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B15559 A practicall catechisme: or, A view of those principall truths according to godlinesse, which are contayned in the catechisme diuided into three parts: and seruing for the vse, (as of all, so) especially of those that first heard them. By D.R. B. of Divin, minister of the Gospell. D. R. (Daniel Rogers), 1573-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 21166; ESTC S116040 309,840 430

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Church Commonwealth What obnoxiousnesse to Satan to his instruments temptations mischiefe bondage to the vngodly suites seruices dependances with hard conditions crosses streights pursuites losses forfeits death of friends imprisonment accidents and shrewd turnes bad tydings confusion in the state famine warre pestilence and a 1000. waies for him to goe wofully out who came but one way into the world Besides griefe of minde melancholy passions and distempers of the spirit bad conscience ill marriage lewd children ill successe Ruine of estate and at last a miserable death And yet the vpshot of all is worst after viz. A finall separation ●rom God and losse of his eternall presence with the sence of vnutterable intolerable vnauoidable wrath of God in Hell vpon the whole man for euer without the least hope of helpe or redresse Q I partly conceaue this view and mappe of the misery of the fall now conclude the Article with some vse of it A. First heere is confutation of all Papists who flatly deny this Article and tell vs that our Nature is indeed shrewdly Vse 1 may med and wounded much like him who fell among theeues betweene Ierusalem and Iericho Luke 10.30 and left halfe dead But as for vs that maintaine this dying the death this quite and cleane deadnesse in sins and trespasses they cannot abide No say they there be left euen in the vnregenerate such abilities and devotions as may congruously dispose God to pardon them And by some helpe of grace merit also full f●rgiuenesse Yea they boast themselues of their performances and d●ties whereas Paul tels vs that all boasting is cut off And tels vs Rom. 3.27 Baptisme washeth away all originall sinne which yet Paul grones vnder the burden of bei●g regenerate Also all P l●gians or their adherents who affi●me that old Adam is as one in a darke dungeon who by reason of darknesse cannot see but if he haue a light put in hath his eyes very quicke and can see any thing and so wee want but light and then wee are able to discerne and apprehend any truth put into vs of our selues Also such as blanch the matter with the color of Grace added to our nature for by that say they nature being holpen can put on the cordes as Ieremy in the dungeon and addresse himselfe to come forth What hath a dead man with all the light and helpe in the World to addresse himselfe to liue Vse 2 This also reprooues all Naturall Papists that dote upon their ciuill morall or religious duties and deuotions and cannot abide to heare that those who so duly pay all debts all dues who giue so many almes to the poore heare so many sermons keep so many Sabbaths read so many good books keep so much good company commend the Ministers and welcome them and maintaine them should yet bee as the Publicanes and sinners I doe not say yee are but I say this Except ye also deny your selues and behold this misery of your Natures yee will fate wo●se in time euen by your righteousnesse then if yee had non● for ●hy doe ye not graffe upon a rotten stock and guild a rotten post So also such as commend mens natures in the point of religion saying Oh such are so sweetly natured courteous lo●ing mild and harmelesse that there is but little betweene them and Heauen Alas how many of these sweet creatures are as bitter enemies to Gods grace as friends to ciuility and faire carriage Also such as aime at religion onely thus far to colour their wings and tip their tongues or their outward dealings with some outside but as for that heart within and nature they suspect not And to conclude such as being told of their passions defend thē by their nature It 's my nature to be so hot I haue soone done why poore foole thinkst thou thy nature is more excusable then thy passion and yet what is so common with men to say then this If I were an adulterer or drunkard I were willing the Minister should thus sharply rebuke mee but to be so bitter for mens infirmities and against that which we cannot doe with nor heale and auoide and against vnbeleefe or the like me thinkes he might be wiser Oh God would faine draw thee from the open to the secret sins of thy heart lest thy freedome from the grosser should destroy thee He would euen weary and tyre thee by thy cursed nature when thou seest all thy other defences are but dawbings with vntempered morter Thirdly This should cause thee to look vpward and to gage the greatnesse of Christs loue which could finde in his heart to Vse 3 satisfie for such a misery and to fetch happinesse out of the depth of it Euen in this Article is layd the foundation of thy esteeme of Christ in the next p●rt of the Catechisme Christ will be little set by the height and depth of mercy cannot bee sounded till thou take measure of it by a Reede of thy misery Little sinne to forgiue will make Christ little loued As we see at the Assyses that base theefe that thinkes to conceale some of his robberies and is loth to haue all come out at once fearing the mercy of the Iudge when his inditements come to bee read the second time loses his life Let vs beware lest it bee so with vs. Let not vs lessen and minse our sinnes in hope of more easie pardon but if we would magnifie the grace of Christ let vs first magnifie and enlarge our sin to the vttermost if Christ see that we rather hope in our small sin then his great grace we are dead men The way to get pardon is to equall his price to all our misery Say thus If Lord my sin had beene onely a share in Adams eating and no more or in some actuall few euils or if in the meere priuation of some good things or in sin only and not in penalties or if in bodily only and not spirituall or if spirituall onely and not eternall somewhat might seeme to lessen thy loue but surely that loue that would satisfie for all rather then any should condemne me is of vnspeakeable dimensions Oh! learne by this how to esteeme the price of grace If each step of this first part if each of these Articles make thee not miserable● then other no Article of the second part shall be able to comfort thee Be confounded vnder the ruine of thy misery and vow with that good Iabez If the Lord will indeed rid me of all this great euill that it may not grieue me If he will enlarge my coast and bring me out of this heape of woe then he shall be my God and I will make songs of his mercy Oh! let all that haue beene sayd of this misery make thee goe as she Luke 13.11 bowed together vnder an intolerable burden Lay all together to make vp such a loade as may pinch thy shoulders and cry out Who shall deliuer me who could't thinke such
The difference Secondly The nature the effects and end of it Thirdly The extremiti●s or abuse of it Q What is the difference of it from the former legall workes A. The worke of enlightning casts out ignorance the worke of conuincing resists deadnesse and insensiblenesse But this third of consternation or terror resists that pride and iollity of a sinner ouerbearing himselfe and lifting vp himselfe in his sinne without checke or remorse And this latter is of all other the most proper worke of the Law to tame and beate downe the lofty heart of man setting vp a Law to it selfe to walke as it listeth without law or feare Q. What is the nature of it A. It is a presenting more or lesse of the wrath and pena●ties due ●o sin vnto the whole man by the conscience for the casting of it downe at the feete of God Marke these heads First It s a presenting for the dead bare letter of the ten Commandements cannot doe this by any magicall power No it s the worke of the Powerfull Ministery of the Law which can doe it The Lord who put the former gift or conuiction into it puts this also of subduing and casting downe into ●his Law Ministery Although in appearance it be weake yet God setting it on worke with the authority of his Spirit with power to carry his errand into the soule it shall be able without feare or flattery to doe it and to doe that which no Law of Princes can effect euen to flait and gaster the conscience Lawes of men are absent but this law is p●esented by God to the soule From him it first came and by him it was giuen in terror and earth quakes by strong Angels to master the proud heart of man and is still pronounced and presented to the same vpon the mount Ebal of the legall Ministery in the open assembly as it came therefore from God so it is supported in her power by God and serues for his vse in all places to arrest and cast downe all sinners and carry them to prison vnder sentence at the Iudges pleasure Secondly It doth present the wrath and penalties of sinne especially Till these come sinne is at peace Euen as while the Iudge is reading his Commission or giuing his charge or calling a Iury or hearing the crime debated but when the thiefe sees more that hee hath power to giue oath take euidence and verdict and pronounce sentence of death presenting the messengers of it to the eare the knife the hatchet the fire the halter then his courage comes downe The law in her Ministery is this voice of God and Iudge of a sinner Rom. 4.15 therefore called the Ministery of the letter the messenger of wrath the Law of sinne and death Rom. 8.2 Not of the wrath of a man against a man but of God against a sinner not able to kill the body but to cast body and soule into hell This law curseth from Gods mouth euery stale sinner soked in his lees Cursed be euery one that abides not in all things to doe them cursed from God be euery lyer swearer adulterer hypocrite worldling Desolation and destruction tribulation and anguish be vpon euery soule that sinnes high and low without baile or main prise and if God curse cursed they are and who shall blesse them It is no curse of a sinne vpon a sinner no Popes curse with booke bell and candle which yet made Kings to tremble and made them as blacke as soote in the opinion of fooles no not the curse of a father which may turne to a blessing as Iacobs did to Simeon and Leui but the curse of the eternall God whose wrath is the messenger of death and blasteth indeed wheresoeuer it lighteth and whatsoeuer resists it This wrath I say marke well in the penalties of it temporall spirituall and eternall the law presents to a sinfull soule Temporall in this life Leu. 26.24 2 Cor. 15.6 read Deut. 29. setting God against the soule in all h●r course walking contrary to her because she hath walked so to him vexing her withall aduersity and suffering nothing to goe currant either in one kinde or other marriage crosse children cursed state vntoward successe naught God against me in all Spirituall and farre worse penalties in the soule deserting it and leauing it to her owne impenitency security hardnesse obstinacy which is Gods curse vnder seale Lam. 3.65 as a Baylif holding vnder arrest euen till hell eternall at death euen a separation from the presence of God and a tormenting of it for euer in hell in the fulnesse of this wrath which indeed is the dying the death and yet neuer dead without hope ease or remedy Thirdly Ceazing vpon the whole man by the Conscience for as the law is the worker so the conscience is the immediate obiect of this wrath God hath made it the lawes obiect created it with a marueilous power of sensiblenesse aboue all parts to record and to apprehend all sin and wrath for it if God had not so ordeined it could neuer receiue into it selfe so infinite wrath of Gods Iustice as now it can It exceedes the apprehension of any the tendrest part when it s stung with an Adder scalt with water or boyling oyle burnt with fire cut with a sword the sence of conscience ceazed with this wrath of God is vnspeakeable and cannot be vttered by man it cannot enter into man that feeles it not to conceaue the sting and vexation of conscience being thus wounded for sinne in which it s differenced from all other consciences eithe● first Ignorant erroneous and superstitious conscience not fearing or fearing amisse Secondly defiled conscience dallying with God halfe conuinced and halfe whole hypocritically feeling God in some of his Law but preuailing by subtilty against the rest that so it might shunne the dint ●hereof Thirdly Seared and hardned conscience which by long rebellion and resistance of the Law hath got the mastry of the Law and is waxen senslesse and vselesse forgetting her office I say these are cursed neither shall they auoid the dint of this law at the length earlier or later their dog shall awake one day and howeuer they sleep yet 2 Pet. 2.6 Their damnation sleepes not Onely this conscience of which Salomon speakes Who can beare the load of it this wounded conscience differs from all these and is the obiect of the Law thus presenting wrath to it that by how much the more it seemes in worse case then the other three yet by this feeling of God she might in due time prooue better then the best of them And I say conscience is so the next obiect that yet the whole man thereby partakes of this wrath As Iob speakes of himselfe Thy feares are vpon mee day and night The arrowes of the Almighty stick fast in me Thou scarest mee with dreames and visions no rest in my flesh for thee And chap. 33. My bones clatter and stick out all dainty meat is
