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A26919 The divine life in three treatises ... by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1664 (1664) Wing B1254; ESTC R3168 316,514 416

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remember Where it is that he is to be fully and perpetually enjoyed and then it is good for thee that thou wast afflicted for all thy sufferings have their end This last Consideration will be further prosecuted in the following Part And the Directions for Walking with God which I should here give you I have reserved for a peculiar Treatise intitled A Christian Directory THE CHRISTIANS Converse with God OR The Insufficiency and Uncertainty OF HUMANE FRIENDSHIP AND THE Improvement of Solitude IN Converse with God With some of the Authors breathings after him By RICHARD BAXTER LONDON Printed for Francis Tyton at the three Daggers in Fleet-street and Nevil Simmons Bookseller in Kederminster 1664. THE CONTENTS THe Context opened p. 298 Why Christ was forsaken by his Disciples p. 300 Use 1. Expect by the forsaking of your friends to be conformed unto Christ Reasons for your Expectation p. 302 The Aggravations of their forsaking you p. 313 Some quieting Considerations p. 315 The order of forms in the School of Christ. p. 322 The Disciples scattered every man to his own p. 324 Selfishness contrary to friendly fidelity p. 325 Considerations to quiet us in the death of faithful friends p. 326 Whether we shall know them in Heaven p. 331 Whether creatures be any matter of our Comfort in Heaven p. 332 Quest. Shall I have any more comfort in present friends than in others p. 334 Doct. 3. When all forsake us and leave us as to them alone we are far from being simply alone because God is with us p. 336 The Advantages of having God with us ibid. Quest. How he is with us p. 337 Use 1. Imitate Christ Live upon God alone though men forsake you yet thrust not your selves into Solitude uncalled p. 341 In what cases Solitude is lawful and good p. 342 Reasons against unnecessary Solitude p. 343 The comfort of Converse with God in necessary Solitude The Benefits of Solitude The Reasons from God Improved largely in some Meditations p. 347 351 Directions for conversing with God in Solitude p. 370 Concluded in further Meditation p. 375 A Caution p. 378 Joh. 16. 32. Behold the hour cometh yea is come that ye shall be scattered every man to his own and shall leave me alone And yet I am not alone because the Father is with me HAving treated of our Conformity to Christ in sufferings in General I since came distinctly to treat of his particular sufferings in which we must be conformed to him And having gone over many of those particulars I am this day to handle the instance of Christs being forsaken by his friends and followers He thought meet to foretell them how they should manifest their infirmity and untrustiness in this temporary forsaking of him that so he might fullyer convince them that he knew what was in man and that he knew future contingencies or things to come which seem most dependent on the will of man and that he voluntarily submitted to his deserted state and expected no support from creatures but that man should then do least for Christ when Christ was doing most for man that man by an unthankful forsaking Christ should then manifest his forsaken deplorate state when Christ was to make atonement for his Reconciliation to God and was preparing the most costly remedy for his recovery He foretold them of the fruit which their infirmity would produce to humble them that were apt to think too highly of themselves for the late free confession they had made of Christ when they had newly said Now we are sure that thou knowest all things by this we are sure that thou comest forth from God ver 30 He answereth them Do ye now believe Behold the hour cometh c. Not that Christ would not have his servants know his graces in them but he would also have them know the corruption that is latent and the infirmity consistent with their grace We are very apt to judge of all that is in us and of all that we shall do hereafter by what we feel at the present upon our hearts As when we feel the stirring of some corruption we are apt to think that there is nothing else and hardly perceive the contrary grace and are apt to think it will never be better with us so when we feel the exercise of faith desire or love we are apt to overlook the contrary corruptions and to think that we shall never feel them more But Christ would keep us both humble and vigilant by acquainting us with the mutability and unconstancy of our minds When it goes well with us we forget that the time is coming when it may go worse As Christ said to his Disciples here in the case of Believing we may say to our selves in that and other cases Do we now Believe It is well but the time may be coming in which we may be brought to shake with the stirrings of our remaining unbelief and shrewdly tempted to question the truth of Christianity it self and of the holy Scriptures and of the life to come Do we now rejoyce in the perswasions of the Love of God The time may be coming when we may think our selves forsaken and undone and think he will esteem and use us as his enemies Do we now pray with ferveur and pour out our souls enlargedly to God It is well but the time may be coming when we shall seem to be as dumb and prayerless and say we cannot pray or else we find no audience and acceptance of our prayers Christ knoweth that in us which we little know by our selves and therefore may foreknow that we will commit such sins or fall into such dangers as we little fear What Christ here prophesieth to them did afterwards all come to pass As soon as ever danger and trouble did appear they began to flag and to shew how ill they could adhere unto him or suffer with him without his special corroborating grace In the garden when he was sweating blood in prayer they were sleeping Though the spirit was willing the flesh was weak They could not watch with him one hour Matth. 26 40 41. When he was apprehended they shifted each man for himself Matth. 26. 56. Then all the Disciples forsook him and fled And as this is said to be that the Scriptures might be fulfilled Matth. 26. 54 56. so it might be said to be that this prediction of Christ himself might be fulfilled Not that Scripture Prophesies did cause the sin by which they were fulfilled nor that God caused the sin to fulfill his own predictions but that God cannot be deceived who foretold in Scriptures long before that thus it would come to pass when it is said that thus it must be that the Scripture may be fulfilled the meaning is not that thus God will make it be or thus he causeth men to do that he may fulfill the Scriptures It is not necessitas consequentis vel causata that is inferred from predictions but only
