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A14923 The soules progresse to the celestiall Canaan, or heavenly Jerusalem By way of godly meditation, and holy contemplation: accompanied with divers learned exhortations, and pithy perswasions, tending to Christianity and humanity. Divided into two parts. The first part treateth of the divine essence, quality and nature of God, and his holy attributs: and of the creation, fall, state, death, and misery of an unregenerated man, both in this life and in the world to come: put for the whole scope of the Old Testament. The second part is put for the summe and compendium of the Gospell, and treateth of the Incarnation, Nativity, words, works, and sufferings of Christ, and of the happinesse and blessednesse of a godly man in his state of renovation, being reconciled to God in Christ. Collected out of the Scriptures, and out of the writings of the ancient fathers of the primitive Church, and other orthodoxall divines: by John Welles, of Beccles in the County of Suffolk. Welles, John, of Beccles. 1639 (1639) STC 25231; ESTC S119607 276,075 406

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prevent him SEing the Divell is so apt and ready to assault and tempt the faithfull and the elect of God consider therefore thou devout soule in what danger thou art because the divell thine adversary is alwaies lying in wait for thee hee is an enemy for boldnesse most ready for strength most powerfull for subtilty most cunning for engines well stored in sight indefatigable into all shaps changeable he intiseth us into many sinnes and having inticed us hee accuseth us before Gods judgement seate 2 Cor. 2.11 2 Cor. 11.14 hee accuseth God to men and men to God and one man to another hee exactly considereth every ones inclination and then hee layes for them the snares of temptations for the devill when he assaulteth the soule of man first sets upon that part he findes softest and best affected for his purpose for him the easier to worke upon and if hee once be withstood and overcome hee doth not presently remove nor give over but comes againe to tempt with greater force that so hee may by tediousnesse and neglect overcome those whom by violence and force of temptations he could not overcome Against whom will he not be bold to use his subtill trickes when hee was so bold to set upon the Lord of Majesty himselfe with his craft and subtilty Math 4.2 3. when hee had fasted forty daies and forty nights what Christians will he spare when hee sought to winnow Christs Apostles like wheate He deceived Adam in his nature instructed whom then can hee not deceive in his nature corrupted he deceived Judas in the schoole of our Saviour Luke 22.31 and whom will hee not deceive in the world Gen. 3.4 5. the schoole of errours in all states the divels trecheries are to bee feared In prosperity hee lifts us up with pride in adversity he drives us downe to despaire if he sees a man delighted with frugality he intangleth him in the fetters of insatiable covetousnesse if hee sees a man of an heroicall spirit hee sets him on fire with flaming anger if he sees a man somewhat merrier then ordinary hee incites him to burne with lust those whom he sees to be zealous in religion he labours to entangle in vaine superstition those whom he sees exalted to dignities hee prickes them forward with the spurres of ambition when hee allureth man to sinne hee amplifieth Gods mercy and when hee hath cast him headlong into sinne then he shewes and amplifies Gods justice first hee will lead a man to presumption and afterwards he labours to bring him to desperation sometimes he assaults outwardly by persecutions sometimes hee assaults inwardly by fiery tentations sometimes he sets upon us openly and by force sometimes hee sets upon us secretly and by fraud in eating he sets before us gluttony in generating luxury in exercising sluggishnesse in conversing envie in governing covetous extortion in correcting rage in dignity pride he possesses the heart with evill cogitations in the mouth he puts false speakings in the other members wicked actions when wee are awake he moves us to evill workes when we are asleepe he moves us to filthy dreames so then at all times in every place and in every thing we must beware of the divels trecheries wee sleepe but hee watcheth wee are secure but he goes about like a roaring Lyon seeking whom he may devoure 1 Pet. 5.8 Consider therefore thou faithfull soule the trecheries of this most potent enemy and seeke the ayd of spirituall armes to defend thee from his subtilties let thy loynes be girt with the girdle of truth Eph. 6.14 and covered with the brest-plate of righteousnesse put on Christs perfect righteousnes thou shalt bee safe from the divels tentations Iohn 14.30 as Satan hath no power over Christ neither hath he power over the faithfull his members Let thy feet be shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace so the fiery darts of the divell shall not hurt thee take the shield of faith to defend thee from the assaults of this most wicked enemy Eph. 6.15 Math. 17.20 Faith is that which removes Mountaines which is to be understood the mountaines of doubts persecutions and tentations if thou hast faith neither shall any thing be unpossible unto thee Vers 20. Exod. 12.17.12.13 The Israelites whose doore posts were figured with the blood of the paschall Lambe were not smitten with the destroying Angell so likewise those whose hearts are by faith sprinkled with the blood of Christ shall not be hurt by this destroyer faith relies upon Gods promises in the mercy of the Almighty and Satan cannot overthrow them that believe faith is the light of the soule and hath a bright eye a holy eare a cleane heart and a sure foote shee is the strength of hope the trust of truth the honour of amity and the joy of love and Satan cannot prevaile against it and the tentations of this malignant spirit are easily discerned through this light Mich. 7.19 By faith our sins are throwne into the profound sea of Gods mercy and in that the firy darts of the divell shall be easily quenched we must likewise put on the helmet of salvation that is Ephes 6.17 holy Hope endure tentation and expect an issue thereof by hope and thou shalt find comfort thereby For God is an Assister of them that contend and the crowne of them that overcome Vers 19. wee must also take the sword of the spirit that is the Word of God For the consolations of the Scripture will prevaile against the contradictions of the divell Nazianz. for by the Word Christ overcame all Satans temptations Math. 4.4 c. 11. and still the faithfull shall overcome the divell and all his subtilties To conclude by prayer thou hast great aid against tentations for as often as the little ship of thy soule is ready to be overwhelmed by the waves of tentation awake Christ by thy prayers we overcome visible enemies with striking but wee overcome our invisible enemies by powring forth prayers unfained fight thou O Christ both in us and for us that so through thee we also may overcome our deadly enemy with victory that in thee and through thee we may triumph gloriously Of the Morall Law of God the ten Commandements THe Law of God The morall Law of God and the Law of nature is all one though it was not given to man with solemne promulgation before the time of Moses yet was there a generall sense thereof given to Adam in his creation For when God gave him his nature and endued him with the use of reason and discourse he gave him capacity to understand his duty the which duty is nothing else but the observation of the Law of God and therefore when Adam had transgressed the commandements of God and had eaten the forbidden fruit the reason of his naturall soule could tell him his offence and then his conscience judged him he was afraid