for if the sur●ty faile in any point his vndertaking is vneffectuall Greatmen must haue their Peeres to acquit them no common persons S●e Rom. 1.3 Eph. 1. vlt. Q What is the vse of it A. Briefly this to stay and comfort an heauy heart in the view o● the hainous circumstances of her sinne making it out of measure sinfull as depth of continuance odious greatnesse against knowledge meanes of grace with an high hand Bee not dismaid Hee that is thy surety made not thy peace for small and some but all and the greatest so that thy thought must be how to receaue this fulnesse Heb 9 14. not for the greatnesse of the sinne The Lord Iesus offred himselfe vp by his eternall Spirit that an eternall Maiesty might bee appeased for sin of an eternall guilt and curse and such is all sin but especially crying sin his merit is more out of measure deseruing then sinne is sinnefull and hath merited far more happinesse then Adams sinne forfeited Get humblenesse and faith and then thy great sins shall be as deaw to the sunne and as a spoonefull of water cast into the Ocean Q What is the third thing considerable A. Vnion of both natures into one person by the vnconceauable work of this Spirit of God It s much that a soule and a body but much more that flesh and the Word should be really one person I doe not say that the Diuinity of Christ was a nature as the humanity for Christ was so a nature that yet a distinct subsisting person of himselfe But the meaning is that this person of the Word tooke the nature of his flesh into his person therein to subsist The flesh of Christ was no person as Abraham or Dauid but a nature onely hauing no subsisting of it selfe at all but as it dwelt in the Godhead As Misleto is no plant of it selfe otherwise then it fastens and subsists in the appletree So that Iesus Emanuel God and man vnited was the third qualification of the surety Assistance could not haue caused identity or samenesse onely hypostaticall vnion could do that By vertue whereby not onely properties are communicated to ech other in forme o● speech as The Lord of life was slayne GOD dyed c. but in reall manner the efficacy of the one nature was imparted to the other Yet this vnion doth no more admit confuzion then separation no not in the lowest degree of eclipsing in death or the graue See text Ioh. 1.1 ●say 1.4 Call him Emanuel Mat. 1.23 Q. What is the vse heereof A. Most sweet lo all broken soules in their approch to the throne of grace What is so bottomles and vnsubsisting a thing in it selfe as a soule in the anguish of conscience Yet euen then looke vp to Emanuel and he will vnite thy poore empty bottomlesse spirit to his owne person that in him thou mayst haue a reall beeing and subsistence Oh poore soule who thinkest thy selfe meerely lost in this thy estate In time thou shalt see it was mercy brought thee to be out of hope in thy selfe that the hope of thy wel beeing might be in him for euen the flesh of Iesus himselfe had the like vnablenesse of subsisting except the second person had taken it to himselfe Q. What is the vnction of Christ A. It is a consequent vpon his personall vnion whereby the Godhead made the man-hood full of himselfe and of all gifts and graces of the Spirit meet to enable him to his worke of mediation and by name separated him from men to be excellent as to be the Prophet Priest and King of his Church That this was from the wombe appeares by sundrie glorious effects exceeding man as that in Luk. 2. at twelue yeeres old Yet especially his Baptisme was the anoynting of him to the entire and immediate execution of these Offices for therein hee did more fully receiue the anoynting with the Oyle of gladnes aboue his fellowes as was prophecied Psal 2. Esay 42.1 and Esay 61.1.2 He was Priest to satisfie and pray for Prophet to teach and King to rule and deliuer his people And these offices do mutually serue each other The vse is that wee his members might acknowledge him an eminent Mediator as hauing a calling from GOD as those three sorts of Men had vnder the old Testament And that we might be out of doubt that the acts and suffrings he performed were allowed according to that voice This is my well beloued Sonne in whome I am well pleased heare him And that wee knowing into what treasure the Lord hath put all his graces euen the flesh of Christ might there seeke and finde them all Therefore 1. Cor. 1.30 Paul sayth Of him are we who is made vnto vs of the Father wisedome as a Prophet righteousnes as a Priest sanctification and Redemption as a King Ioh. 1.17 Reuel 1.6 The Lord hath made him whatsoeuer his Church needes that of his fulnes we might receyue grace for feare And that we also in our measure together with vnion to him might receyue his vnction and become Prophets Kings and Priests to God and be conformed to our head in all his excellencies not in the poynt of his meritig but of his Graces Q. Proceed to the fourth the former part to wit the merit A. This is yet more essentiall then the former three The fourth then I say is Actiue obedience of Christ I do not separate the actiue from the passiue as if eyther alone could satisfie or as if I ascribed the effects of eyther to the one without the other but yet distinctly I speake of both for the vse of each of them to the soule Marke then what I haue noted The Lord Iesus became piacular for vs not onely by bearing our punishment but by translating vpon himselfe the reall imputation of our guilt with out the least measure of inherent guilt This latter would haue disabled his person for he must be separated from sinners Heb. 7.26 yet the want of the former would haue made his merit none of ours and his death vniustly inflicted Therefore he was made Sinne originall and actuall all the sins of the elect were charged vpon him that he by his perfect obedience might disanull them and bring in and settle vpon vs perfect righteousnes And as the mi●ery of a man stands in both sinne and guilt and staine aswell as in curse so must our Surety performe righteousnes aswell as beare the curse Now this righteousnes of Christ is both his Naturall and his actuall opposite to this naturall and actual vnrighteousnes of Adam I say both the purity of his humane nature infused by Vnion a●d also the obedience to the whole Morall Law to the vttermost extent thereof And this is as true a part of the material cause of our iustification as the other of the Passiue though not to be disioyned Q Whereof doth this Article obedience consists A. Of the whole conuersation of our Lord Iesus his
as soone as he liveth for hee must be perfected in the wombe and brought forth and so is a childe of the world hee lived before the life of the wombe but now he lives another life in the light feedeth sleepeth cryeth suckes the breasts So is it here Faith giueth the generation and life to the soule at the first quickning but the birth is not obtained fully till it be brought forth as a new Creature by Renovation then it is declared to haue the true life of God when his image of holinesse declares it Q. Well the Similitude may serue let vs now come to the three heades and first what is the Author of this creation A. The holy Ghost As almost all the Scripture prooueth Two places may serue 1. Cor. 6.11 But ye are washed purged sanctified hy the spirit of our God So Titus 3.5.6 He saued vs by washing of Regeneration and the renuing of the holy Ghost Co● 2.12 And the reason is plaine For euen as it was in the vnion of Christ our head with our flesh the holy Ghost most miraculously did concurre with the matter of conception and did vnite it to God so that one person was made of two natures and by this meanes the Deity infused into the humanity the most excellent purenesse of God and the quallities of light and holinesse so this beeing for vs lo the same spirit takes the same matter of the Lord Iesus his nature and properties and vnites the one and infuses the other into the soules of his people by the worke of the Gospell Not that wee made Christ as some dreame but vnited wholly to his person and thence partake the influences of his graces wisedome and righteousnesse c both in the habite of renouation and in all the holy properties of humblenesse patience loue feare zeale c. As 2. Peter 1.3 most sweetly saith His diuine power ministring all things fit for life and godlinesse and making vs partakers of the diuine nature and gifts of the Spirit And looke how it was in the old Law that the next kinsman to the deceased was both to redeem his lost inheritance if embezeled and then to raise vp seed to him Ruth 4.5 as vnto the first borne euen so in the Gospel the Spirit of God doth not onely recouer vnto vs our lost title and inheritance of Gods fauour by forgiuenesse of our sinnes but also raise vp an holy seed vnto God by begetting in vs his Image againe so that not onely hee becomes our righteousnesse of iustificarion but sanctification also Moreover it 's cleere by this that the Spirit of God concurres with the offer of Christ vnto the soule according as it lyes and neuer seperates the things which God puts together Now as I noted in Part 2. Artic. 4. the Lord offers his Christ wholly and at once not onely adoption and reconcilation to bring vs into fauour but also sanctification to make vt the workemanship of God Yea and in truth the Spirit lookes at this chiefly For although in this life faith to iustifie a sinner is the maine gift because it giues vs the right of grace and heauen and holdes it for vs yet that which faith armes at is the renuing of the Image of God in vs. Onely bec●use we lost it by sin therefore faith in the first place brings and knits vs to God in pardon but the perfection of it is that our lost image in Adam might be restored Now therefore the Spirit doth come and vnite them both together in the soule at once because Christ is not nor cannot be deuided either wee haue him not all or else we enioy him wholly and at once as he is offered in the word Q. I would faine know what workes the Spirit doth for the soule in this new creation of nature and infusion of qualitiess A. He doth two things First perswadeth Secondly sealeth For the first he draweth the soule to be willing to take all Christ at he is offered and to reiect no part of him and succoureth the poore soule in her application of the offer and couenant of grace Hee presenteth to the soules view the meaning of God to keepe backe nothing of his Christ but hee will haue him wholly eaten as a passeouer no bone broken no part left Though perhaps the soule see not the extent of Christ at one view yet the Spirit attends the offer of God in the Word and ceazeth the soule with that gift which God giueth As if a man being to giue his seruant a bone doth not onely reach him a ring which the seruant thinkes enough but a ring with a rich pearle of price set in it The pearle is aboue the hope of the receiuer yet because it 's not aboue the Giuers loue both are taken at once So heere the Spirit shewes the soule what God beteemes wholy tels it there is nothing too much shee shall haue vse of all for one vse or other and therefore let none be refused And this i● doth by the tennor of Gods charter and couenant in the Word See that noted place Who is made of the Father all the 4 Wisedome Sanctification c. Marke the Lord offers not onely righteousnesse to accept but sanctification for image Take all therefore Secondly the Spirit sealeth these to the soule See Mat. 3.11 The Lord Iesus shall baptize with the holy Ghost and fire What is that the very diuine gifts of Christ which as fire do purge and clense our drosse Col. 2.12 and bring forth our mettall as pure and cleane So in Rom. 6.4.5 he tels vs we put on Christ in baptisme and that not onely to couer our nakednesse but to warme vs with holinesse We are not only partakers of the satisfaction of Christ to forgiue vs but of his death to mortifie vs and of his life to quicken vs in both to giue vs his image And by baptisme we are sayd to be ingrafted into the similitude of his death and resurrection This baptisme of the Spirit seales vp the substance of the couenant to al purposes as a seale to a writing confirmes the writing in all points Now marke the tenor of the couenant not onely to pardon our sinnes and to remember our sinnes no more but to wash vs with pure water to write his Law in our hearts and inward partes to cause vs to walke in his wayes and to put his feare into our soules that we neuer depart from him any more And from this spirit of Renuing proceedes the infusion of all diuine graces issuing from his holy nature as loue compassion meeknesse feare confidence doing and suffering for Christ and betokening our conformity Q. I rest in your answer touching the first of these three now proceed to the second what is the inward instrument on the soules part to apprehend this Creation A. Faith sauing and effectuall As appeares in those texts Act. 26.8 To giue them an inheritance among them that are sanctified