and therefore it is here that we have the loudest call and best assistance to make a large return of Love And where there is the most of this Love between God and man there is most Communion and most of Heaven that can be had on Earth But it much concerneth the members of Christ that they deprive not themselves of this Communion with God in this Holy Sacrament through their miscarriage which is too frequently done by one of these extreams Either by rushing upon holy things with a presumptuous careless common frame of heart as if they knew not that they go to feast with Christ and discerned not his body or else by an excess of fear drawing back and questioning the good will of God and thinking diminutively of his love and mercy By this means Satan depriveth many of the comfortable part of their communion with God both in this Sacrament and in other waies of grace and maketh them avoid him as an enemy and be loth to come into his special presence and even to be afraid to think of him to pray to him or to have any holy converse with him When the just belief and observation of his Love would stablish them and revive their souls with joy and give them experience of the sweet delights which are opened to them in the Gospel and which believers finde in the Love of God and the foretast of the everlasting pleasures 4. In holy faithful servent Prayer a Christian hath very much of his converse with God For Prayer is our approach to God and calling to mind his presence and his attributes and exercising all his graces in a holy motion towards him and an exciting all the powers of our souls to seek him attend him reverently to worship him It is our treating with him about the most important businesses in all the world a be●ging of the greatest mercies and a deprecating his most grievous judgments and all this with the nearest familiarity that man in flesh can have with God In prayer the Spirit of God is working up our hearts unto him with desires exprest in sighs and groans It is a work of God as well as of man He bloweth the fire though it be our hearts that burn and boil In Prayer we lay hold on Jesus Christ and plead his merits and intercession with the Father He taketh us as it wereby the hand and leadeth us unto God and hideth our sins and procureth our acceptance and presenteth us amiable to his Father having justified and sanctified us and cleansed us from those pollutions which rendered us loathsome and abominable To speak to God in serious prayer is a work so high and of so great moment that it calleth off our minds from all things else and giveth no creature room or leave to look into the soul or once to be observed The mind is so taken up with God and employed with him that creatures are forgotten and we take no notice of them unless when through the diversions of the flesh our prayers are interrupted and corrupted and so far degenerate and are no prayer so far I say as we thus turn away from God So that the soul that is most and best at Prayer is most and best at walking with God and hath most communion with him in the Spirit And to withdraw from Prayer is to withdraw from God And to be unwilling to pray is to be unwilling to draw near to God Meditation or Contemplation is a duty in which God is much enjoyed But Prayer hath Meditation in it and much more All that is upon the mind in Meditation is upon the mind in Prayer and that with great advantage as being presented before God and pleaded with him and so animated by the apprehensions of his observing presence and actuated by the desires and pleadings of the soul. When we are commanded to Pray it includeth a command to Repent and Believe and Fear the Lord and Desire his Grace For Faith and Repentance and Fear and Desire are altogether in action in a serious prayer And as it were naturally each one takes his place and there is a holy order in the acting of these graces in a Christians prayers and a harmony which he doth seldome himself observe He that in Meditation knoweth not how to be regular and methodical when he is studiously contriving and endeavouring it yet in Prayer before he is aware hath Repentance and Faith and Fear and Desire and every grace fall in its proper place and order and contribute its part to the performance of the work The new nature of a Christian is more immediately and vigorously operative in Prayer than in many other duties And therefore every Infant in the family of God can pray with groaning desires and ordered graces if not with well-ordered words When Paul began to live to Christ he began aright to pray Behold he prayeth saith God to Ananias Act. 9. 11. And because they are Sons God sends the Spirit of his Son into the hearts of his Elect even the Spirit of Adoption by which they cry Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. as children naturally cry to their Parents for relief And Nature is more regular in its works than Art or humane contrivance is Necessity teacheth many a beggar to pray better for relief to men than many learned men that feel not their necessities can pray to God The Spirit of God is a better Methodist than we are And though I know that we are bound to use our utmost care and skill for the orderly actuating of each holy affection in our Prayers and not pretend the sufficiency of the Spirit for the patronage of our negligence or sloth for the Spirit makes use of our understandings for the actuating of our wills and affections yet withall it cannot be denied but that it was upon a special reason that the Spirit that is promised to Believers is called a Spirit of Grace and Supplication Zech. 12. 10. And that it is given us to help our infirmities even the infirmities of our understanding when we know not what to pray for as we ought Rom. 8. 26. And that the Spirit it self is said to make intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered It is not the Spirit without that is here meant such intercession is nowhere ascribed to that How then is the Prayer of the Spirit within us distinguished from our Prayer Not as different effects of different causes as different prayers by these different parties But as the same prayer proceeding from different causes having a special force for quality and degree as from one cause the Spirit which it hath not from the other cause from our selves except as received from the Spirit The Spirit is as a New Nature or fixed inclination in the Saints For their very self-love and will to good is sanctified in them which works so readily though voluntarily as that it is in a sort by the way of Nature though not excluding Reason and