and I shall speake and let the earth heare the words of my mouth for I will publish the name of the Lord and ascribe honour unto our God Acts 13.26 Yee men and brethren children of the generation of Abraham and whosoever amongst you feareth God to you is the word of this salvation sent Psalm 34. Come yee children and hearken unto mee and I will teach you the feare of the Lord. O praise the Lord with mee and let us magnifie his name together A perfect Table to finde readily all the branches contained and treated of in the first and second Part of this Booke OF the Essence of God what God is in his Essence and how he is to be understood in his holy attributes so farre as he hath revealed himselfe in holy Scripture for otherwise no man is able to define what God is page 1 Of the majesty greatnesse and quality of God page 19 Of divine directions declaring the variable state and misery of man from the time of his creation to the time of the Gospel or the new Covenant of Grace page 30 Of the creation of the world page 34 Of the Angels their nature their office their fall page 40 Of man his first beginning page 51 Of the state of mans innnocency before his fall page 58 Of originall sin the fall and apostacy of man page 64 Of the Divells trecheries and how to prevent him page 74 Of the morall law of God the ten commandements page 77 Of the purity of conscience page 89 Of the accusations of conscience page 91 To avoyd security page 102 Of the knowledge of mans corruption and state of misery in this world and the miserable state and condition in the life to come without we be renovated by Christ. page 105 Of the meditation of the misery of the body and soule in this life page 109 Of the meditation of the misery of man after death which is the fulnesse of cursednesse page 116 Of the meditations of the grievousnesse of the torments of Hell p. 120 The Branches contained in the second part of this Booke OF the Covenant of the Gospell or the Covenant of grace pag. 127 Of the incarnation of the word Christ pag. 141 Of Christs Nativity pag. 150 Of Christ Iesus the summe or compendium of the Gospell pag. 154 Of the Crosse of Christ and his holy sufferings for our sins pag. 164 Of repentance or sorrow of the soule for sinne pag. 168 Of the two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper pag. 182 Of the Lords Supper the institution of Christ pag. 184 Of the preparation to the receiving of the holy Communion of the Body and Blood of Iesus Christ pag. 199 Of the ordinance of Christ concerning the translation of the holy and blessed Sabbath pag. 205 Of Christs ascension pag. 208 Of the comming of the holy Ghost pag. 210 Of the love of God pag. 213 Of the properties of Charity and true love to our Christian brethren pag. 217 Of Gods eternall election and predestination pag. 222 Of mortification pag. 234 Of Regeneration pag. 246 Of Sanctification pag. 255 Of Justification pag. 262 Of Faith pag. 267 Of Hope pag. 294 Of Patience pag. 301 Of Prayer pag. 313 Of Afflictions pag. 326 Of generall rules directing a Christian in a godly life pag. 336 Of Gods glory pag. 347 Of the uncertainety of mans life and the expectation of death pag. 351 Of temporary death and of the severall state of salvation and damnation pag. 355 Of a sweet contemplation of the beatificall joyes of Heaven and of heavenly things and the blessed state of a regenerated Christian pag. 364 The Conclusion pag. 373 Esay 40.3 A Voice cryeth in the Wildernesse of this wicked world prepare the way of the Lord make straight the path of our God in the Desert Esay 58.1 Cry now as loud as thou canst leave not off lift up thy voyce like a Trumpet and shew my people their offences and the house of Iacob their sinnes Psal 36.1 My heart sheweth me the wickednesse of the ungodly that there is no feare of God before his eyes Vers 4. He imagineth mischiefe upon his bed and hath set himselfe in no good way neither doth he abhorre any thing that is evill Esay 59.2 3 4. But your mis deeds have separated you from your God and your sinnes hid his face from you that he heareth you not for your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers with unrighteousnesse your lips speake leasing and your tongues set forth wickednesse no man regardeth righteousnesse and no man judgeth truely every man hopeth in vaine things and imagineth deceit conceiveth weaknesse and bringeth forth evill Vers 7. Their feet run to evill and they make hast to shed innocent blood their counsels are wicked counsels harme and destruction are in their waies Ierem. 9.8 Their tongues are like sharpe arrowes to speake deceit with their mouth they speake peaceably to their neighbour but privily they lay waite for him And like as a net is full of birds so are their houses full of that which they have gotten with falshood and deceit Ier. 5.27.28 hereof commeth their great substance and riches hereof are they fat and wealthy and are more mischievous then any other they minister not the law they make no end of the fatherlesse cause yea they judge not the poore according to equity They are corrupt Psal 53.2 4. and become abominable in their doings there is not one that doth good no not one For though they can say the Lord liveth yet they sweare to deceive Ier. 5.2 Their throate is an open sepulchre Psal 14.5 with their tongues have they deceived the poyson of aspes is under their lips Their mouthes are full of cursings and bitternesse their feet are swift to shed blood Vers 6. For when ye have stollen Ier. 7.9 murdered committed adultery and perjury when yee have offered unto Baal following strange and unknowne gods shall ye be punished Have they no knowledge that they are all such workers of mischiefe Psal 14.7 8. eating up my people as it were bread destruction and unhappinesse is in their waies and the way of peace have they not knowne Should I not punish these things Ier. 5.29 saith the Lord should I not be revenged of all such people as these be Heare thou earth also behold I will cause a plague to come upon this people Ier. 6.19 even the fruit of their owne imaginations for that they have not beene obedient unto my words and to my law but abhorred them Psal 28.4 5. Reward them according to their deeds and according to the wickednesse of their owne inventions recompence them after the works of their hands and pay them that they have deserved Eccles 8.11 Because now that evill workes are not hastily punished the heart of man giveth himselfe over unto wickednesse Esay 5.14 Therefore gapeth hell marvellous wide