the Actuall Sinnes of the mind The second is Seruing lusts which implyes a Slauery to the Deuill world and lusts lusts of the heart lusts of the eye and pride of life as a beast led to the Shambles The third is Trading and Conuersing in actuall sinnes such as accord with the particular nature of each sinner some of which distempers are noted a few of the cōmonest for all the rest Pleasures riot enuy hating being hated c. all which are added to giue a bitter rellish to this misery Q Why sayth he nothing of the other part of misery standing in the curse A. Not because he excludes any essentiall part of it but because one text will not conteine all but that which the drift of it lyes vnto Some texts include all three parts in one Verse as Eph. 5.8 Some expresse one generall part some another and in that part some one Branch some another Therefore what is heere lacking must bee supplyed by some other This for a ground of Scripture may same and its good that such draughts of Scriptures bee before our eyes when we handle these grounds that as corner stones they may hold in the building The which God willing shal be framed more distinctly in the Article following A PRACTICALL Catechisme The Articles of the first part are these sixe following Question WHAT is the generall scope of these Articles A. All tend more or lesse to lay forth the substance of the first part which is sinne in her colors and what vse the soule is to make thereof Q. What is the first of these A. Touching the integrity of Adams first Art 1 estate Q. Why was not man thus miserable from the beginning A. No in no sort For God created man male and female in his owne image Eccles 7.31 Gen. 1.26 1 Cor. 11.7 Col. 3.10 Eph. 4.24 Read the places First for the matter in respect of his better part he was made a spirituall immortall inuisible intellegible being as God A little sparke of diuinity Secondly For the maner as the one Gods essence is subsistng in three persons so one soule in three powers as naturall sensible reasonable Thirdly For endowments and qualities pure lightsome orderly righteous holy and perfect in act though not in power and stability righteous but not righteousnes for that 's the Gospels worke not immutable but left to his freedom of will Fourthly In his body although of Earth yet by the breath of God putting life into the earthy frame thereof hee was made a creature of great authority and maiesty a modell of the creation as in Psalm 8. Read it ouer A Lord and Souereigne vnder the Creator of all his creatures vnder himselfe A strange Masterpiece for all to stoop to euen as he onely to stoop to his Creator Heb. 1. A little lower then the Angels a petty Vice-roy vnder the Lord himselfe The very ruines of him are admirable as when wee behold the rubbish of some Palace wee may guesse at the first magnificence of it a far off so when we see the admirable reliques hereof in Philosophers Moralists Politicians Artists and naturall effects of men we may guesse at the originall Q. May there be any thing more distinctly spoken hereof A. Yes for order sake wee may consider this Image of God in respect of these three First Body Secondly Soule 3. Person Q. Touching the body first how was Adam therein created A. We may consider therein two things First The production or making thereof Secondly The frame of it beeing made For the former the Lord addresses himselfe to it more solemnly then other Creatures for this concernes his body as well as his soule Let vs make man not thus Let man be As to the other creatures The Trinity is called to this worke noting it should be Diuine and excellent Gen. 1.26 Secondly The frame of it being made it was so as God intended it a speciall resemblance of the Creator He made not the soule but man consisting of body and soule according to the Image of GOD. So that whatsoeuer resemblance the other creatures had Verse 26. twice repeated remotely Adam had an immediate neere and engrauen character of Gods Image as might be in a materiall thing Consider it in these 3 things First The organicalnes that it should bee a materiall instrument created with peculiar aptnes and fitnes for the seruice and execution of an immateriall Diuine soule yea euery way in all points most instrumentall Secondly that out of so base and earthly a substance the Lord should rayse vp a mixture and constitution of elementary and yet immortall and durable nature neuer to dye with a consequent freedome from all alterations or impressions by Diseases or Infirmityes tending to dissolution of the same al paines distempers weaknes or the like remoued actually I meane Thirdly A difference of habit of proportion and gesture from all other creatures For such reuerend markes there were in the colour temper guise awfulnes erectnes and gate of man as caused all creatures to stoope and do obeysance The heathens obserued it in the vpward looke of man and the prone downeward looke of other Q. But the Holy Ghost especially ayming at the soule proceed to speake of that A. The soule of man resembled the Creator much more and that in three things First The nature of it like Gods as hath bin sayd incorporeall intelligible immortall free to will or nill nothing in it grosse carnall or base the purpose counsell vnderstanding deliberating resoluing discoursing and iudging faculties being Diuine sparks Secondly for the manner I spake in the former question Thirdly The seuerall functions and powers thereof resembling the communicable Attributes of GOD in their perfection his knowledge his purenesse his freedome his righteousnes These may be referred to 2 sorts inward and outward The inward standing in vnderstanding will and conscience The vnderstanding hauing perfect knowledge of God his nature attributes will and worship of himselfe of all other things yea the formes and very natures thereof whence he gaue them Names in all respects his vnderstanding was an Vrim of distinct pure and perfect light so was his will as I may say a Thummim of Holines perfect righteousnes originall rectitude and was thorowly subiect to the edict and charge of the mind and so the operations and actions sutable to both GOD then sate in the throne of the mynde as supreme the will was subiect to the mynd the actions to both In the conscience he enioyed a pure and true reflexe of himselfe in all these perfectly gladding and comforting himselfe in the priuity to this excellency a Musicall harmony without all iarre remorse or anxiety The outward acts of the Sences members naturall ciuill oeconomicall or religious ordered by knowledge There was positiue power and free will to good and not euill in his nature and to euill onely negatiue as now in the vnregenerate there is a freedome to euill and not good
the●e o●e all these to some few heads A. I will in this Article lay downe the order of the point and leaue the further enlargement of it to his d●epl●ce in the fift Article following Conceaue then the point by the Apostles speech Rom. 5.12 Wherefore as by one man sinne entred into the world and ●eat● by sinne c. Where we see that the actuall sinne of Adam determined not the bound of misery but brought a second misery with it euen the misery of our whole nature While we stood in Adam his obedience kept his whole estate and nature entire but when he fell though the sinne were a limited thing in act of eating yet it was an unlimited excesse in respect of the committer and the frame of his reuolting heart And therefore it was iust wi h God to plague his whole nature for this sinfull act And the plague thereof was to inflict such a penalty vpon Adams nature of the Propagation I shall speake in Article 4. as made it truly miserable in stead of being before truly happy Note then Adam hauing actually disobeied the Iustice of God offended h●gh● by it doth punish whole nature for it As if hee had said thus Hast thou indeed freely chozen to leaue mee in plaine ground To embrace lust and Satan and pleasure of appetite before me To cast dirt vpon my pure Image Be it then so with thee as thou desirest Bee that in nature which thou chozest in thy free will to doe That Image of mine which thou caredst not to preserve bee stripped off that image of thine owne inuention which thou preferredst be satisfied with fill thy selfe with enioy and delight thy selfe with to the vttermost I will not suffer mine to harbour with thine light and darkenesse corruption and purenesse therefore depart my image from this sty of vncleannesse and let him who needes would bee filthy lye downe in his filth and hee that would forsake a reall fire of heat to compasse himselfe in his owne sparkes let him lye downe in sorrow As I threatned so I sentence thee In dying dye dye the death of thy sinne and find thy owne inuentions to thy selfe I vtterly cut thee off and excommunicate thee from my presence and in token of it from Paradise the place of thy former happinesse in one word Be miserable Note then whatsoeuer Adam brought himselfe vnto by his act of sinning was Penall because it was a stroke of iustice Not onely death and all other punishments before and after it but euen Originall sinne it selfe is a penalty it is a sln indeed but it s a penall one God iustly punishing actuall with originall and so wee must conceaue that although in vs it be truly sinne yet God inflicting it did not infuse it as sin into vs but onely as a iust penalty of that which Adam himselfe in the freedome of his wicked will had first forged in his owne heart against God Q. How many branches doe yee diuide this Misery into A. Into two The misery of sin and the misery of punishment eyther of which had beene misery alone but iustice would not suffer misery to bee within narrower bounds then these that he who by doing made himselfe might by suffring be made miserable The former viz. misery of sinne is either of the Roote originall or the branches Actuall sin both making the soule truly though not equally miserable Q. What is the former of these Shew in what the misery of Originall sin standeth A. In two things 1. Originall guilt 2. Originall staine or Pollution both being the fountaines of all Actuall guilt of conscience and pollution of conscience Originall guilt is that priuity and reflexion of conscience in Adam fallen whereby he told himselfe continually that he had fallen and therefore must dye the death in each kinde of it body and soule This perpetuall alarum of co●science in his nature was the first part of his sinfull misery A●d the Holy Ghost expresses it in those words They saw they were naked Gen. 3● and Adam when God called him hid himselfe in the bushes and gaue the reason because bee was naked The Lord askes him how hee knew it The meaning was his conscience in presenting to him his fault did gugge him also w●th feare and expectation of reuenge So that as in his inn●cency one excellent part of his welfare was that hee knew himselfe so so now one especiall part of his woe is that the conscience did ring his sin alway in his eares and made him obnoxious that is to feare God in point of that punishment which he looked for from his Iustice for his sinne And to say the truth what misery is like to this to be euer on the racke of a mans owne spirit suggesting and bo●ding to him sad things to come for his sin dogging him as the Taylor who will not suffer his prisoner to goe one inch from his custody how bitter doth it make all h●●gs when as a sword hanging by a twined threed over a mans head it doth threaten him perpetuall ruine and tye him ouer as a band and recognisance of great forfeit to the great assize of wrath and iudgement there to answer for himselfe yea and there without all bayle or mainprize vnescapeably to suffer eternall death of body and soule This the Author to the Heb. 2.15 toucheth saying who all their life time by the feare of death were subiect to bondage q. d. walked under the chayne of this guilt alway afrayd lest by death of body their soule should slide into hell to abide there till the body came thither True it is Adam dyed not at the first committing of the sinne but had he found no more fauour then Caine did lo all those 900. yeeres he had bin tossed and terrified with this guilt till it had seazed vpon him And whereas ye will say that those that liued without the law were better then wee because they were miserable and knew it not I answere they had law enough in them to hold them vnder a guilt of horror for such euils as they committed against the naturall light although ignorance had worne out the true dint of this conscience Besides although to know a mans misery onely increaseth it yet so to know it as we may preuent it is better then by not knowing it to escape the sent and bondage of that which yet lyeth vpon vs. Q. Wherein the misery of Originall staine of sinne consisteth A. We may eyther conceiue it in the whole or in the parts Touching the whole the best way will be to take the word which the holy Ghost vseth which is Death For death is the resolution of nature and so is this death of the soule a totall abolishment and corruption of that blessed frame of creation I meane in the point of her Purenesse in minde by light in will and heart by holinesse Now then looke how contrary a carcasse is to a liuely body so is this to the
