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A76748 The grand triall of true conversion. Or, Sanctifying grace appearing and acting first and chiefly in the thoughts. A treatise wherein these two mysteries are opened. 1. The mystery of iniquity working in mans thoughts by corrupt nature. II. The mystery of holiness working in the thoughts of sanctified persons. Together with precious preservatives against evill thoughts. / By John Bisco, minister of the gospel in Thomas Southwarke. Bisco, John, d. 1679.; S. S. Man in the moone discovering a word of knavery under the sunne. 1655 (1655) Wing B2987; Wing S147B; Thomason E1620_1; Thomason E1620_2; ESTC R209672 192,198 465

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without remedy it holds forth the remedilesse ruine which lies at the door of proud men and women who shall be thrown down like an earthen pitcher by the hand of God and so they shall perish 2 Chron. 26. 16. Isa 13. Isa 16. Hos 5. 5. Isa 2. for ever by this fall Vzziahs heart was lifted up to his destruction pride was the great sinne that destroyed Babylon Moab and the people of Israel Judah 4. Proud men fall into the Devils condemnation 1 Tim. 3. 6. It is said that a Bishop that is a minister of the Gospel must not be a novice that is not one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Paul sayes not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not meant of young in years but in faith Superbia dejecit angelos ex angelis fecit diabolos eisque in aeternum interclusit Regnum caelorum Augu 1 Tim. 6 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 insaniens Beza Stephan-Erasmus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non modo inflatum sed in genere dementatum fanaticum-significat Victorin Strigelius newly converted to the faith not a young plant in Christianity lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the Devil that is lest he being swelled up with a conceit of his high office and opinion of his parts and gifts do fall into the same condemnation with the Devil Pride of thoughts was the great sinne that brought the Devils under condemnation All proud men are frantick and fanaticall fools 1 Tim. 64. All corrupt Teachers are said to be proud and mad as Beza and others render it doting they are sick of a spirituall frensie the word in the original used for Pride 1 Tim. 3. signifies one puffed up with pride and possessed with madnesse and phrensie Use 1. Let us entreat God to give us a spirituall sight and sense of that deep mystery of Satanical pride which naturally worketh in our thoughts oh what devilish proud natures do we carry about us the heart of every man in its corrupt frame is a pallace of all pride and presumption it is like the Table of Adonibezek at which he sate in a chair of State and made others even Kings to eat meat like dogs under his feet with their thumbs cut off such are all men by corrupt nature advancing themselves to a throne of State in their own Thoughtss saying in their hearts I am the man and treading their brethren under feet as inconsiderable no bodies to them hence the Psalmist speaks of the foot of pride that is of the proud man as the Chaldee translates it pride being Judg. 1. 7. Psal 36. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put for the man in whom it is as deceit is put for a deceitfull man Prov. 12. 27. and sinne for sinner Prov. 13. 6. to show us how ready proud men are to set their feet upon others and to trample on them with great contempt thus did the proud Pharisee trample upon the Publican thus did those arrogant Jews set up themselves and tread down others in their Thoughts saying stand Isa 65. 5. apart touch me not I am more holy than thou Let us strongly resist and repell the first risings and strivings of pride in our Vse 2 Thoughts though the predominancy of pride be taken away in sanctified men yet there is still much pride remaining in their natures which riseth and rebells upon all occasions and often captivates their thoughts The grand enemy which doth assault and annoy gracious souls is spiritual Pride whereby they are puffed up in the thoughts of their spiritual excellencies and with a conceit that they have attained a higher measure of grace than indeed they have This spirituall Pride doth many times mix it self with the fairest and most sanctified actions of the dearest children of God and d●th soonest insinuate into a heart stored with the rich Treasures of true godlinesse for if Satan cannot detain men in notorious sinfulnesse in meer civil honesty or formality but that by the mercifull hand of God they are pul'd out of the mouth of hell from the slavery of sinne and courses of darknesse into the glorious light and liberty of Christs Kingdome hereupon the Devil is inraged with fierce and implacable fury and doth most eagerly pursue those pretious souls with all possible malice and if he cannot procure a scandalous relapse into grosse sinnes yet that he may in some measure work the dishonour of God and the discomfort of the noblest creatures the two main ends of all his policyes of hell he doth labour to distain the pure streams of divine grace in the soul puddle of their corrupted nature and at least to fasten the spots of spiritual pride upon their best actions and the very face of piety for when godly men by the great work of Regeneration are become more excellent than their neighbours Prov. 12. 26. as indeed they incomparably are howsoever the worlds estimation be otherwise because they are already the blessed members of Christs mystical body clothed with the rich royal robes of Christ his righteousnes and quickned with the glorious life of grace and by the immortal seeed of the powerfull word of God they are made partakers of the holy Image of the Divine nature 2 Pet 1. 4. guarded with an invincible Troop of heavenly Angels they are the sons of God and heirs to a Kingdome of unconceivable glory and intituled to heavenly pleasures more than the stars of the Firmament in number The Saints perceiving their own Prerogative and glorious excellencies are filled with a strange and joyfull amazement and admiration of their own honour and happinesse which the Devil seeing who is perfectly experienced in all advantages and opportunities for spirituall assaults and working upon the Reliques of mans proud nature he doth craftily draw them to think highly of themselves and fills them with swelling thoughts from the apprehension of their spiritual excellencies and to advances above that which is meet in their own conceits the measure of their own graces and vertues Yea after this fiery dart is broken upon the shield of faith yet Satan labours with might and main to fasten some splinter or other even in souls sincerely humbled for sinne thus through that old Serpents subtilty they are insensibly infected with spirituall pride but when by afflictions or disgraces by some extraordinary tentations or particular checks from the Ministry of the word the uglinesse of this sinne is discovered to their souls they for ever abhor it as a consuming Canker that would fret out the very heart of syncerity therefore with much humility and fervency of spirit they pray against this secret sinne strive against it and by the grace of God prevail against it Now seeing this spirituall Pride is so apt to creep into our hearts and to puffe up our Thoughts in the apprehension of our Spirituall excellencies and performances we