and hid himselfe from Gods presence If therefore wee compare his sin to the Commandements of the Law wee shall find it to be a direct breach of some and a consequent breach of all For Gods first Commandement saith Exod. 20. Thou shalt have no other Gods but mee Adams sin by the eating of the forbidden fruit by the temptation and perswasion of the divell doth contradict the Commandement of God and saith Nay but my wife and I will both be gods Gen. 3.5 Againe Caine the second man he committed murther and thereby directly broke the sixt Commandement which when God and his conscience made him to understand Gen. 4.8 hee made a most desperate acknowledgement of his sin Vers 13. so that the Law being nothing but a reasonable duty which the creature oweth to his Creator there was therefore a generall knowledge of this Law in the reasonable nature of man at his creation and so to the succession of them of the old world unto the time that the Law was given to Moses by the ordinance of Angels Gal. 3.19 the old world then from Adam to Moses were not lawlesse and free from the service of the Law but had the law of nature for their direction which being grounded upon reason was even the very same with the law of the ten Commandements and the law of the ten Commandements before it was given to Moses was in the ages before going commonly transgressed and that law did both judge and condemne them the which law God gave man when he gave him his nature every man having the knowledge of this law in the naturall use of his reason This was the state of the old world before Moses all sinned and all were judged by the law of nature Now when iniquity began to raigne and be strong in the hearts of men and that their conscience became senslesse of sin neither would they admonish and judge their transgressions then God thought convenient to publish to mankinde this law binding the consciences of men to a strict and dutifull observation of every particular statute of the law Baruch 4.1 denouncing the judgement of condemnation to all them that transgresse against the least breach and particular of those Commandements A second reason why God ordained the Law Reason 2 was that men might rightly understand themselves and thereby know in what degree of holinesse they were because that men are often partiall in their owne judgement and willingly blinde themselves in the view of their owne calamities wherefore then serveth the Law Gal. 3.19 it was added because of transgressions that by the Law men might know wherein they have transgressed A third reason of the ordination of the Law is Reason 3 to provoke men to endeavour themselves with all diligence in a holy course to travell in godly exercise and to avoid both evill actions and idlenesse the Law giving every man sufficient matter of imployments wherein he is bound to spend his houres 4. Esd 9.31 his daies nay his life in the carefull service of his God For behold I sow my Law in you that it may bring forth fruit in you and that yee may be honoured by it for ever Fourthly the reason that the Law was given Reason 4 is that by the severity thereof we might be disciplined and made fit for the mercy of the Gospell for the judgement of the Law will humble us make us understand our misery Gal. 3.24 and provoke us to implore mercy for by the documents and directions of the Law wee are led to salvation in Jesus Christ wherefore the Law is our Schoolemaster to teach and bring us to Christ that wee might be made righteous by faith in him Lastly the Law was given for the glory and Majesty of God that all the world might judge of his infinite mercy to mankind In this respect that notwithstanding all men are judged and condemned by the law of nature and by the Law of his Commandements yet in the greatnesse of his love hee is content to forgive the trespasse and the judgement therefore due unto mankind Gods admirable mercy and finally to entertaine these transgressors his enemies into the bosome of his mercy giving them Mercy in stead of Justice and eternall life Rom. 5.20 when they deserved death and damnation 21. Moreover the Law entered thereupon that the offence should abound neverthelesse Where Sinne abounded there Grace abounded much more that as Sinne had raigned unto death so might Grace also raigne by righteousnesse unto eternall life through Jesus Christ our Lord and this is an admirable degree of love in God that he will decline or lay by his Majesty and to miserable wretched nay sinfull creatures exercise his Mercy in restoring and advancing us that have so highly offended his Majesty and abounded in transgressions for these causes was the Law given and delivered to man Deut. 27.26 The matter of the Commandements God thereby commanding every mans absolute obedience upon forfeiture of his soule to the paines of everlasting condemnation In the Law of the ten Commandements is to be considered the substance which is the matter of the Law and the circumstance which is the manner of the delivering it The matter is contained in ten Commandements the first foure teacheth us directly our duty to God the six last our duties to our neighbour In the manner of giving the Law we may principally consider these circumstances First the principall giver of the Law God Secondly the servants attending this office the Angels Thirdly to whom it was given to Moses Fourthly for whom it was given for the children of Israel who were then the people of God and by consequence to every people that professe themselves the servants of God these are the maine particulars in the circumstance of giving the Law First Exod. 20.1 Exo. 19.18 c. God was the principall authour of this worke to give it countenance and authority for who dare quarrell his worke and the operation of his hands therefore did God himselfe speake all the words of the Commandements he also spake in a fearefull and terrible manner to gaine the businesse a fearefull estimation Vers 9. he spoke in the hearing of the people that they might know it was Gods owne act and to prevent the distrust they might have in his servant Moses Secondly the Angels attend this holy service to declare the most excellent Majesty of God who in all his occasions is served and attended by an infinite number of that excellent nature Againe the Angels were there because they are most desirous of the good of mankind Heb. 1.14 Luke 15.7 10. and doe willingly attend the service of our salvation having joy among themselves in Heaven at the conversion of a sinner they were also to be witnesses betweene God and his people that the covenants might remaine established for ever therefore S. Paul saith The Law was ordained by the
guard of Angels the Angels are as Gods saving hands which are moved to no worke without his divine direction The Angels rejoyce in heaven over a sinner that repenteth the teares of the penitent are as it were the wine of the Angels but an impenitent heart puts to flight the Angels our keepers let us therefore repent that wee may cause the Angels to rejoyce the Angels are of a heavenly and spirituall nature let us therefore thinke upon spirituall and heavenly things that they may remaine with us and take pleasure in our company The heele which is the extreme part of our body and the last terme of our life the wicked Serpent lyeth in wait for at the time of death therfore in that last agony of death the Angels guard is most necessary and needfull that they may deliver us from the firie darts of the divell and carry our soule when it is departed out of the prison of our body into the heavenly Paradise Luk. 1.11 12 13. When Zachary was in the Temple busie about his holy function the Angell of the Lord came unto him so if thou doe likewise delight in the exercise of the holy Word and Prayer thou mayst rejoyce to have the Angels thy protectors Thus wee may see by the testimony of Scriptures what the Angels are what their office and how they are affected of so gracious a disposition and so inclinable to the good of men Luk. 15.7.10 that they have consolation and joy in heaven among themselves at the conversion of a sinner ●oby 12.15 therefore in all respects of noblenesse and excellency they are the soveraigne of all Creatures whom God hath ordained to be continuall waiters in his holy presence and workers of his blessed Will and Pleasure It is by many doubted by some demanded Question whether men may not lawfully implore the favour and assistance of