Will and not as the motion of the brutish appetite And that God is their felicity and the only help and comfort of their souls and so the principal Good to be desired by them is become to them a truth so certain and beyond all doubt that their understandings are convinced that Velle Bonum Velle Deum to Love Good and to Love God are words that have almost the same signification and therefore here is no room for deliberation and choice where there is omnimoda ratio boni nothing but unquestionable good A Christian so far as he is such cannot chuse but desire the favour and fruition of God in immortality even as he cannot chuse because he is a man but desire his own felicity in general And as he cannot as a man but be unwilling of destruction and cannot but fear apparent misery and that which bringeth it so as a Christian he cannot chuse but be unwilling of damnation and of the wrath of God and of sin as sin and fear the apparent dangers of his soul so that his New Nature will presently cast his Fear and Repentance and Desires into their proper course and order and set them on work on their several objects about the main unquestionable things however they may erre or need more deliberation about things doubtful The New Creature is not as a lifeless Engine as a Clock or Watch or Ship where every part must be set in order by the art and hand of man and so kept and used But it is liker to the frame of our own nature even like man who is a living Engine when every part is set in its place and order by the Creatour and hath in it self a living and harmonical principle which disposeth it to action and to regular action and is so to be kept in order and daily exercise by our selves as yet to be principally ordered and actuated by the Spirit which is the principal cause By all which you may understand how the Holy Ghost is in us a spirit of Supplication and helpeth of our infirmities and teacheth us to pray and intercedeth in us and also that Prayer is to the New Man so natural a motion of the soul towards God that much of our walking with God is exercised in this holy duty And that it is to the New Life as breathing to our Natural Life and therefore no wonder that we are commanded to pray continually 1 These 5. 17. as we must breath continually or as nature which needeth a daily supply of food for nourishment hath a daily appetite to the food which it needeth so hath the Spiritual Nature to its necessary food and nothing but sickness doth take it off And thus I have shewed you how our walking with God containeth a holy use of his appointed means II. To walk with God includeth our Dependence on him for our Receivings and taking our Mercies as from his hand To live as upon his Love and Bounty as Children with their Father that can look for nothing but from him As the eye of a Servant yea of a craving Dog is upon his Masters face and hand so must our eye be on the Lord for the gracious supply of all our wants If men give us any thing we take them but as the Messengers of God by whom he sendeth it us We will not be unthankful unto men but we thank them but for bringing us our Fathers gifts Indeed man is so much more than a meer Messenger as that his own Charity also is exercised in the gift A meer Messenger is to do no more but obedientlly to deliver what is sent us and he need not exercise any Charity of his own and we owe him thanks only for his fidelity and labour but only to his Master for the gift But God will so far honour man as that he shall be called also to use his Charity and distribute his Masters gifts with some self-denial and we owe him thanks as under God he partaketh in the Charity of the Gift and as one childe oweth thanks to another who both in obedience to the Father and Love to his Brother doth give some part of that which his Father had given him before But still it is from our Fathers Bounty as the principal cause that all proceeds Thus Jacob speaketh of God Gen. 48. 15. God before whom my Fathers Abraham and Isaac did walk the God which fed mee all my life long unto this day the Angel which redeemed mee from all evil bless the Lads c. When he had mentioned his Father Abraham and Isaac's walking with God he describeth his own by his dependence upon God and receiving from him acknowledging him the God that had fed him and delivered him all his life Carnal men that live by sense do depend upon inferiour sensible causes and though they are taught to pray to God and thank him with their tongues it is indeed their own contrivances and industry or their visible benefactors which their hearts depend upon and thank It were a shame to them to be so plain as Pharaoh and to say Who is the Lord or to speak as openly as Nebuchadnezzar and say Is not this great Babylon that I have built by the might of my power c. D●n 4 30. Yet the same Atheism and Self-idolizing is in their hearts though it be more modestly and cunningly exprest Hence it is that they that walk with God have all their Receivings sanctified to them and have in all a Divine and spiritual sweetness which those that take them but as from Creatures do never feel or understand 12. Lastly it is contained in our Walking with God that the greatest business of our lives be with Him and for him It is not a walk for complement or recreation only that is here meant but it is a life of nearness converse and employment as a servant or child that dwelleth with his Master or Father in the house God should be alwayes so regarded that Man should stand by as Nothing and be scarce observed in comparison of Him We should begin the day with God and entertain Him in the first and sweetest of our thoughts we should walk abroad and do our work as in his sight we must resolve to do no work but His no not in our trades and ordinary callings we must be able to say It is the work which my Master set me to do and I do it to obey and please his Will At night we must take an account of our selves and spread open that account before him desiring his acceptance of what was well and his pardon for what we did amiss that we may thus be ready for our last account In a word though Men be our fellow-labourers and companions yet the principal business of our Care and Diligence must be our Masters service in the world And therefore we must look about us and discern the opportunities of serving him and of the best improvement of his