terrour and torment in that siery lake thoughts accusing shall be their executioners filling their souls with sorrows beyond imagination 1. Wicked men shall then study over their sinnes and every sinne shall be as a fiery dart at their hearts Oh that sinners would seriously consider this that though in this world it be a delight unto them to look back and survey their old sins yet in hell nothing will be more bitter tormenting to them than the thoughts and remembrance of them Every passage and circumstance in every sinne which they have committed will then be as so many sharp swords at their hearts This setting of mens sinnes in order before their thoughts shall fill their consciences with innumerable stings of terror and torture their thoughts will be all hell and horror at the sight of their sinnes 2. Impenitent sinners shal then think of the glorious blisse of the Saints in heaven and of their own woful wretched estate in hell 3. They will think of their own wilfull neglect and rejection of mercy offered in the Gospel How they have turned their backs upon the blessed and bleeding entreatings of the Lord Christ and this very Thought will be a continuall hell to their souls yea the very Hell of Hells Oh what unconceivable Torture Tribulation and anguish will fall upon wicked men when they shall still be thinking of that beatificall enjoyment heighth of honour and glorious salvation that they have wilfully and eternally lost The Mystery of Holinesse working in the thoughts of all sanctified persons 2 COR. 10. 4 5. For the weapons of our warefare are not carnall but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds Casting down imaginations and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ I Have opened the Mystery of iniquity which worketh efficaciously in the thoughts of all those that are not Regenerate The second great point that now followes to be handled is the Mystery of Sanctity that worketh in the thoughts of all those who are truly Sanctified In this Text this is cheifly observeable That the power of sanctifying Grace which comes into the soule by the preaching of the Gospel doth first and principally show it selfe in casting down changing crucifying and captivating mens thoughts The first and great work of the spirit of Grace in the conversion of sinners is upon their Thoughts I will draw up what I intend to insist upon into this doctrinall Truth That Sanctifying soule-quickning Grace Doctrine which is conveyed by the ministry of the word of life doth primarily and principally put forth it selfe upon mens thoughts For the clear understanding this Truth three things must be premised First That there is no self-sufficiency in mans corrupt minde to think one holy spiritual thought this the Scripture clearly witnesseth 2 Cor. 3. 5. That we are not sufficient of our selvs as of our selvs to thinke any thing that is any good thing according to divine rules we have not the least aptnesse or ability by corrupt nature to think a good thought when we think a divine spirituall good thought it is by the Grace of 1 Cor. 15. 10. God 1. We are by corrupt nature all over flesh we have rotten corrupt minds full of fleshly principles full of pride and contradiction against the Spirit and 2 Cor. 10. 5. Ephes 4. 21. Truth that is in Jesus We have fleshly wills and affections sinfull corruption is as a chaine upon all our faculties as an iron gate that keeps out any good thought or corrupteth it when it comes in The thoughts of carnall men are altogether fleshly Rom. 8. 5. The frame of mans heart must be sanctified before it can frame one sanctified thought as a man is so he thinks and imagins as the tree is so is the fruit as the treasure of the heart is such is that that Mat. 12. 15. comes from it an evill heart cannot think well impure mindes will not admit of pure holy thoughts to enter Wickednesse comes from the wicked as the proverb is 1 Sam. 24. 13 What can be expected from vaine men whiles they are altogether vanity but vaine thoughts Their hearts are alwayes either weaving spiders webs or hatching Isa 59. ●● Cockatrices eggs they are thinking vanity or mischief 2. If the bent and relish of our wills and affections be not changed they will set our imagination on work to devise satisfaction to themselves for there is a mutuall reflux and working betwixt the imagination and affections Mans imagination stirs up his affections and as the bent of the affections stands so imagination worketh Secondly in our new birth there is healing quickning renewing Grace infused into our soules whereby we are freely inclined to spirituall good thoughts and works This infused implanted Grace is called in the Scriptures the life of Christ or Christ living in us the image of Gal. 2. 20. 2 Cor. 5. 17. Ezek 11. Christ the image or impression of his Graces The new creature a new heart and spirit a new frame of heart and spirit put into us it is the implanting of holy principles inclinations and dispositions whereby our natures are made conformable to the sweet pure holy nature of Christ and agreeable to all divine rules in some measure Thirdly this regenerating Grace or new divine life put into our soules is the immediate principle of all our holy thoughts and workes Actions come from powers and are suitable thereunto holy spirituall Acts cannot come from unsanctified powers and faculties living thoughts cannot proceed out of dead mindes In mans naturall life there is 1. The soule which is the principle of life 2. Life it selfe 3. Acts of life These three are inseperable So in the spirituall life there is 1. The quickning spirit 2. The vitall being 3. Living Acts and these are inseparable This new life is an active power whereby the soule is inabled to Act and move towards God All our holy thoughts and works are the fruits and actings of this divine life in us there must be a power and principle of holiness put into mans heart before it can think holy thoughts every thing acteth according to its being an evill tree cannot bring forth good fruit Carnall mindes cannot thing spirituall thoughts These things being premised I now come to the Doctrine it selfe in the opening whereof I must First demonstrate that renewing converting Grace doth primarily and principally put forth it selfe upon mans thoughts Secondly I will declare what are the powerfull precious operations of sanctifying Grace upon the thoughts First that sanctifying Grace after the change of the frame of our hearts doth first and chiefly worke upon our thoughts I thus demonstrate 1. Evill thoughts are the radicall seminall sinnes which corrupt our judgements affections and all our actions therfore it is necessary that our thoughts should be first cleansed cured and changed by Grace Sinne entred into our first parents by their thoughts crooked thoughts were