Angels it is dangerous to acknowledge Apoc. 22 8 9. lest thereby we take divinity from God and give it to his Angels they are therefore dangerously deceived who for giving the holy Angels demonstration of thankes give them adoration and divine worship and so coveting to please displease both God and his holy Angels that attend on them this is one extremity There is another and that is remissenesse when men acknowledge no reverence no respect to the dignity of holy Angels The holy men in all ages at the sight of an Angell Gen 18.2 3. would use extraordinary respect of humility and reverence as Abraham hee bowed himselfe to the ground in reverence of an Angell and called him Lord so likewise in the example of all the godly though in these times the Angels doe not present themselves as in the old world in visible formes therefore they neede no reverence yet they are often present in their spirituall natures which though wee cannot discerne them with our corporall eyes yet a spirituall judgement by holy contemplation may discerne them with the eye of faith for if there be a duty of reverence to men with whom wee converse doubtlesse there is a reverence also due to the holy Angels which doe converse and are conversant with us This Doctrine of the Creation the Nature the Power and the Office of Angells doth admonish and remember all men to make these and such like profitable uses to put us in remembrance of the mighty power of God and that in a double respect first being able by the power of his Word to create a Creature of such excellence and power of nature in nature excellent in number infinite Secondly being served and attended by these infinit number of powerfull creatures one whereof is able if God please to command to destroy the world and all the generations on earth God then being of such infinite power in himselfe in his servants the Angels it ought justly to move all men to a reverence of so great a Majesty and feare to provoke a power so able and infinite Againe the apostacy of those Angels that fell from their obedience and first state of happinesse doth admonish all men that seeing the Angels of such power of such excellence and so neere God in his favour and presence were tempted to fall from so great happinesse Let no man therefore be secure or presume in the confidence of his owne trust but daily beg and crave wholly to relie upon the mercy and providence of God without whom there is no safety no security the greatest power in the world being but weaknesse without the strength of his supportation For 2 Pet. 2.4 5.6 if God spared not the Angels that had sinned but cast them downe to hell and delivered them into chaines of darkenesse to be kept unto judgement neither spared he the old world Genes 7. but saved Noah the eight person a preacher of righteousnesse and his family Genes 19. and brought in the floud upon the world of the ungodly and turned the Cities of Sodome and Gomorah into ashes overthrew them and damned them and made them an ensample unto those that after them should live ungodly neither will he spare the transgression of men that of knowledge and purpose offend him for the Angels are farre exceeding greater then men both in power and might If God spared not the better hee will not spare the worse but cast them likewise into chaines of darknesse to bee kept unto the judgement of condemnation Againe though the Angels were of this excellency and dignity of nature and though many fell from their state of innocency as Adam afterward did yet the Redeemer of the world Christ Jesus Heb. 2.16 17 18 c. did not vouchsafe to take their nature and redeeme them but left them in the judgement of condemnation undertaking and finishing the worke of Redemption for man onely and not for Angels for as much as there was no recovery no turning no hope of salvation for these wicked and trayterous angels there was also no cause why their sinnes should bee set forth and declared as was the sinne of man Vers 15. which had not onely a punishment layd on him immediately but also a promise made for his reliefe and remedy in that respect the Apostle said that Christ tooke not upon him the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham for he came not to save the angels that had falne but men yea rather to destroy the evill angels and their power and therefore they cry Mark 1.24 What have we to doe with thee Jesus of Nazareth art thou come before the time to destroy us and that they shall never bee saved it is plaine enough by the words of Christ Math. 25.41 Goe yee cursed to the everlasting fire which is prepared for the divell and his angels Therefore this ought to provoke all men to a zealous affection of love towards God who gave his onely beloved Sonne for the redemption of men preferring them in his love before the angels that had offended
it for man to pride and boast himselfe in his prosperitie and disgracefully to repute men for their difference of fortunes Pride the vainest folly in mans nature for the best man is but base earth and the basest man is created of God in his owne Image all of one nature and in one office and all to one end ordayned therefore in a Christian judgement there is no difference of men but the difference of good and of bad men and this inequality is not in their nature The difference of grace and fortune but in the corruption and defect of their nature and the best and safest way to esteeme men is to compare them in their gifts of grace and not of fortune Note for with God the least Spirit of grace though in the lowest degree of fortune is of more value and esteeme then the greatest of the world if not gracious This knowledge of our creation should remember us in our dutifull obedience to God that seeing his hand hath fashioned us and that his mercy hath made our bodie a Temple or Sanctuary for his holy Spirit to dwell in 1 Cor. 3.17 therefore let us carefully keepe the temple of our bodies from the filth of sinne and endeavour our selves in such holy exercises that our soules may have the perpetuall fellowship of the holy Ghost without which there is no happinesse nor salvation let us therefore refraine to accompany with the leprosie of sinne lest we runne into their danger in defiling our bodies the Temples of the holy Ghost with diseased company let us hate the imitation of mens vices let us not bee tempted with their fellowship because we know that when we prophane our bodies the temples of the holy Ghost wee shall banish that sweet society frustrate our hope and wound the quiet of our conscience O God of all goodnesse of base earth thou madest us noble creatures we had no life no soule before thou inspiredst it thou gavest us reason and understanding to enable us for thy divine service and worship thou hast given us thy favourable entertainement continue us wee beseech thee in this service God that gave grace can only continue it let our soules let our bodies let every power let every part thereof have their imployments therein we desire no change we are thine from the beginning O continue us thine for ever thy selfe good God inspired our soules it is thy breath and therefore precious it was thine before we had it helpe as to keepe it in the time and in the danger of this our progresse in this our pilgrimage through this sinfull and wicked world and when thou shalt call it home we may gladly breathe it backe for with thee there is onely safety How and where to repose our confidence with thee there is happinesse infinite without time without measure in the meane time keepe us from the danger of leesing let us walke in the directions of thy holy Spirit we are not able to walke to move our selves in any holy course if thy hand lead us not wee shall either faint or wander O keepe us from both that we may travell in the passage of this life with alacrity and spirituall profit that this earth our bodies of earth may passe to the grave in hope that this breath A needful care our soule may returne from whence it came with confidence this is the happinesse for which I will onely endeavour for which I will alway pray O my God make me resolute in this my intended course Of the state of Mans Innocence before his fall THat man was created good holy and innocent is evident by the testimony of Scripture neither is it doubted of the Christian world for when God had ended the Workes of his Creation Gen. 1.31 the holy Ghost saith That he viewed all that he had made and loe it was very good for God being the father and fountaine of all goodnesse Nothing but ●ood can be derived from God Eccle. 