is the chayn of the law and so are the words couched together that being by one and the same spirit ordained he that brakes one violates all as he that breaks any linke of a golden chaine breakes the coherence Men thinke otherwise But as hee who breakes his neighbours fence trespasses him aswel as if he ranged all ouer his ground because the bond is broken so heere It were strange to tell a drunkard he broke more then the seuenth Commandement But to tell him that he had broken all as indeed he hath were strange to him Not perhaps in actuall deed but yet in power and effect because he hath broken the bond of that God who hath made all the rest And yet there is a further thing in it then so for in a sort some actuall sinne breakes all As one hath described it in couetousnesse so might I doe it in drunkennesse For what drunkard makes not his cup and companions an Idoll what cares he for Gods worship daring to bee drunke in an Ale-house within the sound of the Preacher What conuersation toward man looks hee at in family neighborhood oathes vowes to God or men What Sabbaths doth he not breake What parents and Magistrates doth he care for but rather vndoes the estate of the one and contemnes the censure of the other What cares hee in his cups to breake the head of yea to stabbe his fellow What vncleannesse and bastardy is hee not guilty of What booty by the high way will he balke and perhaps with bloodshed to get money to drinke What lyes and slanders what colors and shifts to defend his villanies and couer his sin will he forbeare This is meet to thinke of to open the harmony of a law But howeuer this bee sure it is there is no sinner not onely grosse but euen secret who is not guilty of all the Law in the breach of any Commandement because his vndue carriage fights against the Lord of the whole Law The discouery of this light might bee as much as some mens soules are worth for what is the speech of men As for vnrighteousnesse I aske GOD no mercy As for stealing saith one or for adultery saith a second or slander or murther or vsury I neuer feare what GOD can alledge against mee Indeed such or such a sinne I aske him mercy for Well said but in the meane time it s no thanke to thee GOD and prouidence suffred thee not for th●● wouldst haue broken all aswell as one thy heart was bad enough if hee had not limited thee Oh this light well receiued prepares way for conuiction Q. How thirdly A. The Law discouers it selfe to the soule in the point of her Royalty So Saint Iames cals it Chap. 2.8 That as a King is not prescribed against by the quality of any subiect offending why hee may not hold him guilty so in this No person is accepted with GOD in this kind Oh! it s a great discouery of errour the hear● of man is proud and soone exempts and dispenseth with it selfe by some priuiledge But this Royal Law is impartiall As a glasse will shew a Queene her spots aswell as a poore woman Paul labors this point Rom. 2. against the Iewes priuiledges No difference with God All both bond and free Barbarian Scythian Iew Gentile none excepted God hath shut vp ●ll vnder one disobedience Oh it s a great abating of a proud heart One sin one hell one wrath one Tophet for Princes for subiects for learned for idiots for noble and base for Pharises and Publicanes This cuts the combe of the sinner Psalm 149.8 He bindeth Kings in Cheynes and Nobles in fetters of yron Neither can the poorest scape at a little mash nor the richest at a great Againe his Lawes are no copwebs Apply this as it is the scope of the fourth Article sup●à to thy selfe Q. How fourthly A. It discouers it selfe to the sinner in the point of integrity and soundnesse of her light That is opens sinne to the soule in one kinde aswell as another Such is the corruption of Adam that it will suffer much of the body of sin to vanish in the suruey If sinne bee either of knowledge or ignorance although knowledge shall bee of some note yet ignorance will vanish If other sinnes bee of omission or commission omission sinnes will faile in the reckoning If againe sin b●e of presumption or infirmity Sinnes of infirmity are nothing If presumptuous sins be either of particular presumption or or totall reuolt Particulars seeme nothing to a selfe-louing rotten heart But where God enlightens lo he discouers sin in all her sexes male and female strong and weake remembred forgotten ignorance or knowledge and in a word one and other And this also is a great discouery for want of which many a soule neuer comes to the bar of Gods conuiction But now this rule will not onely tell the soule the differences of these to wit that one is of greater crime then other one may both omit and commit sin and yet know neyther he may sin of knowledge yet not of presumption necessarily because he may be preuented by feare Satan violent lust and not voluntarily consent he may also presume with a different heart yet the least of these in their nature is damnable Q. How fiftly A. The Law reaches forth to the soule her key of knowledge in the poynt of her extent She who hath her Ladyes keyes knowes all and can fetch out of ech boxe So cannot the poor droile in the kitchin So this is the priuiledge of one that hath the Law to be hers It is a great piece of the light of the Law to extend it selfe in the soule to al parts and degrees of sinne First in poynt of Spiritualnes of the Law teaching vs not to rest onely in open grosse morall offences but to goe to spirituall wickednesses The Law is spiritually morall aswell as externally Thus Paul Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy and good I sold vnder sinne And 1 Tim. 1.5 The end of the Commandement is loue out of a pure heart good Conscience and fayth vnfeined Then it must be very spirituall and aswell meet with infidelity hypocrisy vnthankfulnes impiousnes profanenesse of spirit security hardnes of heart contempt of Word Sabbaths c. as open leudnes of life riot stealth or adultery And so also it enlarges the chiefe breach of a Law to all lesser degrees and steps to it As the seuench commandement reaches not onely to grosse incontinenty but to intemperancy drunkennes riot voluptuousnes of sences c. Secondly her Inquisition and Search For the Law Heb. 4.12 is very searching and piercing diuides betweene the ioynts and marrow dare and can go to any part of the whole man and fetch out any poizon out of any corner hath an vnlimited Commission from the Law-giuer to fetch out and bind any malefactor not onely seene and manifest words and deeds but also the most retyred and close
do fearfully lay forth this corruption to be that which men little thinke for For why What a tame still close and harmelesse thing seemes this sinne beeing yet if once stirred a raging Tyger and wild monster What do these termes imply ●●ue that this sinne is the Doe-all in the soule as she will so it must be and in a word she is al sinne both the length and depth of it all that is in sinne is in her And therefore except the Lord Iesus had bene made si●ne note the word 2 Cor. 5.21 for vs aswell as sinfull he had neuer satisfied his expiation beeing chiefly for sinne in her Nature and for the Acts by Consequence● in which respect he is truly called the second Adam made the sin of Nature by imputation that he might by his nature of Righteousnes suffring both satisfie for it the losse of God● Image and then restore it Looke vpon these texts and meditate of them Secondly by comparison For when the soule hath had the view of actuall sinnes be●ore as most yrkesome and now comes to see greater abomination then these as the Lord tells Ezekiel Chapter 8.15 Oh! how out of measure sinfull seemes it to the soule how doth she cry out miserable man for market thus she speakes Although actuall sins were enough to sinke me into misery yet I see they were but euill in respect of their part but now I see a body of all parts and members a King in his throne I see now my selfe cur●ed double and treble No sooner do I get out of one actuall sin or set good duties agai●st bad with some hope of ease that way but the Lord beates me downe by my inward nature of sinne yea when I would faine comfort my selfe in my duties and suffring and prayers Lo then my very clothes this venomed shirt vpō my skin Iob 9.31 defi●es me turnes al hony into the gall of aspes Indeed God hath freed mee from beeing a worldling whose hope is below from a covetous mizer Phil. 3.18 whose God is his Mammon I am free from open vncleanenesse and inward hypocrisy and profanenesse of heart but Oh LORD the nature of these things dogges mee sometimes the wolfe of my nature makes me feele small difference betweene my selfe and these vices The nature of louing pleasures more then God the nature sauor of a proud vaine heart of distrust of worshipping God vnsauourily and for forme of selfe-loue and ends doth so dogge me that its worse ten fold then the breaches themselues Yea and the more I seeme to affect the contrary the more Satan dogs me with them thoughts desires and endeauors after them if it be so be glad yea and selfe-loue with them so blindfoldes me that often they seeme to please me and make me be as I would be and by the suddainenesse of the darts and assaults preuent my armor and so foile mee and leade me captiue So that we see the sting of nature if duely weighed is farre greater then of actions Q. Proceed to the third How doth the Law present the properties of originall sin to the soule A. By ripping vp the body of this death and shewing it what is lust Rom. 7.7 c. First Shewing it to be sin in an eminency of being It s more sin then other sins whatsoeuer is in any of them is here more notoriously whatsoeuer filth and base quality may be spied in all sin or any as impudency vanity pride resolution disdaine is heere more singularly as light and heate is in our fire or the ayre or the Moone but eminently in the Sun the first subiect and seate of it That wherein a quality is first that is eminently worst As coldnesse in the earth drynesse in fire heate in the ayre and moysture in the water So when a Iudge is vniust in the place of equity hee is eminently vniust Euen so heere All ill qualities are first planted heere and its sinne in the Spirit in the place of excellency euen of Gods Image That whereby another thing is qualified so or so that it selfe is much more so qualified As we say Those wofull desperate Traytors in Gun-powder treason were so and so desperate rebellious cruell fierce but by whom were they made so by their father Garnet and grandfather the Pope Garnet and the Pope then must be much more so So all the poizon of actuall euils is seated in the originall after whose copy they write Secondly The predominancy of this sin both in matter of fulnesse and force for fulnesse it hath all sin vnder it and in it as the perfect body hath all the members so this dead rotten body containes fully all dead members of hypocrisie vncleannesse c. in it As the word vsed by Diuines prooves they call it the * Fomite●● Fewell meaning of the fire of sinnefull acts Great farmes haue and keep great fires because of the plenty of wood they haue to nourish them This is the fewell that maintaines all fires in the soule in hall kitchin and parlour sins of pride sins of common formality sins of base lust all are kept vpon the altar burning with this fewell which is set on fire it selfe by hell So of forciblenesse also therfore Paul cals it a Law Princes rule strongly by their lawes they are as a soule wholly in all and in each part Nothing so forcible there is a necessity in a law It breakes downe and carries before it all opposites word threats dangers all counsell perswasion cannot heare is incorrigible vnchangeable as the Law of Medes and Persians It carries the soule to her trade with courage force resolution and irresistiblenesse being the piller of Satans kingdome ruling as a strong man in sinners Luk. 11. ●1 and keeping all in deep peace Thirdly it is perpetuall Wee say The King hath a perpetuall patrimony that is not alienable so hath a sinner by his originall sin He may faile in his spending money as in his policy and strength and industry to oppresse to defile his body but his stocke and patrimony neuer failes If it bee so in the best of Gods seruants Luther himselfe little molested with couetousnesse yet he had this stock still within how much more is it true of each sinner Fourthly It s an ouerflowing and yet a cruell euill as necessary as it is as forcible Fyre water are ill masters but they burne and ouerflow naturally euen so here As in breaches of the Sea we see tops of Steeples and of Towers vnder water so this ouerflowes all the Image of God in vs This sinne goes in the haire and streame of nature and therefore it s called Concupiscence and Lust Iames 4.5 The spirit that is in vs lusts to enuy it pleases vs because it is natural● and hath a self-louing perswasion which carries it smoothly and vnsuspiciously and by priviledge It is my nature to smite when I am angry i●s my nature to be soone ho● it s therefore