shall find that God requires the obedience of our thoughts as well as of our speeches and visible actions We must labour to bring every thought into a sincere subjection to God Our thoughts must be guided by the written Counsell of God Prov. 20. 18. Establish thy thoughts by counsell That is we must take counsell at the word of God how 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to dispose and order our thoughts We should not conceive a thought in our minds unlesse we have counsell and direction from Gods word Renewing Grace that comes into the soule by the preaching of the Gospel is effectuall to bring into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. Grace first brings in our thoughts to Christ and then our words and works Every thought of the heart must bow the knee to King Jesus he must have his Throne in our thoughts then he is said to rule in our hearts when our aime and indeavour is to order all our thoughts according to the rule of his word The spirituall law of God commands and calls for the love and service of our thoughts Matth. 22. 37. Thou shalt M●rk 12. 30. Luke 10. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love the Lord thy God with all thy thoughts he must be served with all our minde that is with our thoughts the actings of our minde It was the earnest desire and endeavour of David to order his thoughts as well as his words according to Gods will as in his sight Psal 19. 15. The words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart shall be to thy will in thy sight O Jehovah This reading I take to be nearest the Hebrew And so the Syrick Ad voluntatem thus the interlinear reads it The meditation of my heart shall be according to thy will O Lord. And so the Arabick The thought of my heart shall be according to thy will God will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accept of nothing but what is according to his revealed will But now though Grace doe in some measure subdue and subject our thoughts to Gods will yet there is still a stifnesse and inflexibility remaining in our minds so far as they are carnall they are unwilling to bow to the Scepter of Christ and they are apt to rebell against his royall Law and to go astray continually but when our thoughts begin to stray and wander Grace brings them in againe to the paths of Christ it layes a solemn charge upon them not to wander any more and bindes them to subjection if ever we will prove our selves to be savingly sanctified it must be our chiefe and continuall care to serve and glorifie God in our thoughts as well as in our words and works God must be sanctified in our hearts and glorified with our Isa 8. 1 Cor. 6. 20. 21. soules by giving up all our thoughts and affections to his will There is a thought-service that Jehovah expects and exacts of his people as well as a tongue-honour and worke-service Oh therefore let us labour to render withall reverence and zeale unto the Father of spirits a continuall cheerfull thought-service most purely and abundantly and the rather because it is so exceeding pretious and pleasing to God There be foure things that doe commend and declare the surpassing excellency and preciousnesse of this thought-worship and service 1. It flowes more immediatly from the heart that that God chiefly desires and wherein he principally delights he calls for our heart as that which carries the whole man with it thoughts are the free and immediate productions of mans heart 2. No created power can hinder our thoughts from serving God and converses with him opportunities abilities and means may faile for outward performances but the heart is alwayes at leisure and liberty to think graciously and spiritually 1. All the powers of this world yea all the powers of Hell cannot hinder a sanctified heart from an invisible fellowship and fruition of God with thoughts of sweetest rapture and reverence of love and lowliest adoration 2. They cannot restraine it from bathing it selfe in that open fountaine the precious blood of Jesus Christ with thoughts of unspeakable peace joy and triumph 3. Nor from closing and clasping about the pretious promises of life or diving into the unsearchable depths of Grace and mercy with thoughts of faith and highest admiration 4. They cannot hinder a gracious heart from being as a mountaine of incense sending up a spirituall sacrifice of praisefull admiring thoughts to the God of mercy 3. This thought-service is the most spirituall service it is ordinarily full of spirituallnesse intention and life because it is nearest the object of adoration The streames which are next the well-head are purest and strongest the more spirit and life is in our service the more precious it is The best men though they may strive to doe their best every way yet they shall finde different degrees in their abilities to performe and in the actuall discharge of their duties to God their works doe not allwayes answer exactly to their words their words cannot fully express the thoughts of their hearts the thoughts of their hearts come infinitly short in conceiving of the excellency of Gods majesty mercy might and glorious perfections The thoughts of sanctified soules laying hold with immediate and neerest embracements upon that al-glorious object the Lord God and his sweetest attributes give him the glory of his infinite excellencies with more life heartinesse and heavenlinesse then their words or actions can doe 4. A constant thought-service is the surest signe of heart-sincerity John 4. 24. That worship that is most spirituall hath most truth of heart in it If mens change in words and works and all visible carriage were angelicall yet if their thoughts were not brought into subjection to Gods will they were still limbs of Satan A constant striving to subject all our thoughts to Christ is the most sound and undeceiving evidence of our uprightnesse this inward thought-service being secret and invisible is clothed with more certaine sincerity and hath a more speciall acceptance with God Seventhly Sanctifying Grace fits mans heart for divine meditations and fills it with holy heavenly thoughts it begets an inward fitnesse and freenesse to entertaine sanctified thoughts and brings in fulnesse of good thoughts by corrupt nature our mindes have not onely an emptiness of all holy thoughts but also an unfitnesse and aversnesse to take in holy thoughts carnall men are unfit and unwilling to set themselves to think of God and divine mysteries to enter into serious thoughts of their sins of their last end of the last judgement they have no minde to think what they have done what they are doing or what they shall doe they would have God depart from their thoughts and all Job 21. thoughts of a holy God and his wayes depart from them But when sanctifying Grace falls upon us it implants a freenesse and aptnesse in our