15.14 15 16 17. it was not possible that any thing that was evill should bee derived from him but like himselfe so his workes were perfectly good without blemish without defect it is therefore generally to be believed that Adam at the first creation was holy and innocent no defect of nature no corruption of sinne and that God gave him liberty and power of free-will if so he would to continue his estate and happinesse for Adam in the estate of his innocence had this condition of happinesse First he was in the full favour of God a joy unexpressable Secondly hee had the world and the creatures therein for his use and pleasure which then were perfectly good hee had power also given him of God to continue this happinesse to himselfe and his posterity for ever for the gifts both temporall and spirituall which God gave him doe well declare the infinite measure of Gods love to him God giving him all that was created Note and enduing him with a divine soule and with that such endowments of grace as made him both excellent and happy that God gave him the possession of the world both for his use and pleasure is already proved yet more God for an extraordinary demonstration of his favour to him planted a garden in Eden Gen 2.8 9. of admirable variety both for use and ornament For out of the ground made the Lord to grow every tree pleasant to the sight that was for ornament and good for meate the tree of life also in the middest of the garden and the tree of Knowledge of good and evill These were there both for the beauty of the place and for the triall of mans obedience Verse 16 17. and God gave Adam liberty to eate of every tree thereof freely onely prohibiting him to taste of the tree of Knowledge of good and evill These benefits this bounty was large yet doth God still encrease his favour to Adam and deviseth to make him an helpe fit for him for he said Gen. 2.18 It is not good for man to be alone as if God had laboured his invention to devise for the good and for the helpe of man 1 Tim. 2.14 then God made woman and gave her for the consolation of man Thus did God derive his blessings by degrees upon man still inlarging the measure of his bounty and goodnesse towards him so as there wanted nothing which in the wisedome of God was thought fit for mans prosperity Lastly to all these favours God yet giveth one more then all and that was a free will and power in himselfe to derive these infinite blessings upon himselfe and his posterity for ever no mixture of griefe to distaste them no death to deprive them but themselves and these pleasures to bee infinite and unspeakeable and all these pleasures and continuance was given upon such easie condition as in our imagination could hardly tempt a reasonable man to a small forfeiture
an Apple perhaps no better or not so good in taste as many other in the garden whereof Adam might have freely eaten without feare or forseit all this doth witnes Gods infinit love to his creature man who gave him so great a power and had purposed so inestimable a reward for so small a service This is the summe of this place But so great is the mischiefe strength and working of sinne that it hath bereft all mankind in the very beginning and first entry of our nature from the purity of good conscience trust in God streightnesse of justice liberty of will to doe good quietnesse of life the honour of being the Image of God of our governance and from the incorruptnesse also of nature and immortality and hath infected it with wicked hypocrisie and brought us into danger of all evill made us slaves of sinne subiect to the wrath of God unto corruption to innumerable calamities and unto death Apulaus not onely of body but everl●sting So that the scholler of Plato when he describeth man Man saith hee dwelt upon earth glad of reason able to talke having a soule immortall Jerem. 4.2 members subject unto death of light and carefull mindes bruitish and servile bodies not like in conditions but like in errours of peevish boldnesse stiffe in hope vaine in labour brickle of fortune every one mortall and yet together continuing ever their whole kind by mutuall succession of their brood changeable their time ever fleeing away long ere they be wise soone dead in their life never content this saith Apulcius which it seemeth he marked well the corruption of our nature though hee knew not the beginning thereof thus it is better to speake to mans understanding with profit then be vainely curious This as doth the former remembers all men how surpassing the love of God is to man-kind who notwithstanding man was made of a matter so base and unworthy as nothing like him yet doth God descend his Majesty to dignifie his basenesse and did heape such honour such favour upon man as made him the most excellent and most happy of all the creatures of God giving him felicity and power to continue it which of all the blessings of God was the greatest for that is thought to be the greatest misery To have beene happy is a misery to have beene happy and to fall from that happinesse and the greatest happinesse is to be able to continue happy which power God gave to the liberty of man to be or not to be happy for ever This extraordinary degree of favour to our first father Adam doth deserve a thankfull acknowledgement from all men because the favour did reach to all the generations of Adam even to us and to them that shall succeed us for ever All men being then in Adam and Adam the Compendium of all men the honour and the grace being conferred to every man in generall without exception of any Seeing God hath thus honoured our father Adam and enlarged his benevolence unto him above the rest of his creatures and seeing this was not given unto Adam onely but to his posterity for ever even to us being the sonnes of Adam and derived from his beginning Let us therefore acknowledge our selves in as great a debt of beholding to our God as Adam our father was to whom God gave these blessings by name and in speciall manner wee being interested in the benefit as well as Adam but as his sinne made himselfe and us his posterity both alike miserable so if hee had continued constant in his innocency he had made himselfe and us alike eternally happy without feare without hazard without forfeit without interruption let us therefore advise and remember our selves what honour what thankes what service is due from Adam and his posterity unto God Let us compare the infinite greatnesse and goodnesse of God to Adams nothing let us measure ●hem in the infinite distance of their worth let us study to know what desert what moving cause of ours could provoke God