with that pardon particularized and applied to themselves But where the heart is not truly penitent and converted that person is not pardoned by the Gospel as being not in the Covenant or a child of promise and therefore the pardon of a Minister being upon mistake or t● an unqualified person can reach no further than to admit him into the esteem of men and to the Communion and outward priviledges of the Church which is a poor comfort to a soul that must lye in Hell But it can never admit him into the Kingdom of Heaven God indeed may approve the act of his Ministers if they go according to his rule and deal in Church administrations with those that make A CREDIBLE PROFESSION of FAITH and HOLINESSE as if they had true faith and holiness but yet he will not therefore make such Ministerial acts effectual to the saving of unbelieving or unholy souls Nay because I have found many sensual ungodly people inclining to turn Papists because with them they can have a quick and easie pardon of their sins by the Pope or by the Absolution of the Priest let me tell such that if they understand what they do even this cheat is too thin to quiet their defiled consciences For even the Papists School-doctors do conclude that when the Priest absolveth an impenitent sinner or one that is not qualified for pardon such a one is not loosed or pardoned in Heaven Leg. Martin de Ripalda exposit Liber Magist. li. 4. dist 18. p. 654 655. p. 663 664. dist 20. Aquin. Dist. 20. q 1. a. 5. Suar. Tom. 4. in 3. p. disp 52. Greg. Valent. Tom. 4. disp 7. q. 20. p. 5. Tolet. lib. 6. cap. 27 Navar. Notab 17. 18. Cordub de indulg li. 5. q. 23. they deny not the truth of those words of Origen Hom. 14. ad cap. 24. Levit. Exit quis à fide perexit de castris Ecclesiae etiamsi Episcopi Voce non abjiciatur sicut contru interdum fit ut aliquis non recto judicio eorum qui praesunt Ecclesiae for as mittatur sed si non egit ut mereretur exire nihil laeditur interdum enim quod for as mittitur intus est qui foris est intus videtur retineri And what he saith of Excommunication is true of Absolution An erring Key doth neither lock out of Heaven nor let into Heaven A Godly Believer shall be saved though the Priest condemn him and an unbeliever or ungodly person shall be condemned by God though he be absolved by the Priest Nay if you have not walked with God in the spirit but walked after the flesh though your repentance should be sound and true at the last it will yet very hardly serve to comfort you though it may serve to your salvation because you will very hardly get any assurance that it is sincere It is dangerous lest it should prove but the effect of fear which will not save when it cometh not till death do fright you to it As Augustine saith Nullus expectet quando peccare non potest arbitrii enim libertatem quaerit Deus ut deleri possint commissa non necessitatem sed charitatem non tantum timorem quia non in solo timore vivit homo Therefore the same Augustine saith Siquis positus in ultima necessitate voluerit accipere poenitentiam accipit fateor vobis non illi negamus quod petit sed non praesumimus quod bene hinc exit si securus hinc exierit ego nescio Poenitentiam dare possumus securitatem non possumus You see then how much it is needful to the peace of conscience at the hour of death that you walk with God in the time of life 6. Moreover to walk with God is an excellent preparation for sufferings and death because it tendeth to acquaint the soul with God and to embolden it both to go to him in Prayer and to Trust on him and expect salvation from him He that walketh with God is so much used to holy Prayer that he is a man of Prayer and is skilled in it and hath tryed what prayer can do with God so that in the hour of his extremity he is not to seek either for a God to pray to or a Mediator to intercede for him or a Spirit of Adoption to enable him as a child to fly for help to his reconciled Father And having not only been frequently with God but frequently entertained and accepted by him and had his prayers heard and granted it is a great encouragement to an afflicted soul in the hour of distresse to go to such a God for help And it is a dreadful thing when a soul is ready to go out of the world to have ●● comfortable knowledge of God or skill to pray to him or encouragement to expect acceptance with him To think that he must presently appear before a God whom he never knew nor heartily loved being never acquainted with that communion with him in the way of Grace which is the way to communion in Glory O what a terrible thought is this But how comfortable is it when the soul can say I know whom I have believed The God that afflicteth me is he that loveth me and hath manifested his love to me by his daily attractive assisting and accepting Grace I am going by death to see him intuitively whom I have often seen by the eye of Faith and to live with him in Heaven with whom I lived here on earth From whom and Through whom and To whom was my life I go not to any enemy nor an utter stranger but to that God who was the Spring the Ruler the Guide the Strength and the Comfort of my life He hath heard me so oft that I cannot think he will now reject me He hath so often comforted my soul that I will not believe he will now thrust me into Hell He hath mercifully received me so oft that I cannot believe he will now refuse me Those that come to him in the way of Grace I have found he will in no wise cast out As strangeness to God doth fill the soul with distrustful fears so walking with him doth breed that humble confidence which is a wonderful comfort in the hour of distress and a happy preparations to sufferings and death 7. Lastly to walk with God doth encrease that Love of God in the soul which is the heavenly tincture and inclineth it to lo●k upward and being weary of a sinful flesh and world to desire to be perfected with God How happy a preparation for death is this when it is but the passage to that God with whom we desire to be and to that place where we fain would dwell for ever To love the state and place that we are going to being made connatural and suitable thereto will much overcome the fears of death But for a soul that is acquainted with nothing but this life and favoureth nothing but Earth and Flesh and hath
