of the flesh we are not to destroy any faculty of the soule or in the soule or part of the body but the inordinate appetite and desires of either we are not to abstaine from the necessary meanes of life as house lands diet apparell company c. but the evill concupiscence about these Thirdly for instruction It should teach us therefore to restraine the flesh as much as we can and therefore we shall with the same labour restraine the lusts of the flesh and to this end 1 Wee must with all feare and jealousie watch our owne natures as mistrusting 2 We must silence the flesh and not suffer it to plead for sinne 3 Wee must by a daily course of mortification judge the flesh that so wee may be as it were condemned in the flesh 4 We must keepe from it what may pamper it as idlenesse excesse of diet apparell recreation c. Which warre against the soule These words may bee considered either in their coherence or in themselves in their coherence and so they are the third reason taken from the evill effects of those lusts In themselves there are two things to be opened both what the soule is and what this warre in the soule is The point is cleare that fleshly lusts do much hurt the soules of men and so both the soules of wicked men and of godly men First of wicked men These lusts hurt their soules 1 Because they provoke the wrath of God upon them The Israelites were not estranged from their lusts and therefore the wrath of God came upon them Psal. 78.29 30 31. 2 Because they make us resemble the divell Ioh. 8.44 3 Because they hinder the power of the Word from them they will never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3.6 4 Because it brings the soule in bondage so as all the conversation of the soule is in a manner about those lusts of the flesh Eph. 2.2 5 Because they make all their prayers abominable Iam. 4. 6 Because sometimes they are scou●ged with a reprobate mind being given up to their lusts Rom. 1. 7 Because they may drowne the soule inperdition 1 Tim. 6.9 If godly men entertaine these inward evills in their thoughts and affections many evills will follow 1 They hinder the Word 2 They grieve the good Spirit by which they are sealed to the day of redemption 3 They harden the heart and blind the understanding 4 They hinder good cuties Gal. 5.17 5 They wound the soule 6 They make the mind soule and lothsome they defile 7 They may bring outward judgements upon thee or inward terrours of conscience Use. The use may bee partly to declare the misery of such Christians as are fallen away from the acknowledgement of the truth by intertaining these lothsome lusts of whose fearfull estate at large 2 Pet. 2.18 to the end Partly it should worke in all the godly obedience to the Counsell of the Apostle here in abstaining from these lusts as grievous hurts to the soule or their soules they shou●d put on the Lord Jesus in sincerity and never more take care to fulfill these lusts of the flesh Rom. 13.13 Thus of these words in the coherence The sense will be more full if wee consider more at large two things in the words First what the soule is Secondly what this warre in the soule is Two things have made the inquirie about the soule exceeding difficult The first is the nature of the soule For it is a spirituall essence and therefore wonderfullhard to be conceived of There be three things cannot fully be conceived of or defined by man first God secondly an Angel and thirdly the soule of man Now besides this transcendencie as I may call it of the soule the fall of man and custome in sinne and the remainders of corruption in the best have made this doctrine so hard that wicked men scarce discerne that they have a soule and godly men are very ignorant and impotent in conceiving the condition of the soule This word Soule is diversly accepted in Scripture for it signifies sometimes The life of man as Matt. 6.25 Be not carefull for your soules what yee shall eate c. Christ because looke what the soule is to the body that is Christ to the whole man so Psal. 16.10 Thou wilt not leave my soule in hell that is Christ Act. 2.25 29 c. and 13.35 36. The dead bodies Levit. 19.28 The whole man to Gen. 46.26 by a Synecdoche But here it signifies that part of man which is called his spirit By the soule then we understand that part of man which is invisible and invisibly placed within the body of man Now the things which are fit for us to inquire into and know concerning the nature and excellency of the soule may be comprised briefly in this description of the soule The soule of man is a substance incorporeall invisible