to these degrees of favour let us search this desert in the excellency of mans nature doubtlesse it is not there to be found though wee search with diligence Let us then resort to the mercy of God and there inquire there wee shall rightly understand this knowledge For thy selfe O God did move thy selfe to these effects Note thy Mercy did move thy Majesty thy favour did move thy Power thy goodnesse did perswade thy greatnesse thy greatnesse did effect what thy goodnesse caused thus was God tempted by himselfe to dignifie our Father Adam therefore Adam could be no cause of his owne honour because it was in Gods decree before Adam had being therefore Adam had greater cause of thankefulnesse that God did please without cause thus to advance him and to multiply his infinite and abundant favours upon him Adams honour was ours Adams duties are ours Resolution wee are as strictly bound in our dutifull obligation to God as our father Adam was let us therefore his posterity be constant in that duty wherein he failed and though Adam hath disinherited us his posterity of that power which hee had to performed his divine acknowledgements yet let us by our best endeavour strive with our nature to reforme our errours to imitate so neere as wee can Adams innocency thus let us ever be resolved to contend against the corruption of our nature and with a holy ambition to covet to equall or exceed the honour and happinesse of our father Adam in his innocency and seeing God did make us so wonderfull in our frame so excellent in our nature let us therefore with modesty and reverence to God esteeme our selves let us understand and remember our selves that God hath made us creatures of note and excellence ordained for holy ends and made us Masters of infinite other creatures let us remember that our soule is the divine breath of God our bodies the temple of the holy Spirit let us therefore bend all our endeavours to fashion the government of our lives in some proportion to ●his excellency of our nature let us hate the company of the wicked and imitation of evill because God hath created us good let us value the posterity of our soule before the possession of the whole world let us be jealous of our selves and carefull to feare to give entertainment to any evill cause that may move deprave or corrupt us let us love our owne salvation above all but God because God did honour us above all but himselfe in our creation Thus may wee lawfully with religious modesty endeavour and esteeme of our selves God did grace us in our creation but then God will double that grace in our salvation for this I doe earnestly intreat I pray I hope Of originall Sinne the Fall and Apostacy of man VVHen man was in the height of his prosperity having all things requisite to make him both happy and great and wanting
nothing that might minister the fulnesse of content to his desire Man did degrade himselfe hee then suddenly by himselfe cast from these pleasures into a state most miserable depriving himselfe and posterity not onely of the pleasures but the usefull necessaries of this life Gods favour the highest benefit and that which is infinitely more worth than the rest the blessed favour and presence of God which of it selfe without addition is able to make the enjoyer most happy and absolute in his felicity Thus in a trice was man the glory of Gods workmanship by sinfull disobedience spoyled of his innocency A strange alteration which when hee lost and wanted his very nature endured alteration and hee that but lately was made Lord of all the world is now made subject to all extremities this one touch of sinne being of that infectious nature that like a leprosie A generall decay it spreads over all his whole nature his body his soule his workes nay his very affections are infected with this venome his holinesse his innocency and all his divine graces abandon his nature disdaining to consort with the fellowship of sinne God also who had made him and had so wonderfully inrich'd him with benefits takes off the majesty and ornaments he had given him and in stead thereof investing him with poverty and extremity of fortune What bitter effects sinne causeth Genes 3. and whereas before he had made him immortall hee now makes him subject to the stroke of death and in this array thus altered he excludes him his sacred presence This sinne branding not onely Adam with this disgrace and these deformities but himselfe and his posterity for ever being all disgraced from their innocency and also degraded from their excellency of nature now to describe Adams griefe in this alteration Anunutterable measure of griefe the power of mans invention is not able to doe it there are not words nay imagination hath not thought to conceive it for to fall from the happinesse of prosperity is a strange degree of griefe but to be deprived from that felicity is a torment which without extraordinary patience no man is able to beare In the fall and apostacy of man is principally to be considered these particulars First from whence he fell Secondly to what he fell From whence he fell was from the favour of God considered in the excellencie and innocency of mans nature in his large endowments of grace in his power and in his possession of pleasure in which respect Adam the first man was so aboundantly favoured as that his soule could desire no enlargement God having given him so many and so great demonstrations of his love and favour towards him as nothing could bee more this is abundantly proved before Secondly to what he fell Gen. 1.2 chapt this is familiarly knowne in the experience of every mans life being full of the marks of this misery as you may read in Ecclesiasticus a catalogue of mans misery Eccle. 40. what Adam was in his sinne and the miserable change hee endured by the alteration of his fortune The miseries of this life doth give us a particular knowledge of our owne condition Adam our father by generation was the father also of our corruption we his generation deriving our substance and nature from him have with him derived his sinne and punishment the which as they were inseparable in the nature of Adam at and after his fall so are they necessarily descended down upon us his posterity the trespasse being in him from whom we are all derived makes that we are all guilty of the sinne of Adam and are all deservers of the like punishment Rom. 5.12 c. this is St. Paul his judgement Wherefore as by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne so death went over all men for as much as all men have sinned As Adam was so are we 4. Esd 4.48 such a father such children the best way to understand our nature is to consider it in Adam but to understand his fall and the miseries thereof it is palpably evident in the knowledge of our own particulars the torments of our transitory life are sufficient arguments to perswade and resolve us thereunto for the extremities of fortune and her variable turnings remember all men the miserable conditions of sinnefull man Ier. 4 2. all men being at all times subject to all extremities and sometimes taste the bitternesse thereof in the booke of Ecclesiasticus as aforesaid there is a Catalogue of the miseries of mans life all which hapned to us for sin of Adam who by his sin not only did deprive himself of the inestimable worth of Gods favor but also brought the like condemnation upon his seed their posterity for ever by his one sin overthrowing the blessed estate of many millions of people as if at one blow he had cut off the heads of a world of people and doubtlesse but the sorrow for leesing the