Third must be my excuse for all But pardon the Manner and I dare commend the Matter to you as more worthy your serious contemplation and your daily most delightful practice than any other that was ever proposed unto mortal man This is the man-like noble life The life which the Rational soul was made for To which if our faculties be not by sanctifying Grace restored they fall below their proper dignity and use and are worse than lost like a Prince or Learned man that is employed only in sweeping Dog-kennels or tending Swine To walk in Holiness with the most Holy God is the improvement and advancement of the nature of man towards its designed equality with Angels When Earthliness and Sensuality degrade humanity into a voluntary and therefore sinful brutishness This is the Life which affordeth the soul a solid and durable pleasure and content When carnal minds evaporate into Air and bubble into froth and vanity wasted in a dream and the violent busie pursuit of a shadow deceiving themselves with a mixture of some counterfeit Religion playing with God and working for the world living in jeast and dying and despairing and suffering in earnest with unwearied labour building on the Sand and sinking at death for want of a foundation hating the serious practice of their own profest Religion because it is not the profession but the serious practice which hath the greatest enmity to their sensual delights yet wishing to be numbred with those hereafter whom they hated here This Holy Walking with the most Holy God is the only life which is best at last and sweet in the review which the Godly Live in and most of the ungodly could wish to dye in like him that wished to be Caesar in life and Socrates at death Yea this is the Life which hath no end which we are here but learning and beginning to practise and which we must hereafter live in another manner and degree with God for ever O wondrous Mercy which thus ennobleth even the state of mortality and honoureth Earth with so much participation of and communion with Heaven That by God and with God we may walk in holy peace and safety unto God and there be blessed in his perfect Sight and Love for ever Madam the greatest service I can do you for all your favours is to pray that God will more acquaint you with himself and lead you by this blessed way to that more blessed end that when you see all worldly glory in the dust you may bless him for ever who taught you to make a wiser choice Which are the prayers of Dec. 24. 1663. MADAM Your very much obliged Servant RICHARD BAXTER TO THE READER Reader THE Embryo of this Book was but one Sermon preached a little before the ending of my publick Ministry upon the Text of the third Treatise upon the occasion intimated in the Epistle to that truly Honour able Lady Being obliged to communicate the Notes and unavoidably gullty of some delays I made a compensation by enlargement and having reasons for the publication of them with which I shall not trouble you to make them more suitable to the designed end I prefixed the two former Treatises The first I had preached to my ancient flock Of the second I had preached but one Sermon If many of the materials in the second be the same as in the first you must understand that my design required that it should be so They being the same Attributes of God which the first Part endeavoureth to imprint upon the mind and which the second and third endeavour to improve into a constant course of holy affection and conversation As it is the same food which the first concoction chylifieth which the perfecting concoctions do work over again and turn into blood and spirits and flesh so far am I in such points from gratifying thy sickly desire of variety and avoiding the displeasing of thee by the rehearsals of the same that it is my very business with thee to perswade thee to live continually upon these same Attributes and Relations of God as upon thy daily air and bread and to forsake that lean consuming company who feed on the shels of hard and barren controversies or on the froth of complements and affected shews and run after novelty instead of substantial solid nutriment And to tell thee that the primitive pure simple Christianity consisted in the daily serious use of the great materials of the Creed Lords Prayer and ten Commandements contracted in the words of our Baptismal Covenant Do thus and thou will be like those examples of the succeeding Church in uprightness purity simplicity charity peaceableness and holy communion with God when the pretended subtilties and sublimities of wanton uncharitable contentious wits will serve but to strangle or delude their souls I have purposely been very brief on the several Attributes and Relations of God in the first Treatise because the copious handling of them would have made a very great volume of it self and because it is my great design in that first part to give you a sight of all Gods Attributes and Relations conjunct and in their order that looking on them not one by one but all together in their proper places the whole Image of God may by them be rightly imprinted on your minds The Method being the first thing and the necessary Impressions on the soul the second which I there desire you to observe and employ your minds about if you desire to profit and receive what I intend you Decem. 24. 