voice and as much as our matter We should labour to be so honest in our way since●e louing faithfull tender to soules denying our selues and hauing a sensible stampe of conuiction in our selues that wee might not wrong the Word we teach It is not the rolling of speech our lowd words but sincerity and simplenesse of our scope that must preuaile as Paul saith 2 Cor. 4.2 3. Oh tell men 2 Cor. 4. ● Deut. 29. If any heare the Words of this Law and blesse themselues with peace Gods wrath shall smoke against such Doe not blanch doe not dawbe with bad morter sow no pi●lowes but rather pluck off mens mufflers and vizors and cry as those Boanorges did Awake oh dead slothfull suotill heart Bee not beaten off from this by the peoples vnthankfulnesse and repining plow we with Gods heifer and he shall teach our tongues this logique Study we our selues first then the Scriptures and the Spirit of conuincement shall follow vs wh ch the w●●ld shall not resist We shall be a sweet sauor to God in all Eze. 33.3 4 1 King ● 224 both who are saued and who perish if we doe thus else we shall pay for their blood Suffer no Sycophant to disswade vs as hee did offer to Michaiah Though the wicked will say Wee are informed and haue plowed with other mens heyfers and we ●e●er speake well to them yet in the end faithfull witnesses shal be honoured Secondly the people must bee warned to shake off their Branch 2 lets of conuiction Let the righteous smite you it shall bee as balme The poore man whose impostume was let out by an enemy fared better by him then by all his Physicians Hunt out those three enemies before and adde a fourth of selfe-loue It is an Adder which will not heare the voice of the charmer The sweetnesse of vsury pleasures lawfull liberties ease will be as a Delila to keep off the least conuiction of the Law How can I want such a sinne Who can prooue such a gainfull lost to be so sinfull Surely he will sting thee with it as Delila did Samson when the sweet is past who now so enchants thee and then most of all when thou cryest The bitternesse of death is past Againe thinke not cch p●ng or glimpse of light or holding of a truth to be conuiction For so the Deuill will betray thee if euer thou be called to suffer Nay in thy ordinary course thou wilt confesse a Christ but deny him before a Papist Thou wilt say Thy soule is more worth then the World but stake it for a groate Conviction is no opinion but the ouerpowring of the Conscience If the truth bee no stronger then the Soules resistance there is no Conuiction The Martyrs gaue their blood for Transubsta●tiation Which they had neuer done had they not seene and beene conuinced of the issue of it Thirdly Examine ●h●y selfe about this weighty worke of the Law that thou maist hope to go on more safely Try it by these markes First By the loue of a conuincing Ministery and loathing of the contrary Secondly A cleering of God and the righteousnesse of his Law call thy selfe the slaue sold under sin As he to Achan Giue glory to God! Hug the Chirurgion that lanced thee Thirdly Shame and confusion for sin Dan. 9. The Publicane durst not looke vp Peter bids Christ depart for he was vtterly confounded at the power of Christ Thus they in Ezra 10. vnder the raine of Heauen so thou vnder this showre Rom. 6 21. What fruit Fourthly By thy thanks to God 1 Cor. 14.25 God is in you of a truth Fifthly Vnder thy confusion till God raise thee vp Habac. 3. let rottennesse enter into bones that peace may be in the day of trouble Crust not ouer thy sore waxe not weary of this work of God as most doe A man once throughly shamed and confessing is hardly after defiled Lastly let it end in true consternation of soule and terror for thy sin of which we are to speake Q. What is the second worke of Conviction A. The second is of the whole soule call●d terror and bondage For when the former worke of conuiction hath prevailed it works thus that such a soule is as vnder an arrest and seeing it selfe this sinner this cursed one hee is thereby killed and the spirit brought into terror and bondage And this the Lord sees meet to adde to the former for else as a dog with his chayne loose so the conscience runs riot with the worke of bare knowledge of sinne But if the dogge be fastned to his chayne hee is vnder custody And this is that which is so oft spoken of in Rom. 7. when Paul saith When the Law came I dyed Meaning in spirit and conscience That selfe of iollity ease and security which sinne afforded was nipt and quasht and in stead of it a sad item giuen to the soule taking away the taste of her morsels mixing the gall of aspes with her drinke and stinging her as an Adder and stabbing her to the heart as a sword for her conuinced villanies yea and none more then this body of death which still dogges her and wounds her as fast as she licks her selfe whole with all her duties or abstinences and works and shifts proouing her a slaue sold vnder misery and shewing her a nature a world of sinne and woe to beare downe all her morality and hypocrisie An heart vnder this bondage cannot be stild with Rattles the Spring comes so fast that there is no stopping it by the wit of man till a stronger streame turne it backe The like speech is that Sinne by the Law slew mee Hee meanes not any mortification but hee touches vpon that point of the iol●inesse of a sinner who that sinne might bee out of measure sinfull prides himselfe in his estate This pride the law resists le ts out the rankenesse of it and abases it with terror of hel and wrath And that in so great measure of times that when God leaues them from hope they wickedly bereaue themselues of life And yet this is not grace but in the elect a seed of it without which the Lord were no more fit to treat with them about saluation then a Smith to meddle with a wild horse but when hee hath cast him hee can handle him at pleasure This worke in Scripture is called the Spirit of feare or Bondage not bondage to sinne but by it whereby as they who are prisoners vnder chaynes doe lye in sorrow and horror without escape or hope so doe these Their spirit is enslaued to feare their conscience to guilt accusation to the whip of wrath and iustice yea crusht downe to Hell by the torment of such a spirit as cannot sustaine it selfe for the restlesse anguish thereof Q. Seeing this point of legall terrour is one of the maine points of this first Part tell me how many things make for the vnderstand●ng of it A. Three things especially First
told them of a sonne for how could this and that stand together Nay wait vpon God and presse vpon him by prayer to performe his promise vpon this condition Elisha being to forgo his Master asked him that his spirit might be doubled vpon him Elia told him it was hard to grant howbeit if he saw him at their parting he should Now what did Elisha did he start from him Could any thing deuide him No he would be sure to keep the condition of the grant and so did For seeing Elia to ascend he cryed My father my father the Horsemen of Israel and the Chariots thereof and so in taking vp the cloake of his Master hee receaued his Spirit doubled Oh that this wisedome were in vs Rather the sinne of our hearers is after they haue spent a great part of their life in getting the condition they are so farre from heartening themselues to beleeue that God will perfect the worke of faith with power that they are ready to float betweene these two the Condition and the Performance If they be vrged to beleeue they fly to the condition saying yea if I had the condition but I am farre from mourning c. If they be vrged to the condition then they answer yea if I could beleeue as if these were works of our owne not the Lords rather the one contrary to the other then agreeable I end therefore with this caueat Let not the Deuill deceaue thee about thy condition and then hold what thou hast and let nothing so beguile thee as to deny Gods grace and so doing plead with the Lord humbly that he would not frustrate thy hope of which hee hath giuen thee such a pledge and in his best seasō he wil assuredly answer thee Q. Now come to the latter branch What is it to cast the soule vpon a promise or to beleeue A. It is the last worke of the Calling Spirit of GOD wherby an humbled sinner doth cast himselfe vpon this Word of God Be reconciled come and drinke come and I will ease you or the like offer will charge or promise of God for pardon and life This point is of all others the chiefe and therefore I choze to refer it to this place as the vse of all that hath beene spoken ioyntly considered for wee know a fiuefold cord is not easily broken and yet no one twist thereof might well bee spared Fiue diuers grounds haue beene handled in this second part First God the Father our enemy hath cut off his plea and found out our deliuerance Secondly The Lord Iesus accordingly hath satisfied the iustice of God that mercy might haue free course by the procuring of a righteousnes Thirdly God the Father accepts this for a poore sinner as if hee in person had satisfied and therefore offers it to the soule most vnfeignedly without hooke or crooke Fourthly He offers him not nakedly but with all his rich furniture to draw the soule to fasten vpon him Fifthly He offers him to each poore member of his Church there to dwell for euer both in grace and Glory Now conclude I demand what one linke of all this chaine were not strong enough to draw the heart to settle it selfe vpon it And yet I must say this That the Word promise of God is the immediate thing which faith relyes vpon although strengthened with all the rest A little therefore of the nature of this promise Q. How many things are required to this consideration A. Two in generall The one to gage the promise and offer of God as a mariner would sound the depth of the Sea lest his ship should be on ground to see whether it be able to beare the weight of the soule or no and answer all her distempers and feares fully The second if it appeare that it is able to susteine it then to rely and cast it selfe vpon it confidently for her owne pardon and saluation Q. How shall the soule rightly gage the depth and strength of the offer and promise which it cannot reach A. Although the mariner cannot himselfe by his owne fadom touch the bottome of the Sea yet by his line and plummet hee can sound it as well as if hee could reach it with his hand and so fasten his Anchor vpon it so heere the plummet and cable of the Word wherein this strength and depth lyes will helpe vs to find it out so farre as may serue our turne The hand of fayth touches the depth of mercy conteined in the offer by the direction of the Spirit in the Word which tells vs what is contained therein Q How many things are conteyned in it A. Many things of which by the way I gaue a touch in Article three but heere I will open further Looke thither and see what I sayd of the freedome and Simplicity of the offer Now adde more touching the nature of the Word of promise which is Gods expression of the offer at the full Three things then the soule must looke at to bottome it selfe vpon the promise of Reconciliation and deliuerance First The wisedome of the Lord. Secondly The strength Thirdly The faythfulnes all which as sure grounds the Lord hath hidden in the promise of mercy to a poore sinner that is vnder the condition Q. What is the first the wisedome of GOD in the promise A. I may say of it as the Holy Ghost sayd of Salomon when hee called for a Sword to cut the Child All Israel sawe that God hath put the spirit of wisedome into him to doe iustice So God hath shewed all wisedome in the promise to settle the soule And that in two respects first of himselfe secondly of vs In respect of himselfe because in reuealing his heart of loue to the soule onely heerby and no other way he teacheth vs that he who is God onely wise 1 Tim. 1.17 could in the depth of his counsell find out no other way so wise and sufficient as this to ground the soule in sure peace towards him Christ and the promise in him was that which seemed the wisest of all wayes in the thought of God especially to vs vnder the Gospell See Heb. 1.1 After sundry wayes the Lord spake to our Fathers in darke times as dreames Vrim visions but now by his Sonne and Word the engrauen forme c. Note how this course is called the best and wisest and holdingest of all as hauing more in it then all the rest Oh! we would thinke in our shallownes that one from the dead Angels or reuelations were better But wisedome it selfe hath pitcht vpon this way all things considred as the wisest of 〈◊〉 Secondly in respect of vs For it is suche way as call●● vs to fayth a promise hauing relation to beleeuing it without wch it cannot profit vs. Now if it bee without vs how w●●e a way is it to quash and dampe our base spirit of Selfe-conceit and selfe endeauor and to abase our pride that he who boasteth might boast in the