him of nothing But by renovation conscience is good for the time of this life but imperfectly and increaseth in good men by degrees and so because man is renewed but in part it is a part of the goodnesse of the conscience to accuse for sinne especially if it be presumptuous after calling as well as to excuse from faults while the man keeps his uprightnesse That a good conscience should only excuse is true in this world onely of conscience as it was good by creation Now concerning the goodnesse or badnesse of conscience these seven things are to be considered of First that all mens consciences by nature are evill Secondly the difference of evill in mens consciences Thirdly the signes of an evill conscience Fourthly the hurt of an evill conscience Fiftly the meanes how evill consciences may be made good Sixtly the signes of a good conscience Seventhly the great happinesse of the man that hath a good conscience For the first that all mens consciences are by nature evill is manifest because all have sinned in Adam and lost their originall righteousnesse in all the faculties of the soule and so every man in his naturall condition is in every point uncleane and to the impure all things are impure even their consciences are polluted saith the Apostle Tit. 1.15 For the second evill is not in the same degree in all mens consciences but after a different manner in divers men for First in most men wee see that conscience is so feeble and works so little that it seemes to be but a small sparke or like a bubble which riseth now and then and presently vanisheth Now the reason why conscience stirs so little in the most men is not to be taken from the nature of conscience for that can worke all workes mentioned before but from divers things in man For first Adams sinne as it deprived all mens consciences of originall righteousnesse which was the life of the conscience so it brought such a depravation and evill disease upon the conscience that it was never healed nor cured in the naturall man to this day but the weaknesse arising from the infection holds him downe still Secondly the generall ignorance and darknesse which is in the world is one great cause why conscience lieth so miserably weake and neglected For it cannot worke for want of light For in the mind it findes only a few naturall principles or some generall truths of religion which are altogether insufficient to direct in the particular occasions of mens lives Thirdly besides the law of nature is corrupted in man and so those principles are very muddy and uncertaine and the generals of Religion are poysoned with secret objections gathered from the controversies of so many false religions Fourthly further it is manifest that the cares and pleasures of life oppresse conscience in many and in them conscience stirs not not because it cannot stir but because there is no leasure to heare what it saith men are so violently carried to the pleasures and busines of this world As a man that runs in a race many times runs with such violence that he cannot heare what is said unto him by some that he passeth by though it were counsell that might direct him in the right way of the race so is it with men that haste to be rich conscience often cals to them to take heed of going out of the way by deceit or lying or oppression or the like but they pursue riches so violently that they cannot heare the voice of conscience And so is it with the voluptuous person and with the most men that live in any habituall gainfull sinne Fiftly yea this weaknes comes upon the conscience of some by custome of sinnes that are not sinnes of gaine or pleasure as the sinnes of negligence sloathfulnesse passion or the like in which men are wilfully confirmed and will not regard the checks of their owne conscience Finally one great reason why the most of us feele so little of conscience is the evill hearing of the Word of God for the Word of God powerfully preached would awake the conscience but that most men set themselves to neglect it by a willing wilfull entertainment of distractions and in voluntary forgetting of what they have heard and so hood-winking themselves it is no wonder they cannot see Secondly some mens conscience is starke dead it stirs not at all The conscience is compared to a part of the body that is not only without sense and rotten but is feared with an hot iron and this is the case only of some notorious either Hereticks or malefactors that have lived a long time wilfully in some monstrous wickednesse either knowne or secret 1 Tim. 4.2 This seared conscience is either joyned with a greedinesse to commit speciall wickednesse or with a reprobate minde that is so horrible stupid that it judgeth evill to be good or at the best not dangerously hurtfull Ephes. 