with notionall Doctrines and empty enticing Discourses 2. Others crying peace peace do altogether publish the pardons of free grace but they never presse the power of renewing grace upon the heart and thoughts of men whereas the aim and principal work of Gospel-preaching is to cast down the imaginations and heights of mans heart and to captivate every thought to the obedience of Christ as the Apostle clearly shows 2 Cor. 10 4 5. all our Declarations of Gods grace and mercy must tend first and chiefly to the subduing and sanctifying the thoughts of mens hearts 3. A third sort of Teachers make it their whole work to cry down visible exorbitances and scandalous sinnes and to perswade to external duties of Religion and a moral conversation this was the way of the Pharisees preaching 4. Some soar aloft in Seraphical notions high speculations and strange expressions which serve onely to feed the fancy and to fill mens heads with whimsies So that the heart and thoughts of men being altogether neglected by a great number of Teachers and the wickednes of mans natural imaginations not being faithfully and effectually laid open What wonder is it if men do flatter themselves with a groundlesse conceit of the goodnesse of their heart and so give credit to this deluding Principle that thoughts are free because preachers do not strike at their thoughts nor discover any danger in them Query 2. How doth it appear from Scripture that thoughts are not free Answer Evil thoughts are expresly forbidden and condemned by a threefold Law of God 1. By the common Law of nature 2. By the Royal Law of Love 3. By the Evangelical Law of grace 1. It is evident by the Scriptures that evil thoughts are condemned by the Law of nature written in every mans heart for the clearing of this truth three things must be demonstrated 1. That there is a Law of Nature 2. That the Law of Nature is 3. What evil thoughts are directly against this Law of Nature 1. That there is a Law of nature the Scripture testifies Rom. 2. 14 15. for when the Gentiles who have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves who shew the work of the Law written in their hearts c. In these words the Apostle proveth the being of this naturall Law by two effects flowing from thence even in the Gentiles themselves 1. Their doing of the things contained and commanded in the law of Moses verse 14. Rom 2. v. 15. 2. The testimony and inward conflict of Conscience the naturall accusing and excusing of their thoughts verse 15. Their Conscience also bearing witnesse or conscience witnessing with them and their Thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another so far as their actions were evil their conscience accused and so far as they were well done it excused These fruits do plainly demonstrate that there is a law of nature and a natural knowledge of this Law bubling up in mans nature the Gentiles who knew nothing of the letter of Moses Law yet they carry the work of the Law written in their hearts that is a Law agreeable to the morall Law Observe here 1. The Gentiles had not the written Law of Moses and yet they did the things prescribed and contained in the written Law as the Apostle Paul testifies Here is their practise and the Principle of their practise 1. Divers things prescribed in the Law they knew and practised some worship they performed unto God 2. Divers of the Heathen abhorred the making and adoration of Images 3. They were strict observers of Civil Justice and honesty as appears both by the Laws enacted for observance of both and by histories recording the excellent vertues of many Heathens 2. There must necessarily be some inward divine Principle in the Gentiles to discover the things of the Law unto them and to move them to the doing thereof this principle of their fact is expresly called nature they do by nature the things of the Law Rom. 2. 14. by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Naturali judicio naturali instinctu atque impul●u naturali ratione eis dictante quid honestum quid ●urposit Piscator nature that is by the light and Law of nature implanted in their hearts Nature is here opposed either to Scripture or to grace and may thus be understood 1. that the things that they did that were materially good they did them by the dictate instinct and impulse of natural principles naturall Reason making known what is good and what is evil and that without any direction from Scripture or special revelation 2. Or else thus by nature that is by the power of nature or naturall principles without any assistance of renewing grace But the first sense I conceive is chiefly intended in the Text therefore the Syriack by way of explanation Rom. 2. 14. renders it thus the Gentiles who had not the Law they did the Law from their own 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 2. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nature that is from those naturall principles they carried in their own hearts 3. The Scripture declareth the Gentiles to be sinners under sin and wrath Gal. 2. 15. they are called sinners of the Gentiles and sinners by way of notoriousnesse 4. There is wrath threatned to be poured out upon the heathens that know not God and it was actually poured out upon divers of them in the Prophets dayes 5. Their own Conscience is said to accuse them of sinne Rom. 2. 15. These Reasons prove undeniably that there is a Divine Law written in the hearts of the Gentiles which is fitly called the Law of nature for punishment is properly the fruit of sin and sin is the transgression of the Law 1 John 3. Quest What is th●s Law of nature Ans 1. Nature imports two things 1. An essentiall being it is being it self 2. the actings operations of a being 2. A Law is a righteous Rule and immoveable measure of mo●all Acts ordained for the g●od and welfare of rationall creatures sufficiently made knowne by the Law-giver Lex est regula men●ura actuum agen 〈…〉 omittendorum Aquinas 3. The Law of nature is a Radicall light shining from the Candle of the Lord powerfully making known certain practicall principles agreeable to the eternal Rule of Truth and Righteousnesse which God hath planted in the mind of man to be a testimony to man that there is a God who ruleth over all and judgeth the actings of all men 1. The Law of nature is internall and essentiall to the nature of an intelligent creature it is a Law that is as necessary as the being of such a creature it is connaturall to a rationall creature so that as such a creature it cannot be imagined to be without a Law for rationall beings as creatures have a supream Lord to whose will they must be subject and by whose Laws they