1663. THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. THE Text explained The Doctrine The Knowledge of the only true God and of Jesus Christ the Mediatour is the life of grace and the necessary way to the life of glory What is contained in the Knowledge of God as to the Act what as to the Object A short Scheme of the Divine properties and Attributes to be known Page 1 CHAP. II. Of the Knowledge of Gods Being and the necessary effects of it on the heart p. 14 CHAP. III. Of the Knowledge of Gods Unity and Indivisibility and its necessary effects p. 17 CHAP. IV. Of the Knowledge of Gods Immensity and so of his Incomprehensibleness Omnipresence and the effects p. 21 CHAP. V. Of the Knowledge of Gods Eternity and its due effects A Believer referring all things to Eternity honoureth his very horse or dog or smallest mercy more than Unbelievers honour their King their lives their souls regarding them but for transitory ends Unbelievers denying the End destroy morally all souls all mercies all Divine revelations all Gods ordinances all graces and duties and the whole Creation p. 28 CHAP. VI. The Knowledge of God as he is a Spirit and incorporeal and consequently 1. As he is simple or uncompounded 2. Invisible c. 3. Immortal Incorruptible Immutable The Uses of Gods Simplicity The Uses of his Invisibility The Uses of his Immortality and Immutability p. 44 CHAP. VII Of the Knowledge of Gods Almightiness
to come and follow him was there no prevailing inward power that made them leave all and follow him And was it not the power of the Holy Ghost that Converted three thousand Jewes at a Sermon of them that by wicked hands had Crucified and slain the Lord Jesus Act. 2. 23 41. When the Preaching and Miracles of Christ Converted so few his Brethren and they that saw his Miracles believed not on him Joh. 12. 37. 5. 38. 6. 36. 7. 5. but when the Holy Ghost was given after his Ascension in that plenty which answered the Gospel and promise his words were fulfilled Joh. 12. 32. And I if I be lifted up from the earth will draw all men unto me I pass by abundance more such evidence Quest. 9. Doth it not tend to bring sin into credit which holiness is contrary to and to bring the love of God into discredit and to hinder mens Conversion and keep them from a holy life when holiness is taken for so low and natural or common a thing Quest. 10. And consequently doth it not tend to the vilifying of the Attribute of Holiness in God when the Image and effect of it is so extenuated Quest. 11. And doth it not tend to the contempt of Heaven it self whose state of felicity consisteth much in perfect Holiness And if Sanctification be but some common motion which Cain and Judas had as well as Paul sure it is less Divine and more inconsiderable then we thought Quest. 12. Doth it not speak very dangerous suspicion of a soul that never felt the special work of grace that can make light of it and ascribe it most to his own will And would not sound Humiliation do more then Arguments to cure this great mistake I never yet came neer a throughly-humbled soul but I found them too low and vile in their own eyes to have such undervaluing thoughts of grace or to think it best for them to leave all the efficacy of grace to their own wills A broken heart abhors such thoughts Quest. 13. Dare any wise and sober man desire such a thing of God or dare you say that you will expect no other Grace but what shall leave it to your selves to make it effectual or frustrate it I think he is no friend to his soul that would take up with this Quest. 14. Do not the constant Prayers of all that have but a shew of godliness contradict the doctrine which I am contradicting Do you not beg of God to melt and soften and bow your hearts and to make them more holy and fill them with light and faith and Love and hold you close to God and duty In a word do you not daily pray for effectual grace that shall infallibly procure your desired ends I scarce ever heard a prayer from a sober man but was orthodox in such points though their speeches would be heterodox Quest. 15. Do you not know that there is an enmity in every unrenewed heart against sanctification till God remove it Are we not greater enemies to our selves and greater resisters of the Holy Ghost and of our own conversion and sanctification and salvation then all the world besides is woe to him that feeleth not this by himself And is it likely that we that are enemies to holiness should do more to our own Sanctification then the Holy Ghost Woe to us if he conquer not our enmity Quest. 16. Is it probable that so great a work as the destroying of our dearest sins the setting our hearts and all our hopes on an Invisible glory and delighting in the Lord and forsaking all for him c. should come rather from the choice of a will that loveth those sins and hateth that holy heavenly life then from the spirit of Christ sure this is much above us Quest. 17. Whence is it that so often one man that hath been a notorious sinner is Converted by a Sermon when a civiler man of better nature and life is never changed though he have that and ten times more perswasions Quest. 18. Doth not experience tell impartial observers that the high esteemers of the sanctifying work of the Holy Ghost are ordinarily of more holy heavenly lives then they that use to ascribe the differencing work to their free wills In my observation it is so Quest. 19. Should not every gracious humble soul be more enclined to magnifie God then himself and to give him the Glory then to give it to our selves especially in a case where Scripture and experience telleth us that we are more unlikely then God to deserve the praise Our destruction is of our selves but in him is our help Hos. 13. 9. When we see an effect and know it and the causes that are in question it is easie to conjecture from the quality which is the true cause If I see a Serpent brought forth I will sooner think that it was generated by a Serpent then a Dove If I see sin in the world I shall easily believe it is the spawn of this corrupted will that is so prone to it But if I find a divine nature in me or see a holy heavenly life in any I must needs think that this is liker to be the work of the blessed God then of such a naughty heart as mans that hath already been a self-destroyer Quest. 