the euidence saying If these men will sweare thus I beleeue it So when the soule sees the bottomes of the promise of GOD to bee sound it waxes conuinced of the truth and answers Lord I cannot see why thou shouldst trauaile with mee thus to bring me vnder the condition and reueale thy promise with such euidence but I must needes be conuinced Surely thou hast done thus because thou meanest to pardon and saue me I am Lord vnable to gainsay thou hast perswaded me to beleeue Q. What is the third worke A. It is the cleauing of the soule to the Promise against all her feares doubts cauils For marke when it is conuinced of cleere truth the scales of darknes fall from her eyes When Naaman had weighed the Prophets promise of clensing his cauils vanished no more speech of Abana and Pharfar So Thomas being conuinced by Christs hands and sides The soule is set betweene vanity and mercy Iona 2.8 if mercy preuaile then lying vanityes cease Then the soule lookes off from her former doubts and beholdes the Temple out of the belly of the Whale It then begins to set close to the promise As if a man that grafts a sien in a stocke should fynd some clay stone to get betweene the one and the other to keepe the sap away and make it warp from the stock and pulling it out le ts the sien come close home to it Hence it is that a conuinced heart comes forth and sayth I cut off my carnall reason I see no sauor in it I cut of my bold presumption I renounce my slauish feare I abhorre my base mixtures of selfe and duties vertues and preparatiues of my owne I abandon all my former proppes of nature art experience Religion which kept me from mercy I cut al knots in sunder which I cannot vnloose and let all my tackling fall into the Sea and commit my soule to thy promise through rocks waues and shelues that if I perish I may perish onely I will for euer cling to thy promise do with me as thou wilt if I be deceaued thou hast deceaued me Thus the soule beeing conuinced claspes to GOD and affiances it selfe to him as the Iuy to the Oke so that breake the one and breake the other As the wife forsakes all and cleaues to her husband And this affiance causeth that sweet consent and naked obedience to the Word according to the Word and the extent thereof whereof read Esay 1.19 If ye consent and obey ye shall eate of the good things c. Consent looking at a promise and clozing with it as the seale with the waxe and it with the seale concurring therewith and beeing carryed in the streame of it against the motion of her owne rebelling heart as beeing ouercome and yeelding vp her weapons As Rebecca conuinced that the marriage was from God being called to speake answered I will go to Ishac And so followes obedience which hath a respect to a command of God nakedly considered in the promise of God As Abraham simply looked at the charge of killing Isac in the meere power of God Heb. 11.17 18 19. and so to the promise also of Isac not beholding Saras wombe See these two examples Luk. 5. of Peter and Luk. 6. of the Centurion I haue fished all night yet at thy Word Lord I will let downe And Say the word Lord and I beleeue Luc. 7.7 So the poore soule sayth LORD in my selfe I see little why I should thinke thy Word to concerne mee but seeing thou wilt haue it so I come in and kisse the Sonne submit to beleeue and put my selfe vnder the authority of thy promise Q. What is the last act of the soule about a promise A. The last differs not from the former saue in degree and it is the cleauing to a promise when there is strong vnlikelyhood presented to the soule eyther from the Lords leauing it to her selfe or in temptation or in deepe sence of vnworthinesse feare c. Then shee labours to cling to the promise by pleading it secretly as wee see in that rare example of the Woman of Canaan who was content to be put off by silence denyall yea taunts and although shee was called a Dogge yet she held close to the Word that Christ was the Son of Dauid A true Dog and happy in this that shee would not bee beaten off Therefore our Sauiour sayd She was of great faith Like to which was that of Iehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20.9 when those enemies beset him and the City he gat vnto God in the promise made to Salomon in 1. King 8.17 Oh Lord Thou saydst If when our enemies besiege vs round about wee come and pray in this place thou wilt looke downe and haue mercy Oh Lord looke now heere they are our eyes are vpon thee By which plea of an old promise yet as fresh as at first he preuailed Let vs do so in our streights with the promise of free reconciliation Q. Well what vse make yee of _____ Doctrine A. Manifold First confutation of those desperate enemies of a promise the Papists They say to cleaue to a promise by fayth with cleauing to it for saluation is a Doctrine of presumption But we answer that as their Doctrine of iustification is the true Doctrine of presumption of their owne works so their Doctrine of fayth is a meere Idoll and fancy They adde we must haue reuelations before we come to Assurance Wee answere it is true for although wee abhorre their fantasticall ones yet wee grant Reuelation of a promise is the true obiect of faith And because as in all other so in this point they crosse themselues I will conuince them by their owne words In the point of Transubstantiation they being put hard to it answere thus I will translate their words In their adored Sacrament of the Altar it is meet that the edge of all carnall reason bee blunted and that the wisdome of the flesh beeing banished wee hold our selues close to the Word Their meaning is Hoc est corpus meum But oh yee hypocrites Is the word so precious vnto ye yea a word which no body grants ye to be Gods but by imposture it becomes your owne that yee bid vs looke all reason in the Word and when we teach the Word must be of like vse in all doubts of conscience and Religion doe yee then eate your owne speeches What knot can hold a Pro●eus Secondly instruction to all that haue beleeued the promise Vse 2 of Grace once and seen cause to cleaue to it nakedly to vse the same method in recouery out of their particular falles Men seeme heere to forget themselues They confesse in their conuersion they must come empty-handed to God But in their recouery out of their sins they thinke they must first repent and then beleeue But if ye will be wise as yee vse the Lord at first so vse him after and hauing sinned let mercy first breake your hearts and
remember that Iesus Christ Hob. 13.8 is yesterday and to day and the fame in the order of his grace for euer Otherwise the sodering with the Lord shall cause ye much sorrow and yet you must come backe this way when all is done Thirdly let this be admonition to all poore soules or others Vse 3 who would obteine this grace to rely vpon the promise of the Gospell to pardon and peace both abhor all let of this grace and vse all meanes to get it The first among other lets let these be auoyded first take heed of resting in deuout complaints of the want of fayth For although there is an holy complayning of Gods people as we see Esay 63.15 where the Church laments her hard heart in the Lords bosome asking Where are thy bowels c yet sure it is the common trade of complaynts come from a corrupt heart of ease loth to be informed and searched to the quicke Good complaynts made in season to such as can ease vs from the depth of a broken heart is a great friend to faith but counterfeict complaynts are the greatest lets thereof Therefore in stead of our compaints let vs do as Ester did at Mordecai his request Mourne sayth he and spare not but rest not there in any conditions of fayth Rest not in the handmayd but goe to the Lord and his promise to end the question And so did Ester Ester 4.16 5● she complayned of her weaknes but rested not in that but went to the King saying If I perish I perish and so found the Golden Scepter held out to her The second let is Take heed of Sloth and ease when the Lord hath brought thee within sight of his promise consult not with sloth which slayes the soule but looke vp to the Lord for assisting grace to hold on the vse of meanes and so to finish his worke Thus Gedion hauing begun to pursue Zeba and Zalmunna would not stoppe his course nor the worke of GOD by reuenging them of Succoth and Penuel Iudg. 8 7. but first dispatcht one thing and then returned to the other Most wise in this was Eliezer when the question was about his stay for Rebecca ten dayes No sayth hee seeing the Lord hath prospered me Gen. 24.56 hinder me not And so preue●ting danger of delay carried her away with him instantly So the merchant in the purchase of the pearle If in any good thing then aboue all in this dallying is dangerous The Apostle 2. Cor. 6.2 hauing pressed the receyuing of the offer dwels vpon this for hee sayth This is the accepted time and day of Saluation It is the diuels Maygame to see men make shipwracke in the Hauen Doe not by a lazy heart with the Lord Act. 24.25 as Felix did with Paul speaking of the iudgement day put him to another time which neuer came Few there be but haue their season from God take heed of dallying with it lest God deny it or an heart when thou perhaps wouldst haue thy heart neuer so open Our nature is to seeke grace most when its most out of season But that is Gods season to deny Mat. 25.9 Pro. 1.28 Q. Are there any more lets in this vse of admonition A. Yea the third is ouermuch filling of our hands with the delights of this earth as lawfull liberties pleasures wealth credit Farmes Oxen Wife posterity These are as the Sea-eatings of the banks downe and destroying all See Luke 14.18 It is as if a man a drowning should hold his gold so fast that hee cannot take hold of a pole to saue his life or as if ones hand coud not receiue a pearle being full of nut-shels Come to fasten vpon the promise empty-headed hearted and handed Oh that the deuill did not bleare mens eyes with this vnder the colour of lawfulnesse What although yee might win the world if ye lose your soules They may be lost aswell by winning it in an excesse of liberty as against conscience If ye haue shot the gulfe take heed ye be not drownd in a shallow Obserue thy selfe and thou shalt finde that when thou goest from an eager pursuit of thy beloued vanities for so are liberties if abuzed as all the wotd is vnsauory so especially the promise of Reconciliation If thou wilt sauor that well let all other Phil. 3.18 euen the best blessings be as drosse to it Q. What else A. Especially take heed lest a worse thing Heb. 12.15 euen a roote of bitternesse spring not vp to defile thee Goe not to the doctrine of Reconciliation with a surfet of any priuy lust which thou wouldst not gladly know and forgoe for the promise For this will so defile thee that whatsoeuer commeth in the way thereof will be defiled Read Ioh. 3.19 in the end They hated light because their workes were euill they would not be rid of them Nothing marres Gods bargaine so much as the presage that it will cut off our lusts You that read this in Gods feare weigh it In my poore experience I haue seene this euill that many professors some by a peeuish spitefull preiudicate heart to be won by no meanes others by the pride in gifts selfeloue others their vncleane dallyings loosenesse in company others and the most by the thorne of couetuousnesse haue choked most fayre hopes of fayth but these haue kept the heart in warping One such gourd to the pottage one such dead fly in the oyntment marres all The diuell can with one lust chase away ten graces So it is when the heart is enclined to bee vaine in talke curious in toyes and fashions but aboue all when it is surfeited with hollownesse and vses it selfe to speake or doe as Balaam did Num. 23. who would beare himselfe out to make conscience but in al● a rotten heart followed him to his ruine This bitter roote is discerned two-waies First when its naturallest of all vices as we know Twichgrasse and May-weede will ouergrow the soyle that is giuen to it Secondly the oft returne of the same sinne after the seeming departure of it Read and ponder that of the end of him whom the vncleane spirit cast out once returned to with seuen times more strength and looke vp to God against it Q. Is there any more A. The last at the least which I will touch is vnwillingnesse to submit to Gods way of beleeuing I discourage none but warne onely Men looke God should wayt vpon vs and fill vs with goodnesse while wee are ydle if our hearts can be in frame and as we would God shall haue our good word but we are loth to bee too farre downe But learne to know the Lords way and yeeld humbly to it in vse of meanes and be not our owne caruers Those that saile vpon the Sea are vp in the cloudes and downe in the depths suddenly Get an heart to trade with the Lord according to his way And as it is fearefull to be alway dead and not