from dead works 2. In a divine manner with holy and spirituall affection As 1. When it is performed with the affection of a child and filiall respects not from a spirit of bondage but from a spirit of love 2 Tim. 1. 7. 2. In a free and voluntary subjection to God the Law-giver and a sincere respect to all his Commandements Psal 119 6. 128. for men never obey God and his Law even when they do the works therein prescribed but when they do them with all submissive and loyall affections towards him who commands those duties James 2. 10 11. and that by vertue of his authority and command this is to do all in the name of Christ Col. 3. 3. A work that is Theologically and spiritually good must be directed unto a divine holy end the glory of God we must bring forth fruits of holinesse and finish our works that God gives us to do and do all the good that we have to do with a single respect unto God as Quicquid homo veluti recte fecerit nisi ad pietatem quae in Deum est referatur rectum dici non oportet our end that in all things God may be glorified John 15 8. and 17. 4. 1 Cor. 10. 31. this onely is to live unto God and to bring forth fruit unto him and not unto our selves Rom. 7. 4. Every good work must be done with a pure heart with fervency of spirit Chearfulnes and delight our hearts must be given unto God in every service All the Circumstances that accompany Augustin de fide operi●●s an holy action must be right for an excellent work may be so misplaced or attended with such incongruous and unsuitable circumstances as that it may rather be a snare of Satan than a fruit of the Spirit in us 5. Lastly all our services must be presented and offered up to God upon that divine Altar Jesus Christ to make a good work compleatly acceptable it must passe through the incense and intercession of Christ who as he doth by his blood take away the guilt of sinne from our persons so by his intercession he covers and hideth the pollution and adherency of sinne that is in our services Eph. 2 18. 1 Pet. 2. 5. Christ Jesus Matth. 23. 19. is the Altar that sanctifies all our spirituall sacrifices Isa 56. 7. and 60. 7. Their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine Altar and they shall come up with acceptance on mine Altar 3. A work is materially good when the materials of it are the things that God requires as prayer alms-giving c. Now though the matter of these duties be things that God commands to be done yet because the doing of them doth not necessarily and intrinsecally take in a sincere aim and respect to God but is onely reducible unto God and that so as that the same thing may be done with other respects for carnal men do all things with carnal self respects therefore the goodnesse of such works is not in the things themselves barely and abstractly considered in the work done but in the right spirituall manner of performing them such were the Pharisees praying and the sacrifices and services of those wicked Jews in Isa 1. 4. There be some works that are so essentially intrinsecally good in themselves that if they be done they must needs be spiritually and divinely done because they have relation to God in their very acting and do intrinsecally and in the substance of the work respect God as namely a sincere love and fear of God a trusting in God and waiting upon God These actions are so inherently good that though they may be imperfectly done by us because not done with all that strength and height of spirituality and sincerity that the Law requires yet they can never be done prophanely and selfishly and so displeasing unto God Now it is evident that carnall men by the principles of nature acted and improved may do things morally good such works as have relation to men are good in the sight of men and tend ro the good of men 2. They may do works materially good such works whose goodnesse doth not necessarily consist in the doing of them but in the spiritual manner of doing them but then they perform them onely in a carnal selfish manner not divinely and spiritually Natural men cannot do a good work spiritually and obedientially they cannot do it with a fil● all submissive affection unto God 1. Because they are not quickned and acted by the spirit of Christ Rom. 8. 9. Gal. 4 6. 2. Every good work that is spiritual is vital for the spirit quickneth But now both the persons and performances of carnal men are dead Heb. 9. 14. Therefore though the works of naturall men in respect of the substance or matter thereof seem very specious and glorious unto men who judge according to the sight of their eyes and do measure the intention and affection by the work that they see and not the work by the intention and affection which they cannot see yet to God who seeth not as man seeth such works are abomination because they are di●ected to their own corrupt ends and done with carnal affections Luke 16. 15. 3. Natural men by the strength of Principles of na●ure cannot do those works ●hat are essentially and inherently good They cannot sincerely and spiritually love God nor fear him nor trust in him because they are living actions coming from the spirit of life 7. The Law of nature is of divine authority the omnipotent God is the authour thereof he is the giver and graver the contriver commander and publisher of it Hence it is that 1. It hath an efficacious influence and the highest binding vertue upon mens consciences no created power in heaven or earth can absolve them from their obedience thereunto 2. This Law is an indelible and immutable rule yesterday and to day the same for ever it ties all people and persons with an impartiall hand it shines upon all Nations and times with a perpetual light none can claim exemption from this natural Law unlesse they can cease from their rationall being This divine writing cannot totally be defaced or blotted out in the worst of men 8. This Law of nature as it is in its latitude does bind men in the Court of Conscience Natural Conscience is the Center of natural Principles it dictates what the law of nature requires applies it and so incites and ingageth men to the observation thereof yet sometimes Conscience erroniously incites men to those Acts which were never dictated by any divine Law 2. Conscience reflects upon what is done and so calls men to a strict accompt for every violation of natures Law accusing them when they act contrary to it and excusing them when they walk up to it Rom. 2. 15. 9. Every violation of the Law of nature is exceeding injurious to God and to mans own being 1. It is a secret contempt of that supream Lord