20. What motive hath any man to exalt himself and sin again the Holy Ghost by such an extenuation of his saving grace It is a causeless fruitless sin The only reason that ever I could hear for it was lest the doctrine of differencing grace should make God a respecter of persons or the author of sin of which there is no reason of a suspicion We all agree that no man perisheth or is denyed Grace but such as deserve it And when all deserve it it is no more respect of persons in God to sanctifie some only of those ill deservers then it is that he makes not all men Kings nor every dog or toad a man nor every star a Sun or every man or Angel To clear all objections concerning this would be but to digress 3. Lastly Our knowledge of the Holy Ghost must raise us to an high estimation of his works and a ready reception of his graces and cheerful obedience to his motions He Sanctified our Head that had no sin by preventing sin in his conception and he annointed him to his office and came upon him at his Baptism He Sanctified and anointed the Prophets and Apostles to their offices and by them endited the holy Scripture He illuminateth converteth sanctifieth and guideth all that are to be the heirs of life This is his work Honour that part of it that is done on Christ on the Prophets Apostles and the Scriptures and value and seek after that which belongeth to your selves Think not to be Holy without the Sanctifier nor to do any thing well without the spirit of Jesus Christ who is Christs internal invisible Agent here on earth as
though all your carnal friends and superiors be against it though the devil will do all that he can against it yet all this must be done or you are lost for ever And all this must be done by the Spirit of God for it is his work to make you New and Holy And can you think then that the business is not great which you have with God when you have tryed how hard every part of this work is to be begun and carryed on you will finde you have more to do with God than with all the world 9. Moreover in order to this it is necessary that you read and hear and understand the Gospel which must be the means of bringing you to God by Christ This must be the instrument of God by which he will bring you to Repent and Believe and by which he will renew your Natures and imprint his Image on you and bring you to Love him and obey his will The Word of God must be your Counsellor and your delight and you must set your heart to it and meditate in it day and night Knowledge must be the means to reclaim your perverse misguided Wills and to reform your careless crooked Lives and to bring you out of the Kingdom of darkness into the State of Light and Life And such Knowledge cannot be expected without a diligent attending unto Christ the Teacher of your souls and a due consideration of the truth By that time you have learnt what is needful to be learnt for a true Conversion a sound Repentance a saving Faith and a holy Life you will finde that you have far greater business with God than with all the world 10. Moreover for the attaining of all this Mercy you have many a prayer to put up to God You must daily pray for the forgiveness of your sins and deliverance from temptations and even for your daily bread or necessary provisions for the work which you have to do You must daily pray for all the supplies of Grace which you want and for the gradual mortification of the flesh and for help in all the duties which you must perform and for strength against all the spiritual enemies which will assault you and preservation from the manifest evils which attend you And these prayers must be put up with unwearied constancy fervency and Faith Keep up this course of fervent prayer and beg for Christ and Grace and Pardon and Salvation in any measure as they deserve and according to thy own necessity and then tell mee whether thy business with God be small and to be put off as lightly as it is by the ungodly 11. Moreover you are made for the Glory of your Creator and must apply your selves wholly to glorifie him in the world You must make his service the trade and business of your lives and not put him off with something on the by You are good for nothing else but to serve him as a knife is made to cut and as your cloaths are made to cover you and your meat to seed you and your horse to labour for you so you are made and redeemed and maintained for this to Love and Please your great Creator And can you think that it is but little business that you have with him when he is the End and Master of your lives and all you are or have is for him 12. And for the due performance of his service you have all his Talents to employ To this end it is that he hath entrusted you with reason and health and strength with time and parts and interest and wealth and all his mercies and all his ordinances and means of Grace and to this end must you use them or you lose them And you must give him an account of all at last whether you have improved them all to your Masters use And can you look within you without you about you and see how much you are trusted with and must be accountable to him for and yet not see how great your business is with God 13. Moreover you have all the graces which you shall receive to exercise and every grace doth carry you to God and is exercised upon him or for him It is God that you must study and know and love and desire and trust and hope in and obey It is God that you must seek after and delight in so far as you enjoy him It is his absence or displeasure that must be your fear and sorrow Therefore the soul is said to be sanctified when it is renewed because it is both disposed and devoted unto God And therefore Grace is called Holiness because it all disposeth and carryeth the soul to God and useth it upon and for him And can you think your business with God is small when you must live upon him and all the powers of your soul must be addicted to him and be in serious motion towards him and when he must be much more to you than the Air which you breath in or the Earth you live upon or than the Sun that gives you light and heat yea than the soul is to your bodies 14. Lastly you have abundance of temptations and impediments to watch and strive against which would hinder you in the doing of all this work and a corrupt and treacherous heart to watch and keep in order which will be looking back and shrinking from the service Lay all this together and then consider whether you have not more and greater business with God than with all the creatures in the world And if this be so as undeniably it is so is there any cloak for that mans sin who is all day taken