favour of God Adams sorrow Adam could not have a greater then this because there is nothing doth more move griefe and pity in gentle minds then a compassion of general calamities especially then when they are caused by their mis-fortune Ier. 2.3 that have the grace to pity them To undertake to ranke the calamities incident to sinnefull life were intricate N●te therefore we will omit the greater number and somewhat insist upon the greatest in the number that is the displeasure of God which is damnation a misery infinite in time infinite in torment a judgement denounced against all men for the sinne of one man because at the committing of sinne all men were then present in Adam and with him did both combine and conspire in the trespasse Adam then by his sinne did bring a generall destruction on his nature and thereby made himselfe and all men not onely subject to death but to an everlasting death and damnation to inflict eternall and unexpressable torments on the bodies on the soules of men It is not in the capacity and power of man to describe the torments of damnation for as they are infinite in time No man can describe at full the torments of damnation so also in number and greatnesse there is misery without hope torments without number without measure without end they are above our strength above our patience to beare them they are not utterable for number nor sufferable for torment the very soule though eternall is continually wasted with that affliction neither could it endure and last in such extremities but that God hath made it eternall Againe it is not onely infinite and eternally great in personall sufferings but also in griefe and spirituall discontentments and vexations the soule that is damned grievously afflicting it selfe with rage and intestine displeasure Discontent the sicknesse of the soule when it considereth from what dignity it is falne and the honour and felicity it
might have had if it had continued in the favour and presence of Almighty God it will also enviously remember the prosperity of others what glory what happinesse they enjoy for their constancy in their godly conversation and holy travell The nature of envie and that it selfe and the damned should have had the same degrees of happinesse if like them they had continued constant and faithfull in their duty and service to God and this is a greater torment to the damned then that which they shall endure in their personall afflictions the remembrance whereof doth so distract the very powers of their soules as that desperately they inflict their owne vengeance and execute upon themselves Note the punishment of their owne condemnation for in our nature we have lesse patience and more affliction when by our owne defaults wee loose prosperity then when for our deserts wee endure any personall punishment this is the reward of Adams disobedience that did by sinne disinherit himselfe and his posterity of the infinite treasure of Gods favour and did thereby purchase a life whose daies are consumed in vexations and miserable change and whose end doth not end his misery Death is the life of torment to the damned but renew and enlarge it with an addition and perpetuity of torment This is the plaine and necessary knowledge of the fall of man from the state of innocency In which argument the overcurious wits of men have travelled in the search of many intricate questions I will therefore forbeare to relate the number of mens opinions The fall of man from the first state of his innocency doth remember all men what the miserable condition of our nature is what glory wee have lost and into what degree of adversity we are falne wee that were the most excellent of Gods creatures are now the most miserable provoking not onely God to be our enemy Gen. 3.14 but the creatures of God also to hate and dread us Because for our disobedience God did curse them and that for our annoyance God did suffer the goodnesse of their nature to be altered in so much as that they which before sinne entred our nature were our servants are now become our enemies and wee that then were their Lords and had power to command them are now in bondage of feare and dread their power A miserable alteration for that supremacy power and government which Adam had over all the world was conferred to us that are his posterity He had it and lost it by sin we should have had it but are prevented by sin sin being the cause both in him us why we are degraded from our dignity Ierem. 14.2 and cast into this contempt and disgrace of fortune Whensoever therefore God shall please to punish any mans prosperity and to tempt his patience with the burthen of adversity his care must be to search the cause of his affliction and when he hath found the cause to labour by all meanes to remove it For diseases are not cured before their causes be both knowne and removed And as diseases of the body are not ingendred without their corrupt cause no more our spirituall afflictions are not inflicted without their evill cause which is sinne the originall and continuall cause of all our evill Thus ought Christians to judge of themselves and to understand the miseries of their life to inquire at their own hearts and to search their own actions and their owne transgressions for there and but there Note shall they finde the true cause of all their misery and not as doth the foolish and wicked who when they have extraordinary discontents or mis-fortunes blame their nativities Psal 34. and search the motions and conjunctions falls and exaltations of the stars and celestiall bodies as if by their influence and constellation their grievous alterations were occasioned such fondnesse is ridiculous and to little purpose and they are much deceived who seeke for that farre off which is to be found onely at home even in their hearts in their sinfull natures and in their sinfull actions Againe the fall of Adam from his innocency because of sinne doth instruct every man in the knowledge of Gods divine nature for God is so respectively holy that hee will not entertaine familiarity and neerenesse with any creature that hath the least touch or spot of sinne The nature of holinesse therefore did hee banish the Angels out of his presence though they offended as some thinke but in thought Adam also though it was his first sinne and not of his owne election but doubly tempted by his wife and the divell Genes 3. yet could not the holy presence of God indure him but cast him out of Paradise into misery and tribulation therefore ought all men to make conscience of all sinne and to feare the committing of the least because there is no sinne be it never so little that God will dispense withall but as himselfe All sinne is in Gods hatred so is his affection Hee is holy without staine without imputation and his favour is towards them onely that with all their power endeavour themselves in all the workes of his Commandements Now if the over-spreading of sinne whereby this mischiefe passed through infected corrupted and made subject unto death all man-kind we must harken unto the Apostle who appointed this over-spreading neither to the divell Rom. 5. neither to the woman but unto Adam For the divell did not convey over sinne unto Eve Ephes 2. nor Eve unto Adam by propagation or increase of kinde but onely by entisement For the Serpent corrupted the woman and the woman the man by intisement 2 Cor. 11.3 But the man being corrupted with sinne did by increase of nature shed out his poyson into all the posterities of the world descending from him therefore though the beginning came of the divell and Eve seduced by him finned before Adam yet the nature of man-kinde had not beene so infected with sinne that the evill thereof should have corrupted all his posterity with the increase of all flesh and made it subject unto sinne and death if Adam had not sinned for the increase and succession pertaineth not to the woman but unto the man Note yet because he did harken to the voyce of the woman and did eate hee became a transgressor of Gods Commandements the accomplishment of the sinne beganne in the divell and the woman the spreaders abroad of the whole mischiefe Gen 4.10 11.12 13. whereof there was a most manifest argument declared in Caine his first begotten sonne also the misery corruption and decay which followed the fall of our first parents and invaded all man-kinde doth set forth the power and vertue of Gods providence to be much greater unto us for that we are repaired and renovated by Christ after our fall to a farre more blessed estate then we were created in before wee fell 1 Cor. 15.53