and Law-giver who in so much wisdome and goodnesse did put this Law into mens hearts and oblige them to observe it for their own good 2. So far as men decline and depart from this Law so far they run into misery and expose themselves to punishment and perdition this is most ev●dent Rom. 2. 12. for as many as have sinned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without ●aw shall also perish without law and as many as have sinned in the law shall be judged by the Law Ob. They that have sinned without the law c. this seems a Paradox no law and yet transgression Rom. 4. 15. every sinne is an anomie the breach of some law 1 John 3. 4 Answer It is true where there is no Law at all neither written nor unwritten neither naturall nor positive there can be no transgression but of the laws of God we may thus distinguish according to the different manner of their delivery There is a Law written unto man in the Scriptures and there is a law written in mans nature by his maker there is the law publisht to man by Moses and the law proclaimed in man by the voyce of reason these agree in substance but differ in circumstance in manner of delivery every man hath a law written in his heart The meaning of the words is this they that sinne without the written Sine lege scilicet scripta quae dicitur lex Mosis Piscator Law of Moses shall perish without the written Law of Moses that is without imputation of the writing of that Law that shall not adde to the weight of their sins nor lay a greater guilt or aggravation on their consciences in as much that God did not vouchsafe that mercy to them he requires no more of any than he committed to them Quer. By what Law then shall the Heathens perish who have sinned without the Scripture Law Answer They shall be condemned by that Law which they have transgressed namely the Law of nature or that Law written in their hearts 10. The Law of nature is so exact that it obligeth the whole man it binds men to do service to their Creator with their whole mind will and affections with all possible freenesse and fervency chearfulnesse and complacency intensivenesse and integrity Natures Law is not content with a visible bodily exercise but calls for obedience in our most inward thoughts and affections 2. It binds men to do good and to do it well all the strength and binding vertue of this Law dependeth upon the Soveraign power and authority of the Lawgiver 11. This Law of nature is so equall that it is not capable of any abatement mitigation or alteration in the least Tittle 1. Because there is not the least rigor in the principles and precepts of this Law they are pure equity 2. Natures Law is conversant about such Acts as are most intrinsecally and inseparably such 1. There is such a naturall beauty and intrinsecall lovelinesse in some good Acts and Objects as must needs assure and attract a rationall being 2. There is such an inherent deformity and inseparable malignity in some evils that the light of reason must needs Quae●am sunt mala quia prohibentur sed alia prohibentur quia sunt mala say the Shcool-men loath and abhor them insomuch as if there were no externall written Law yet a rationall being that walks up to the light of reason would abhor and flie from sundry evils and close with dives good Acts. Quer. How is this Law of nature made known to men Answer God hath set up an intellectual lamp in their souls by the light whereof they can read the Law written in their hearts there is the light of reason implanted in mens mind which manifests certain practicall principles and is to warn them in the name of their maker to flie from such irregular inordina●e Acts which have an inseparable blacknesse and ilnesse in them and to close with those Acts and objects that have an internal beauty and native lovelinesse For this end God hath lighted up his Prov 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aqu s●m Theod. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sic ali● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 usurpatur de homine tantum animam hujus ratione ●●aeditam denotat Schindler The Hebrew Doctors dostill look upon this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that that does expresse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 animam rationis participem Candle in the soul Prov. 20. 27. The understanding of a man is the Candle of the Lord the p●oper meaning of this place I take to be this that God hath bre●thed into all men reasonable souls which are as so many Candles and Lamps of light to discover their Creator and his Royall Law of Nature to them Question When are these Principlss of natural light put into men Answer At their coming into this world as is evident John 1. 9. Christ is the true light that lightens every man that cometh into the world that is every man who is born into this world This cannot be be meant of the spiritual light of grace that light of life that hath eternal life in it John 17 3. for the elect onely receive that new light at their new birth that is a light from the Lord and in the Lord Ephes 5. flowing from their union with Christ But this Text John 1. 9. speaks of the light of nature which is a common benefit that men receive by and from Christ thus Cyril took this light for the light of nature and natural reason because of the universal Enunciation and so do many of our Reformers following him it is universally and necessarily of true the light of nature which is in infants radically Christ lightens every man Jew and Gentile without respect of persons with natural light which shines upon both with an impartial beam I grant that the great things of Gods written Law and the divine light flowing from thence was the peculiar priviledge Rom 9. of the Jews 2. That by means of those beams of of heavenly truth that shined more peculiarly upon them the Jewes had even those natural notions much clarified and refined from those clouds and mists which mans originall corruption casts upon them but yet they have no greater portion of the light of Nature than all men have so that Jew and Grecian Barbarian Scythian bond and free men all these are one in respect of nature and natures Law and natures light There are three things wherein Jews and Gentiles are one 1. In the darknesse of corrupted nature Rom. 3. 2. In the light of natural principles John 1. 9. 3. They are one so farre as they partake of a new nature in Christ 3. It is evident that this natural light is a common gift that every man receiveth by and for Jesus Christ though none but believers have eternal life and salvation by him John 3. 16. 3. The third thing to