by faith in me Note the phrase Iustification is much ascribed to faith As Act. 13.38 Rom. 5.1 Rom. 3.25 but heere sanctification also So Act. 15. Hauing purified their hearts by faith 1. Pet. 1.22 And Saint Peter Hauing purified your harts by faith to the obedience of the Gospell Yea the Apostle Paul Ephes 1.13 seems to make faith to bee the instrument of the spirit sealing the soule After ye had beleeued ye were sealed by the spirit of promise faith attending the Spirit in beleeuing the promise it selfe doth further attend also the seale of it and applies both to the soule The reason is because although the seale is aboue a word yet it 's by a word and with it and not else Q But here it a great scruple how faith should be the apprehender of both these at once viz forgiuenesse of sinne and renuing of the soule For who sees not how wide a difference there is betweene receauing a thing without vs as imputation of righteousnesse and a thing really inherent in our natures as the image of God and renouation A. I grant the point needeth due consideration yet as the Lord shall guide me I will endeauour to answer it And seeing the truth hereof is as cleere in the Scrip●ure as any one therefore the manner thereof wil the better be found out To this end note that faith being the instrument of the spirit in both the acts of regeneration I meane reconciling and renuing doth of necessity attend the worke of the spirit in both If then it be true which I sayd that the spirit reades a lecture of the Couenant to the Soule according to the whole purpose thereof then needes must faith do likewise euen follow the direction of the spirit in applying them equally to her selfe for faith is as the eye of the handmaid to the Mistres that is do that which the spirit suggesteth and takes all which the Lord offers her euen the Lord Iesus at once and wholly If the spirit say take Christ both for pardon and sanctification lo it takes him for both together of the former there is no doubt Let vs see for the latter Eph. 1.18 the Apostle prayes that the eyes of the mindes being enlightned by faith they might ver 19 20. see the exceeding powerfull and mighty worke of the Lord Iesus in them that beleeue that is wha● hee can doe by the power of his death and resurrection So in Eph. 3. end he praies that they might haue Christ dwel in their harts by faith that so they might comprehend his length and depth that is take him as hee is to the soule and haue the knowledge of him that passeth all knowledge beeing filled with his fulnesse So that faith takes the Lord Iesus in his fulnesse that shee might bee compleate in him both for mercy and sanctification So if we looke Ioh. 17. vlt. As thou O Father art in mee and I in thee so thy loue may be in them and I in them Marke Christ is not onely offred to the elect to be for them in pardon but to be in them to dwell to rule to comand to exercise power ouercorruption and for gouernment to bee as a soule in the body to act guide and beare sway in them as the branches in the vine out of which they wither so that the promise offers Christ both for vnion of reconciliation and also Communion and influence of grace In both which she takes him for he is not diuided a pearle is little worth being broken Now then looke how the hand of the Prophet was vpon the Kings in shoo●ing so is the hand of the Spirit vpon the soule in beleeuing and as the hand of the writer vpon the learner to frame it his way so is the spirit vpon faiths hand And as the wax takes all the who●e print of the seale so doth faith of the promise by the hand of the spirit So that although its certaine that nothing is more vnlike than the things themselues which faith applies in the manner of apllication the one taking a grace onely imputed and resting onely in the act of God casting forgiuenesse vpon the soule without any addition of inherent goodnesse to it the other taking Christ as infused and dwelling in the powers of the soule yet this puts no difference vpon the apprehension of faith seeing with one hand and one act both the Lord offers them the Spirit ioynes them the soule beleeues them The spirit is that which doth order these two benefits and settles them vpon the soule and in the soule but faith with one hand and act doth receiue them according to the seuerall vse and seruice as the spirit pleases to apply them It pleases the law to conveigh a Copy-hold by Court roll and a free hold by other conveyance of writing seale deliuery and possession but the same hand takes the copy and receaues the liuery and season So heere Q. What doth faith in the application of this Gift of Reneuation or the new creature A. Two things It workes the heart to be renued by an argumentation See 2. Cor. 5.14 For the loue of Christ constraineth vs because wee thus iudge c. Marke faith iudges the matter aright and passes a sound verduict vpon it If Christ haue so loued vs how should our soules earne toward him in all conformity to his blessed nature faith is in this as in all other respects a deepe Logician shee argues for God strongly shee brings euidence vnanswerable for him that as a she carries about her the marke of a diuine cause beeing the most Divine worke of God that ever hee did since the Creation above all the gifts of Adam and ayming at a better end so she carryes also strong reason to move the soule to bee like to her workeman and to resemble his holy nature The word constreine vs signifies such an hemming in as of the beast in a Pound or Pinfold that is put into it and c●nnot get out by any euasion so doth faith controll the heart that it cannot wind out must needs yeeld to bee as hee who hath imputed his righteousnesse to forgiue her that is righteous and holy The very savour and instinct of faith tends to holinesse she serves to abandon nature to set vp holines in the soule As she settles an imputed holinesse to iustifie from Christ so she cannot rest till she her selfe partake it within Such things as are alway lying among sweets cannot chuse but resemble and sauour thereof Faith comes from the divine breath of God and is his gift therefore cannot degenerate but as riuers flow from the sea and runne thither so doth faith come from God and returnes to him shee sins not till shee haue so pleaded for God that she haue drawne the heart to sauor him in his holinesse And secondly by infusion She is the Tunnel of the spirit to convey the renuing of the holy Ghost into the soule As the hand of the workman
daily to the shaming purging out and consuming of these lusts Gal. 5.24 Bring them as the heifer in sacrifice to the hornes of the altar and binde them thereto that they breake not loose And call vpon the Lord for his spirit that the arrowes of the Almighty may be in vs and the power of Christs death might be as venom to giue these lusts the deadly blow and bane and to drinke vp the sin of these affections in vs Let it seriously smite our hearts and let our affections take reuenge vpon vs forth Corruption of our affections Let vs not excuse our selues for our nature for that defends a lesser sinne by a greater for what can be more wofull then when sinne by custome hath hardned vs to a nature Remember wee how hideous effects these wild beastes haue wrought in our liues I say our wealth our inordinate loue our mirth our sorrow feare and indignation How might Dauid with sorrow haue recorded his distemper against innocent Mephibosheth 2 Sam. 19.29 Hezekiah his great ioy and iollity in the comming of those Embassadors Esay 39.2 and the truth is the greatest woe and repentance which euer betided vs in our life may well be fathered vpon our passions Some bringing themselues by them to needles suits of Law pursuits of enemies losse of their estates fines imprisonments a brand of reproach among men as not to be liued with and if not so yet a continuall bondage of spirit and vnfitnesse to any good either to calling prayer bearing of our crosses or family and marriage duties and all by our inordinate passions Fourthly let vs apply the merit and looke at the example of the Lord Iesus in all the whole conuersation of his affections how holy was his zeale against those defilers of the Temple Mat. 21.12 his loue to that young mans forwardnesse Mat. 23.13 hatred of those hipocrites the Scribes and Pharisees sorrow for our sinnes in the garden cheerefulnesse in conuerse withall sorts to winne theme weeping for Lazarus pity to the poore widdowes dead only sonne Luk. 7.13 Oh! the sauor of his example and merit of his affections who as hee abhorred all stupor of heart so neuer faulted in the euennes temper measure of them either in the defect or excesse should rauish vs and excite vs if true members to purchase the like we should euen conceiue holy heate of spirit before these rods Fifthly when we haue got these good affections learne wee to take a due marke of the right obiects of our affections and that will shame vs when by loosing or mistaking our right marke we doe fasten them basely and indirectly Our anger is to good to be set vpon carnall reuenge it will serue to be imployed about Gods dishonour Ephes 4.26 our loue is too good for base lusts mony and pleasures Psa 118.1 it is made for the Lord and for his Saints Psal 16.2 Our hope of a vaine Paradise heere is better set vpon heauen 1 Cor. 15.19 and so might I say of our sorrow that it best befits sinne our owne and the times If we would thus direct our affections they would start backe when other obiects lay clayme to them Lastly let our maine direction be to get our soules settled in peace in the sweete assurance of our Reconciliation with God and that we know the worst that can befall vs that no sinne sorrow or en●my can depriue vs of that crowne and this peace will calme vs and rule our spirits that neither feare nor hope shall much vnsettle vs but we shall possesse our soules in patience in the midst of all distempers As a wicked heart casts vp mire and dirt like the Sea so the affections of the godly are calme and quiet and the wheele of the Conuersation goes on in a most wel ordered manner And so much for these Q. What rules giue you for the third of actions A. Herein wee can giue no particuler rules because they are infinite but bring the generall rules to particular and incident occasions Therefore for the ordering of this conuersation let those foure vsuall golden rules direct vs that wee as neere as we can look to first our grounds secondly to the due manner Thirdly the true measure fourthly the right ends of our actions Touching which the lesse may serue because they trench vpon some former rules Q. Touching the first what is it to be grounded A. To be sure we haue a word to shew for our warrant either in doing or not doing or suspending for although the action may proue bad in the form which is good in the nature of it yet that which is bad in the ground and nature cannot be possibly well done For without knowledge the heart is naught Pro. 19.2 2 Pet. 1.19 Now the word will passe censure vpon it either directly or by consequent and therefore we must attend to this light especially in darke places And if wee cannot informe our selues alone through ignorance we must make it a booke case and aduise by all meanes with other for truth lyes deepe sometimes This is a maine ground and is exceedingly transgressed I wil not here insist vpon them as go against light because the godly abhorre it while they are themselues but euen of them many sorts faile 1. Some wil do many things vpon custome and taking your grounds for granted when yet they haue none These are to be informed that they may know themselues to do well as well as do that which is good without thank 2. Others do many things in the twi-light hit they misse they not vpon assured ground not considering that as well that which is done without faith is sin as that which is against it 3. Many take vp grounds onely in their generality and faile in the particular determining of the generall to their occasion and so sometime exceed sometime limit the word whereas they should go according to the word closely in the extent of it Thus many limit the 2. commandement to grosse idolatry of Pagans securely go on in your own idolatry wil-worship as the Papists Others take their own preiudice deuotion good meanings to be good grounds as blind people And lastly others corrupt the ground by false glosses these sundry waies 1. By adulterating the word both of rule and example in scripture and making it sound as they list This is to crooke the rule and then work by it thus those Pharisees 2. By corrupt error of mens traditions as in 1 Pet. 1.18 receaued from the father alledging Vox populi vox Dei but it is not a common cry can ground an action 2. By Satans cunning and dice-play as he dealt with Eue ye shall not dye Gen. 3.4 Thirdly the imposture of our owne hearts easily beleeuing it lawfull which we eagerly desire and so bribing the iudgement to giue in a false verduict to deceiue vs as the messenger that went for Micaia 1 King 22. and as a bribed iudge will