like as in the day of resurrection when wee shall be all raised up out of the dust of the earth and the corruptible put on incorruptible and the mortall put on immortality and the vertue of the power of God shall be declared much better than if we had still lived and continued in this life without corruption and death And further whereas by the sinne committed man-kind perished and fell into so great corruption It was not Gods fault that man sinned and lost his innocency depravation and death it is not such that it ought to be imputed unto God but rather such as the justice of God may appeare therein therefore it was meet and needfull that Christ should not be conceived and borne in the wombe of the Virgin of the seed of man lest he should be borne partaker of sin but only by the working of the Holy Ghost Lastly seeing the sinne of Adam by the intisement of the woman did so deface the excellence and innocence of our nature as that the corruption thereof did descend from him to all posterities this ought to abate the pride of man that no man dignifie or exalt himselfe in the pride of his nature for all men are of one and the same nature and all men in one and the same condemnation there being no power in mans nature to raise himselfe to the dignity of Gods favour that being onely in the power of him that first created us holy and innocent who againe will restore us if we faithfully spend our indeavours in holy actions Againe it ought to move all men to beare indifferent favour to all the children of God and not to despise any either for the defect of nature or fortun but to pitty and commiserate the common calamities because there is no judgement or punishment inflicted upon any man How to judge calamities but it is generally caused by all men all men having offended God with Adam and all men for that sin of Adam being subject to all misery for those calamities and greater are due to us though other men indure them and those benefits which some injoy Gods favour is not by desert but by benevolence and others want they have them not of desert but of benevolence from the favour of God who giveth them according to the pleasure of his will without respect of persons Seeing that Adam who had such extraordinary indowments of grace and whose nature God had so adorned with excellence that hee delighted in his company and seeing he was innocent and his nature unstained with corruption or infirmity We farre more easie to be tempted then Adam did notwithstanding run in contempt of Gods Commandement and thereby did purchase Gods indignation Let us therefore be extraordinary carefull to withstand all provocations that may tempt us to any sinne for our nature is much more easie to be tempted than Adams was his being innocent and holy ours in corruption stained he having power in himselfe to withstand his tempter we having no power in our nature to resist but rather an appetite and affectation to evill naturally inclined to neglect that grace which should make us able to resist temptation and to withstand the assaults of the divell The depravednesse of nature and because our nature is thus depraved and that our owne blind directions would but leade us to condemnation let us therefore with humble confidence implore the favour of God How to prevent the power of temptation that by his spirit hee would give us directions and that by his mighty hand hee may support us against the power of all temptations for we know our strength is but weaknesse and if God take his hand of favour from us If we will affy in God we must deny our selves wee shall fall into the hands of our tempters and remaine their spoile for if Adam in his innocence was vanquished we in our sinne cannot bee able to withstand them therefore let us not trust in our owne strength but deny our selves and repose our whole confidence in the strength of his arme for it is thou O God that savest and defendest us from and out of the hands of our enemies and puttest them to confusion that hate us Thus let us practise against our spirituall tempters and thus we shall prevaile Againe seeing God hath not spared Adam nor the Angels that sinned who in their natures were much more excellent then we but for their sinne gave them over to condemnation 2 Pet. 2.4 how much lesse will he spare us if wee continue in the committing of sinne and not endeavour our selves with all diligence in godly exercise Assuredly this should make us fearefull to commit any sinne with consent or knowledge Let us therefore flie all sinne The wages of sin in death as we would death because the earnest of sinne is certainely rewarded with death sinne and death being inseparable in fellowship for the soule that sinneth must die the death and no soule dieth but the sinfull Therefore let us resort our prayers to the holy presence of God Resolution let us earnestly intreat that his providence may direct us in an holy course to an holy end let us avoyd all acquaintance with sinne let us hate it in our selves Charity will pitty misery let us hate it in others pity their misery and pray for their amendment let up prove our selves vowed enemies to sinne and practise in that profession thus let us perswade thus let us resolve Againe seeing Adam and his posterity were not cast into condemnation Man was not condemned without hope as the angels were without hope without mercy as the angels that sinned were but had hope given him to be againe restored to the favour and blessed presence of God by the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ the Sonne of God this admirable degree of love and favour of God to mankind should keepe all our actions in awe and make us carefully feare to offend our God who hath so farre exceeded to us in the favours of his love therefore let us not onely feare him because hee hath power to destroy us but let us feare him for the reverence of his love and preferre his love even before our soules our meditations cannot present to our soules a greater Heaven of joy To meditate God and his favours then to understand our selves to be beloved of God neither can wee have more delightfull action then to meditate his love and to love him againe for his love to us for to love him for the safety of our owne soules is most necessary but to love him for his love only is more commendable and declareth a notable degree of Christian zeale Thus did Moses love the Israelits Exod. 32.30.31 32. thus did St. Paul the Iewes and thus will I my God by whom I was created by whom I am restored and in whom I will alwaies trust Amen Of the Divels trecheries and how to