be demonstrated is this that evil thoughts are directly against the Law of nature they are transgressions of that naturall Law that is written in every mans heart this appears most clearly 1. In the men of the old world the great sinne which is laid to their charge and that chiefly for which they were destroyed was their evil thoughts as you may read in Gen. 6. 5. 6. 7. and Gen. 8. 21. The thoughts of their hearts were evil continually from their childhood Quer. But what Law of God did these men violate in their thoughts What Law was there then that did forbid and condemne evil thoughts every sinne is a transgression of some divine Law by what Law did they perish there was no positive written Law in the dayes of the old world the written Law was given by Moses many ages after the flood Answer that Law which those giants of the old world did transgresse in their thoughts was the Law of nature implanted in their hearts there was no Law then in being but what was written in mens nature there was no divine Scripture in the dayes of Noah but that which was written in every mans heart by the finger of God so that the first Law that was broken by mans thoughts was natures Law therefore evil thoughts are transgressions of the Law of nature 2. It appears as clearly in the sinners of the Gentiles vanity of thoughts is the Capitall crime for which they are indicted and condemned by the heart-searcher Ephes 4. 17. This I say and testifie in the Lord that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk in the vanity of their mind this vanity of mind in which the Heathens walk is the vanity of their Thoughts and thus the Syriack version reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ye walk not as the rest of the Gentiles Eph. 4. 17. Quae ambulant in van●tate cogitatiouis suae Tremellius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cogitatio who walk in the vanity of their thoughts thus Tremellius and Trostius render the Syriack 2. As Thoughts are the actings of the mind so the vanity of the mind is the impiety impurity childishnesse and emptinesse of mans thoughts so that the Gentiles walked after their own vain thoughts they were acted by the imagination of their own evil hearts this is that great sin which is laid to the charge of those wicked ones in Jer. 31. 10. They walked after the evil thoughts and imaginations of their own hearts Deut. 29. 19. Jer. 16. 12. 2. The Heathens are more expresly indicted for their vain thoughts Rom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 21. They became vain in their imaginations or thoughts the scope of this 21. v. is to prove that which was affirmed in the last clause of the former verse namely that the Gentiles were left without excuse and could have no cloak for their sin because they sinned against the light and Law of nature this the Apostle demonstrates 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively 1. The Gentiles did not worship and glorifie God according to that natural light and knowledge that was implanted in their minds Rom. 1. 27. they knowing God did not glorify him as God 2. They became vain in their thoughts thus the Syriack reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Infidel Gentiles were full of vain ungodly thoughts 1. In their worshipping of God they turned the true God into an image of their own fancy conceiving God to be like to the creatures verse 23. 2. They were full of vile unclean foolish filthy thoughts in their common conversation Hereby it is manifest that vain thoughts were the radical leading sin in the Heathens But what Law of God did they transgresse in their thoughts it is evident by the Scriptures that the Infidel Gentiles knew nothing of Moses Law in the letter of it Psal 147. 19. 20. He he hath declared his words to Jacob his Psal 147 19. His words that is the Ten Commandments or Moral Law Exod. 20. 1. called the Ten words Deut. 10. 4. 2. His statutes that is Decrees and constitutions of Gods worship 3. Judgments that is the Judiciall Laws for punishing offenders Exod. 21. 1. Psal 79. 10. statutes and Judgements to Israel he hath not done thus to any Nation that is to the Gentile-Nations as the words imports and they have not known his laws the Gentiles had not the knowledge of any of Gods written Laws either morall ceremonial or Judicial Rom. 2. 12. 14. it is expresly said that the Gentiles have not the law that is the Law of Moses and the Prophets but they had a Law written in their hearts and this is that Law which they transgressed now when the Apostle would demonstrate that the Gentiles sinned against the light of Nature he mentions their vain thoughts as their grand sin Rom. 1. 21. So then 't is most apparant that vain thoughts are transgressions and violations of the Common-Law of nature therefore thoughts are not free Secondly evil thoughts are expresly condemned by the Royall Law of love published in the holy Scriptures 1. The written law is spirituall extending to the inward thoughts of men intending a heart service and sanctity and binding every thought and imagination to obedience as is most evident by the exposition of the great Law-giver himself Matth. 5. and by the certain knowledge and experience of all his people Rom. 7. 14. Saint Paul speaketh in the person of all regenerate men we know that the law is spirituall requiring a spirituall angelical obedience a doing the will of God with our spirits and internall thoughts as it is done by those angelical spirits in heaven It is the glory and excellency of Gods Law to be spiritual reaching to the inmost thoughts and imaginations and binding the whole inward and outward man with all its actings The Law is spirituall in its nature office and end 1. It layes bonds upon the internall thoughts of men as well as upon their externall works it gives rules to the heart and over-rules the thoughts which no earthly powers can do 2. The holy Law forbids and condemneth all evil thoughts arising in and out of mans heart in all the kinds and degrees thereof The motions of sinfull corruption in mans mind or thinking faculty are of two sorts The first motions or the second motions 1. The first vitious motions are those stirrings of corruption in men whereby their minds are first instigated and moved to think evil but these have not deliberate consent of their wills these the School-men call Concupiscence unformed Concupiscentia informis 2. The second corrupt imotions that arise from the hearts of men are those evil thoughts which gain lodging in their minds and consent in their wills these they call formed and perfect concupiscence Concupiscentia formata Now both these are condemned by the Royall Law it forbids the first movings of sinne in the thoughts of men coming from within from their naturall corruption though never accepted