Maintaine and hold this right and Title of thine Thinke not that this Spirit of Grace and Supplication is spent though thou see not God so clearely in it for all ends as thou desirest yet giue it not ouer thy sinne hath bound thee in cheynes but Prayer is not bound rather it bindeth the Lord by promise to thee The eare of God is not heauy that hee should not heare Hee is not as a man that he should be distracted by multitude of praying Suppliants at once a thousand to him are as one and one as a thousand Beware of Atheisme in this kinde Secondly Goe in the Lord Iesus by a promise hauing thy wants in a readinesse and thy faith on wing let not thy course in praying issue from a formall platforme though I iudge not any man for reading a prayer but a liuely feeling and humble pinching of soule for thy Necessities Thirdly shake off all extremities of a corrupt heart by faith which must hold thine eye fixed upon thy Mediator by his Spirit vpholding thy faintnesse and groning within thee against all thy presumptions commonnesse dulnesse deadnesse coldnesse and beseech the Lord to stirre thee vp to pray as he shall suggest vnto thee by the present occasion well digested either for the Church others or thy selfe Tye thy selfe to no punctualnesse but as the holy men in Scriptures have done so let confession sometimes goe before or follow prayer and either of both thankesgiuing Come not to the Lord with either an heart moyling and lowring with discontent without faith or bold and ventrous without humiliation but let both haue their due weight If thou wouldest be heauenly in prayer first abase thy selfe as a worme dust and ashes yea as Master Bradford hell and the sinke-hole before the Lord who is heauen and holinesse if the Lord haue any speciall draught for thy net he will put thee out of conceit with thy owne Art and thy selfe as Peter was when hee had toiled all night and catcht nothing Emptinesse is the onely raiser of our minds in prayer Oh! how hard is it to get and then secondly by faith be quickned to wait for 〈◊〉 ●nswer these two will fill thee with heauenly affections and rid thee of thine owne inuentions manner and ends Fourthly Adde these meet qualities of Prayer viz. fervent importunity as one whom God cannot bee rid of till thou speed and frequency as hauing sped well already If in prayer thou finde little stirring know it is not because Prayer is not Gods Ordinance but he would try whether forme and the worke done bee not aboue spirit and faith in thee if they be not persist and goe against the edge of thy owne deadnesse resting in that measure gladly which the Lord sees best for in this case thou wilt pray oftnest as 2 Cor. 12.10 Fifthly and aboue all come not to pray with any tainted knowne sin I say not onely grosse but euen secret and close through a lazy heart loth to cast them off or a loose heart louing them better than the things thou prayest for lest the Lord iustly leaue thee to be wearisome to him and thy selfe Cast out thy wrath and earth and disdaine and censures and vncharitablenesse yea let thy praying awe thee against them ere thou pray that it may arme thee when thou hast done Til prayer become thy familiar friend bring thee into acquaintance with God for a supply of wants pardon of daily sinnes helpe for all duties of conuersation And so looking vp to thine Aduocate for a couering of thy weakenesse this duty shall be a speciall helpe to godlinesse vnto thee Touching the Lords Prayer I send my Reader to the speciall Treatises thereof Q. Adde somewhat of meditation and leaue the rest A. Touching this Ordinance I may call it the high-way to all good conuersation yea I may say it 's as the smoke of the sacrifice in which the Angell Iudg. 13.20 went up to heauen in I set it not aboue prayer but magnifie it to set an edge vpon people who will not know it And surely if that be an helpe to God which both takes away lets and both in the act and effects of it is so admirable iudge what an helpe meditation is Tell mee then first what are the cheefe lets to grace in them who otherwise want not knowledge Surely either giddinesse of mind or vnsavourinesse of spirit The former like a sieve out of the water loseth all it gets suffers nothing either truths heard or workes seene to abide long in the heart But Meditation settles them in the Spirit that they leake not out Heb. 2.1 Thus the life of a thousand Sermons of mercies and occasions is preserued In stead of the latter it seasons the heart with the sap the life the savour of good things They are not heaps upon heaps leauing vs a thirst but we drink of them digest them and make our soules merry with them Euen as an enuious man so long chewes the cud of his malice in his bed till hee haue het his heart and deuised reuenge so is meditation a reall grace on the contrary and whetteth vpon the promises and works of God till it be fired with the love of them Againe it makes the meaning view scope and order both of particular doctrines and the whole frame of Religion to become our owne And lastly wee come hereby to the ease of practice the fruit hereof Experience so that if once we haue found crosses to doe vs good wee feare not when new ones approach if wee haue felt the gaine of a Sabbath we get a delight therein in a word whatsoeuer is easie it becomes sweete and therefore if this be worth somewhat to find the yoke of God easie and his burthen light as to say the truth it is the vpshot of goodnesse well may wee then say Meditation is a diuine helpe to a good course Oh! how it s to bee lamented that men know it not they get no matter to chew vpon they seperate not themselues to it thinking they may meditate while they ●e at worke they doe not curbe their wild and wandring hearts from other obiects and so this piece of Gods Worship is irkesome vnto them Thus much for a tast of some of the priuate Q. But are the extraordinary helpes so too A. There need be the lesse question of that because as their nature is more solemne so is their vse if they be attended accordingly And first that of Fasting Of which I say this that if wee esteeme that receit aboue all which doth cure a disease that no other medicine could then surely fasting deserues account Our Sauiour tels vs This kinde of Diuels goeth not out Mar. 9.29 saue by fasting and prayer that is all the ordinances of God are effectuall but this aboue all for this end Wherefore briefely whither we bring the Churches or our owne cases either sinnes or sorrowes before the Lord to be done away Let vs first arme
cannot rob it of the truth of grace yet he robs it of the comfort thereof chusing to play at any game rather than sit out For the former of these what is the ioy of a deere seruant of God in his poore obedience duties Sabbaths but that of Hezekiah O Lord thou knowest I haue been vpright This the Deuill hides away from the soule as the point of comfort by it as if it were little worth for lack of measure And then whereas the want of measure integrity fruitfulnesse and constancy should onely humble them lo it deiects them Oh say they what good doe I what serue I for a very clod of the earth what wife husband friend neighbor or stranger fares the better for me None liue so as I so barren Oh put case it be true it should abase thee but seeing there is vprightnesse it should not dismay thee And looke what the poore Christian doth most note by himselfe to be amisse that Satan takes for granted to doe the soule most hurt by Lo these sins thou confessest therefore of thy owne mouth God may condemne thee No wofull enemy for hee that confesses and forsakes them all and would be as fruitfull as he is honest as wise as he is vpright shall not be cast off Oh! the wofull bordage that Satan holds vnder many a sad heart though sincere by melancholy and feare Q. And how doth he tempt against obedience A. Sundry wayes hee labours to bring the soule vnder sin to renounce a good course to be slacke remisse loose common prophane vnprofitable euen by consent And this is his most naturall temptation For as he is exceedingly wicked so its little to him that comfort be stopped except the conscience be wasted now that he knowes sinne against knowledge will doe and hereby bring God against a man also As Balaam Numb 31.16 seeing Sorcery could not curse Israel sought to lay blocks of sinne before them that God might curse them Oh! What a May-game was it thinke we for him to see Dauid foyled by Adultery Noah by drunkennesse Lot by incest Hezekia by pride Peter by reuolt How doth such successe put hopes into him to keepe and practise his Trade vpon the best Therefore here hee vses all meanes to bring his purposes to passe He takes vantage of each thing First He markes his season and time when the heart is most at ease as Absalom noted Amnon lying most open and being garnisht which perhaps another time would haue beene armed iealous and fearefull Thus Dauid in Bathsheba Hee concurres not onely with the corruption of the heart as before but secondly with the constitution and complexion of the spirit of nature in a man Is he propense to lust to vncleannesse to iouialnesse to ambition Oh saith he hee is mine I will tempt him with meet baits Thirdly Hee watches the accomodation of occasions as when excesse of cheerefulnesse or of sadnesse of praises or disgraces of welfare and successe or defeat or the like and when the spirits are open then is his opportunity to worke the heart ro wanton speech to riot to wrath and discontent to swelling pride to ostentation of gifts to the making away of a mans selfe and the like Fourthly Hee will make vse of their best Graces and Priuileges all men know you well enough to be one that make conscience you may doe such or such a thing and no man suspect ye therefore be not so nice in trifles defeat an Orphan oppresse the fatherlesse falsifie the trust reposed in ye c. Fifthly Sometime of secrecie of time and place who shall euer find it out who is here twenty mile from neighbours to discouer thee Sixthly By fine colours of pretensed meanings as Ananias and Sapphira meant well to the Church why might they not meane well to themselues So by colour of iustice my paines haue beene such and such in businesse for others why may not I pay my selfe so and so they being neuer the wiser and perhaps neuer the worse as the case may stand As once a wretch spake of mony giuen him for the poore Who is poorer than my selfe Seuenthly By their falls to driue them to sinne for somewhat rather than to be punished for a little ouer shooes ouer knees So by comparing themselues with worse than themselues to be bold and presumptuous in liberty-taking By the oft shunning of sinfull occasions to venture beyond their calling and so be snared Nay by truths of God both in examples of the Saints falles why maiest not thou doe so and repent and in rules that the best men haue their infirmities and therefore why should I be free Infinite is this field let the rest of the sheaues be brought to these bandes but if he can so dazle the heart till he haue snared vs he will be content we shall afterward see in what pickle we are get out how we can These for a taste although I might say that his oppressing the soule being thus fallen that it might not rise againe withholding the sight of mercy encreasing either stupor of conscience our slauery of distrust and so wheeling off the soule till death is worse than the former But I cease Q. What is the third let can the world let vs also A. Yea most dangerously and that by defiling the minds the wils and courses of men both in doctrine and manners See Ephes 4 14. Rom. 12.2 1 Ioh. 2.16 And againe 1 Ioh. 5.19 lyeth in euill as in the sequell shall appeare Q. But how can this be shew it plainely .. A. It both containeth in it all euill and setteth it forth and is it selfe set on fire by the Deuill who is the Chap-man of it to set the glosse vpon them and to vend the wares of it For the first of which see that in Iohn All that is in world is the lust of heart lust of the eye pride of life He speakes of these not onely as the appetites of bad men but as worldly obiects This Ware then being the worlds Merchandize and Staple no wonder if shee defile For the second Shee is carefull not onely to keepe in her Ware-house but to lay forth vpon the open stall and set out to sale these Wares in the most busie manner that can bee No Market or Fare no company or meeting no family or place of resort but sauouring these commodities eyes gazing feet walking hands reaching after tongues iangling members of body and powers of soule attending and acting this Merchandize and therefore Saint Iohn saith The world lyeth in euill saped in the Conuersation of it For the third The Deuill the god of this world and Lord of this Staple and Common-wealth to whose banke and Exchequer all this Custome and Tribute goes I meane hell is not wanting both to suppresse all meanes which might marre this Market of mischiefe and is at hand to vnite to acquaint to accomodate these wares to all Customers as their minde most stands to one more than