4.18 Rom. 1.28 Thirdly in some men the evill of conscience lyeth in this that it is over busie and sinnes too much and so in two sorts of men first the superstitious or secondly the desperate The superstitious person is many times disquieted by his conscience in doing well or when he doth that which is not unlawfull as the Popish Priest is troubled for comming to our Churches or the Christian that is carried with preposterous zeale is troubled for obeying the Magistrate in using his liberty in things indifferent in the desperate the evill of Conscience is the horrible tormenting of them beyond the bounds of the offence of Conscience and that in two things First in that it presents the wrath of God to them without the hope of mercy in Christ as did the Conscience of Cain Secondly in that it drives them to doe that against themselves which is desperately wicked as to make away themselves as the desperate Conscience of Iudas and Achitophel did Fourthly in some men there was a temporary goodnesse in the Conscience of which they made shipwracke and so utterly lost the goodnesse they had for a time And thus many hypocrites doe that for a time get the forme of Religion even into their Consciences but afterward falling into the immoderate love of the world or the lust of some particular sinne fall cleane away from Religion and so lose the goodnesse which they had 1 Tim. 1.19 Thus of the differences of evill in the Consciences of divers men the signes of an evill Conscience follow But before I give the signes wee must take notice of a distinction and that is that the Conscience may have evill in it and not be an evill Conscience Conscience in this life in men regenerate is renewed and restored but in part and so may erre sometimes and in some cases and yet be no evill Conscience As for instance in certaine weake Christians in the Primitive Church who yet were godly men the Apostle shewes Rom. 14. that some Christians for Conscience sake did
must know that in the first sense none enjoy good daies but good men Now good daies in the sense of the Scripture must be considered either in generall or in particular In generall and so first all the daies of Christ after he is revealed in a Christian are good daies and so all the daies of a true Christian from his conversion to his death are good daies Which appeares thus Saint Paul saith that Christ is our Passeover and the Passeover is a feast which we must keep 1 Cor. 5.8 and such high festivall daies are good daies especially the first and last daies of the Passeover were good daies in a speciall solemnity that is the day of thy conversion to spirituall life and the day of thy death which is the beginning of the day of eternall life Secondly all the daies in which Christians enjoy the preaching of the Gospel in the power of it and other ordinances of Christ in their glory all these daies be good daies for they are daies in which God makes rich feasts unto all Nations as is effectually described in the Allegory Esay 25.8 Thus David saith One day in Gods courts is better than a thousand any were else Ps. 84.10 The righteous flourish when Christ comes down upon their souls as rain upon the mowne grasse Ps 72.6 7. Thirdly those be good daies in which we see the Church of God in generall to prosper when God keeps his Church as his vineyard waters it every moment and watcheth it night day and destroieth every thing that might annoy it In particular a Christian finds divers sorts of good daies as first the Sabbath daies well sanctified are good daies above all other daies of the weeke when his body enjoyes rest and his soule is blessed according to Gods promise with spirituall rest and grace in Jesus Christ. Secondly the daies in which the soule of a Christian after sin and the judgement of God for it is humbled soundly and anew admitted into Gods presence and reconciled to God those daies when God entertaines the repenting sinner that prayes unto him especially at the first reconciliation are wonderfull good daies Iob 33.25 26. with the coherence 36.11 Psal. 90.14 Luke 4.21 with Esay 61.1 2 10. Thirdly all the daies in which a Christian thrives and prospers in the knowledge of Gods Word and growes in the spirituall understanding in the mysteries of Gods kingdome are all good daies for this knowledge is that wisedome Solomon speakes of which makes a man so happy Pro. 3.18 2 16. Thus of the good daies that are so in the judgement of the inward man God is pleased also to grant such good daies as are or ought to be so accounted in the judgement of the outward man and so First the daies of youth in which a man hath strength of body and vigour of mind to fit him not onely for the comforts of life but for the service of his Creator are good daies Eccles. 