its actings to be governed by Christ 4. In the restoring and renewing of our nature by the spirit of Christ the change and cleansing of our thoughts is the first and great work wherein the exceeding greatnesse of Gods power puts forth it self 2 Cor. 10. 4. 5. Rom. 12 2. 2. There is an universal newnesse put into our souls by the new Creation all old things passe away and all things become new 2 Cor. 5. 17. which necessarily imports a reall Reformation and reducement of our thoughts to the service of God as well as our affections and actions 3. In this new Creation the Royall spirituall Law is given and engraven in our minds whereby we are inclined and inabled to serve and love God with our thoughts Heb. 8. 10. Vse second 2. Seeing there is so much sinne and iniquity acted in our thoughts continually we should strive to be deeply humbled for all the evils and vanities of our thoughts we must humble our selves for our thoughts as well as our words and works yea chiefly for these leading radicall sinnes this is pressed upon us in Prov. 30. 32. If thou hast done foolishly in lifting up thy self or if thou hast thought evil lay thine ●and upon thy mouth The thinking of evil is here joyned with self exalting which is the greatest folly and fighting against God when we have thought evil we must lay our hands upon our mouths that is our hearts must be filled with sorrow and shame for the same from a clear conviction of our guiltinesse This laying the hand upon the mouth argues and signifies these two things 1. A spirituall and plenary conviction of the extream sinfulnesse of evil thoughts in their aggravations and of the great wickednesse that men have acted in their thoughts so that their mouths are now stopped and they have Rom 3. 19. nothing to say by way of excuse extenuation or self exoneration they dare not say that thoughts are free nor that themselves are free from the highest thought pollution but now they will freely joyn with the Law in charging and condemning themselves 2. It argues a height of shame and depth of self abasement and soul humiliation in the sight and remembrance of the great evil of their thoughts that they are vile in their own apprehensions and very much ashamed and afflicted in their spirits for their thought-defilements Ezech. 16. 65. Job 39. 27 28. Now there is great reason and cause why we should be deeply humbled for our thought-sinnes 1. Evil thoughts are sinnes against all divine Laws they are violations of the Law of nature of the law of love and grace 2. They are grand enemies of God 2 Cor. 10. 4 5 Rom. 8. 7. and the great disturbers and defilers of all the good that we do 3. Man 's own evil thoughts are the first begotten of the old man the fi●st born of the Devil the begetters of all other sins the beginners and first movers in all evil they are leading misleading evils 4. The sinnes of our thoughts are in number like the sands of the sea in their nature out of measure sinfull how great a cause then have we to be greatly humbled and to sorrow bitterly for the evil thoughts of our hearts oh therefore let us look much into our Thought-sinnes and consider them in their hatefull nature and numberlesse numbers that we may be throughly abased and ashamed and may loath and abhor our selves for the same let us duly and daily search our hearts and survey our thoughts in their severall kinds 1. Examine what Thoughts of atheisme blasphemy spirituall idolatry pride unbelief security and sensuality speculative filth and folly vanity and vilenesse what thoughts of impierity and iniquity against God and man do rise out of our hearts daily and how far they have prevailed over our hearts Let us remember that all those evil thoughts before mentioned yea the worst of them all are in all of us by corrupt nature and if we be left to our selves when occasion is offered our corrupt hearts will presently conceive them and give them a compleat being and birth 2. We must examine our thoughts by the word of God this straight righteous Rule will manifest the obliquity and iniquity of our thoughts Heb 4. 12. the word of God is mighty in operation and is a discerner of the thoughts of the heart at the preaching of this word the secret thoughts of an Infidel are made manifest 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. oh therefore let us exactly and throughly search our thoughts by the light of Gods word and strive to find out the manifold exorbitances vanities and defilements of our thoughts 2 We must freely and faithfully confesse our thought-transgressions to God and thereby give glory to the great heart-searcher 3. We must be deeply displeased with our selves for displeasing God by our thought-sinnes it must be the greatest grief of our souls that we have grieved Gen. 6 5 6. God by our thoughts 4. We must judge and sentence our selves for our loose prophane proud ungodly impertinent and unprofitable thoughts acknowledging that we are most worthy to be destroyed for the sinnes of our thoughts 2. We must condemne our selves for secret evil thoughts which never came forth into action there is a world of sinne acted in mens thoughts which doth not break out into their visible conversations 3. For those evil thoughts that proceed out of our hearts whreunto our wills never give consent 4. We must passe sentence upon our selves for the want of holy heavenly spirituall thoughts the Law of Christ commands us to be free from all evil thoughts and to be filled with all good thoughts Mark 12. 30. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy thought so that the want of good thoughts in us is a breach of the Royall Law and makes us liable to that heavy curse in Deut. 27. 29. 5. We must be humbled for the evil that cleaves to our good thoughts Our best thoughts as they come from us are not without some mixture and adhesion of sinfull corruption which is sufficient without Gods covering mercy to cast and condemn us 5. We must seek unto God for the pardon of our evil thoughts this duty Peter presseth upon Simon Magus Act. 8. 21. pray to God saith he that the thoughts of thine heart may be forgiven thee Simon Magus had many foul crimes to be pardoned but yet the first and great sinne for which he was to beg forgivenes was the thought of his heart see how earnestly David petitioneth for the pardon of his thought-sinnes Psal 19. 13. Who can understand his errors cleanse me make me guiltlesse from my secrets thus the words are in the Hebrew and in the Syriack 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 19. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Signifies to cleanse or make innocent guiltlesse empty to absolve The Arabick thus explains it cleanse me O my Lord from my secrets which are