12.1 it being a blessed thing to beare Gods yoake in a mans youth Secondly the daies of speciall prosperity in the world which sometime God grants unto his people are also good daies when God gives his people aboundance of blessings in their families and estates and withall publike honour and respect with all sorts even the great ones of the world as was in the case of Iob which he describes in the whole 29th Chapter of his booke but then it must have this indeed that in this prosperity the godly man be imployed in all well-doing and get himselfe honour by the flourishing of his gifts and good workes as is shewed in that Chapter by Iob. Thirdly such daies in which a man enjoyes a quiet estare free from all trouble or vexation or contumely at home or abroad being free from Gods afflicting hand or mans injurious dealing are good daies and such as perhaps are specially meant in this place Thus of the sense of the words Divers Doctrines may be observed from hence 1. That the daies of men usually are evill which is true not onely of the wicked but of the godly also This Iacob said long agoe his daies were few and evill Gen. 47.9 but of this point before Only this may serve for great reproofe of those that so little minde a better life and so willingly love this life that though they live in much misery are loath to thinke of dying and make no conscience to provide for a better life 2. It is evident from hence that the life of man is but short whether he live happily or miserably yet his life is reckoned by daies not by longer measures of purpose to signifie the shortnesse of our lives This is expressely affirmed in other Scriptures Iob 10.20 Iob saith his daies were few and of all men that are borne of women that they have but a short time to live Iob 7.1 And this is resembled by divers similitudes so our life is compared to a Weavers shuttle Iob 7.6 to a Post for swift running out Iob. 9.25 to the grasse of the field Iob 7.12 Esay 40.6 to an hand breadth so as he saith his age is as nothing Psal. 39.5 to a watch in the night Psal. 90.4 to a sleep ver 5. to a tale that is told ver 9. Thus the life of man is said to be short either as he is in Gods sight with whom a thousand yeares are but as yesterday when it is past Psal. 90.4 or in his owne account if he measure time to come as he measures time past and in plaine reckoning let the life of man be improved according to mans utmost strength ordinarily a mans yeares are threescore and ten and if he live to fourescore it is but labour and sorrow to him Psal. 90. Quest. But what should be the cause that mens lives are so short Answ. If there were no other cause but the will of him that hath the disposing of the times and seasons in his owne power yet that might satisfie us but we may ghesse at other causes as both the mercy and justice of God This world is so bad to the godly that it is Gods mercie to take them quickly out of it and contrariwise it is so good to the wicked considering their desects that it is justice in God to take them hence and send them to their owne place which is hell Besides many men bring speedy death upon themselves by their owne ill courses or by sinning against their owne bodies by lewd courses and by eating up their owne hearts with worldly cares and sorrowes or by living in any grosse sin to provoke God to cut them off or by falling into such disorder as the Magistrate cuts them off or by laying of violent hands upon themselves or by getting their goods unlawfully to bring upon themselves that curse Ier. 17 11. Finally in this last age of the world there may be this reason assigned that the Lord makes haste to have the
called 272 Wherein it exceeds all other writings ibid. Servants Service How we are to serve God 473 Who are rejected from the number of Gods Servants 474 It is an excellent freedome to be a Servant of God 475 Their prerogatives ibid. Servants are of divers sorts 486 For what cause Servitude came in ibid. How a godly Servant may comfort himselfe in his estate 488 They must be subject three wayes 490 Helps in their subjection ibid. They are to shew their feare of God in their callings 492 Their feare towards their Masters shewed divers wayes 493 Sheep Signes of a lost Sheep 557 Hopes of returning 558 Motives to returne 559 The time when the number and meanes 560 The maner and signes of returning 561 The lets 562 Shepherd What attributes are given to Christ as a Shepherd 563 564 He is the one true great and good Shepherd 564 The happinesse of such as live under this Shepherd appeares in ten things 565 Shew Seven wayes whereby we may offend by outward Shewes 333 Motives to the Shew of vertue 334 Sicknesse Vide Healing How it comes into the soule 548 The Sicknesse of the soule grievous many wayes 549 Why many feele not the Sicknesse of the soule ibid. Silence To put to Silence is diversly accepted 455 Sin Sixe wayes by which one mans Sin is derived on another 141 How many wayes Sin hinders the growth of the word 200 A man may be said to make Sin many wayes 522 523 How Christ had no Sin 524 Inwhat respect Christ bare our Sins 531 His sufferings fitted to our Sins 532 Men are said to be alive in Sin many wayes 535 Their miserie great that so doe ibid. Sinner To be a worker of Iniquitie what and three wayes manifested 397 Sion The Church is like Mount Sion in many respects 276 How the Citizens of this City may be knowne 277 Their speciall priviledges 279 Sober Sobrietie A fixefold Sobrietie 104 Sojourners Vide Saints and Strangers 4 5 132 Soule What it is 76 Soule taken many wayes 367 Its description ibid. Seven things considerable in it ibid. c. It is a substance but not bodily 368 It is immortall 369 Its originall 371 Anima non est ex traduce 372 God creates the Soule 373 374 Objections against it answered 374 375 Of the union of the Soule with the body 376 Shewed by many similies 377 By what band the Soule is bound to the body ibid. The faculties of the Soule 378 Its five senses 379 The inward senses three 380 The Soule gives to the body a threefold motion 311 The facultie of reason in the Soule and wherein it excells 382 The end of its creation 383 Foure kinds of warre against the Soule 384 The Flesh wars against the Soule five wayes ibid. How the Soule comes to be diseased 548 The sicknesse of the Soule grievous many wayes 149 Many feele it not ibid. The Soule synechdochically signifieth the whole man 17● Speaking Vide Evill-speaking and Report Spirit What need our Spirit● have to be sanctified ●5 In what its sanctification consisteth ibid. Eight things belong thereto 16 Why the Spirit is called the Holy Ghost 93 Why the Holy Spirit ibid. Sprinkling The meaning of that ceremonie of Sprinkling Christs bloud 22 A fourefold legall Sprinkling 22 23 c. The manifold passages of Sprinkling the Passeover opened 25 26 Statutes God hath foure Statute books 149 Foure praises of those Statutes ibid. Stone How Christ is said to be first a Stone secondly a living Stone 249 250 This Stone disallowed how and by whom 251 252 Wicked men compared to Stones in many respects 258 So the godly also ibid. Reasons why we ought to be lively Stones 259 That Christ is laid as a foundation Stone imports many things 276 A corner Stone 282 Elect and precious ibid. Strangers Who and why man is a Stranger even in five respects 3 4 The Elect are Strangers 4 And in foureteene things they should be like Strangers 4 5 The word Stranger literally and mystically taken 132 Prettie allusions from Israels being in Egypt 132 c. We should carry our selves as Strangers 364 Submission The Submission which belongs to Princes and Magistrates hath sixe things in it 425 Objections against this Submission answered 427 Suffer The markes of such as truely suffer with Christ 315 Divers wayes of Suffering 514 Christ Suffered for us in divers respects 517 518 His Sufferings were for our examples 519 Ten things to be followed by the examples of Christs Sufferings 521 Christs Sufferings 〈…〉 532 He suffered in his body and soule 533 Why he suffered on a tree 534 T TAbernacle Christ hath a fivefold Tabernacle 261 A godly man like a Tabernacle in many respects 262 Excellent uses hereof 263 Taste What will bring us unto a good Taste of Gods goodnesse 239 240 Our true Taste is seene both by the causes and effects 241 Wherein the Taste of the godly and wicked differ 242 How far the Taste of the wicked may goe 243 The uses of it 243 244 We can have but a Taste of Gods sweetnesse in this life 244 The uses of it ibid. The true causes of the want of Taste to the Word 245 When we have tasted of it we must not lose our Appetite 246 Temptation Foure sorts of it 57 Sathan tempts five wayes 58 Thirteene degrees of it ibid. c. How Sathans Temptations differ from our owne concupiscence 59 60 Comforts against Temptation 60 Twelve rules in Temptation 61 God tempts man sixe wayes 62 Seven wayes in affliction 62 63 Testimonie The Scripture is our sure Testimonie and thence how our Testaments are to be fetcht 124 125 Time Times Foure sorts of men have enquired about Times 1. The curious 2. The weake 3. The superstitious 4. The wise 83 Tradition The word is taken five waies 89 90 How many wayes children are infected by the Tradition of their fathers 142 Why those Traditions should be so infectious ibid. c. Trust. Five things pertaining to a perfect Trust 105 Nine wayes to shew our Trust 108 Truth What it is 175 What it is to obey the Truth how 176 V VAine-glory Wherein it is seene 512 Verily The word oft used in Scripture and that for three speciall causes 150 151 How many wayes we shew forth the Verilies of Christ 332 333 Why the Verilies that are in us are called Christs Verilies 334 Vertue How the word is taken in the Originall 327 Nine Vertues in Christ which we should shew forth 329 Vertue and Grace are a Christians best riches 618 Vessell The word Vessell diversly taken 642 Visit Visitation Men are said to visit diversly 412 So God also ibid. c. First in judgement 413 Secondly in mercy 414 Signes of such as he visits in mercy 415 What glorious things the day of Visitation brings forth 419 Uncleannesse Two waies contracted 25 Unitie Of Unitie in mind or judgement 674 675 Helpes thereto 676 Aggravations against discord in opinion 677 Many ill causes of