up with creatures and thinks of God as seldome and as carelesly as if he had no business with him And yet alas if you take a survey of high and low of Court and City and Country you shall find that this is the case of no small number yea of many that observe it not to be their case it is the case of the prophane that pray in jeast and swear and curse and rail in earnest It is the case of the malignant enemies of holiness that hate them at the heart that are most acquainted with this converse with God and count it but hypocrisie pride or fancy and would not suffer them to live upon the Earth who are most sincerely conversant in Heaven It is the case of Pharise●s and Hypocrites who take up with ceremonious observances as touch not taste not handle not and such like traditions of their forefathers instead of a spiritual rational service and a holy serious walking with the Lord. It is the case of all ambitious men and covetous worldlings who make more ado to climb up a little higher than their brethren and to hold the reins and have their wills and be admired and adored in the world or to get a large estate for themselves and their posterity than to please their Maker or to save their souls It is
the credit of being esteemed wise and learned or because their gain and maintenance comes in this way They that fill many Volumes with Controversies concerning God and fill the Church with contentions and troubles by them and their own hearts with malice and uncharitableness against those that are not of their opinions have many and many a thought of God which yet will do nothing to the saving of their souls no more than they do to the sanctifying of them And such learned men may think more Orthodoxly and Methodically concerning God than many an honest serious Christian who yet thinks of him more effectually and savingly Even as they can discourse more orderly and copiously of God when yet they have no saving knowledge of him 3. All men must not bestow so much time in Meditation as some must do It is the Calling of Ministers to study so as to furnish thrir minds with all those truths concerning God which are needful to the Edification of the Church and so to meditate on these things as to give themselves wholly to them 1 Tim. 4. 15 16. It is both the work of their common and their special Calling The study necessary to Christians as such belongeth as well to others as to them But other men have another special or particular Calling which also they must think of so far as the nature and ends of their daily labours do require It is a hurtful errour to imagine that men must either lay by their Callings to meditate on God or that they must do them negligently or to be taken up in the midst of their employments with such studies of God as Ministers are that are separated to that work 4. No man is bound to be continually taken up with actual distinct cogitations about God For in duty we have many many other things to think on which must have their time And as we have Callings to follow and must eat our bread in the sweat of our brows so we must manage them with prudence A good man will guide his affairs with discretion Psal. 112. 5. It is both necessary as duty and necessary as a means to the preservation of our very faculties that both body and mind have their times of employment about our lawful business in the world The understandings of many cannot bear it to be alwaies employed on the greatest and most serious things Like Lute strings they will break if they be raised too high and be not let down and relaxed when the lesson is plaid To think of nothing else but God is to break the Law of God and to confound the mind and to disable it to think aright of God or any thing As he that bid us pray continually did not mean that we should do nothing else or that actual prayer should have no interruptions but that habitual desires should on all meet occasion be actuated and exprest so he that would be chief in all our thoughts did never mean that we should have no thoughts of any thing else or that our serious meditation on him should be continual without interruption but that the final intending of God and our dependence on him should be so constant as to be the spring or mover of the rest of the thoughts and actions of our lives 5. An habitual intending God as our End and depending on his support and subjection to his Government will carry on the soul in a sincere and constant course of Godliness though the actual most observed thoughts of the soul be fewer in number about God than about the means that lead unto him and the occurrences in our way The soul of man is very active and comprehensive and can think of several things at once and when it is once clear and resolved in any case it can act according to that knowledge and resolution without any present sensible cogitation nay while its actual most observed thoughts are upon something else A Musician that hath an habitual skill can keep time and tune while he is thinking of some other matter A Weaver can cast his shuttle right and work truly while he is thinking or talking of other things A man can eat and drink with discretion while he talks of other things Some men can dictate to two or three Scribes at once upon divers subjects A Traveller can keep on his way though he seldome think distinctly of his Journies end but be thinking or discoursing most of the way upon other matters For before he undertook his Journey he thought both of the end and way and resolved then which way to go and that he would go through all both fair and foul and not turn back till he saw the place And this habitual understanding and resolution may be secretly and unobservedly active so as to keep a man from erring and from turning back though at the same time the Travellers most sensible thoughts and his discourse may be upon something else When a man is once resolved of his End and hath laid his design he is past deliberating of that and therefore hath less use of his cogitations thereabout but is readier to lay them out upon the means which may be still uncertain or may require his frequent deliberation We have usually more thoughts and speeches by the way about our company or our Horses or Innes or other accommodations or the fairness or foulness of the way and other such occurrences than we have about the place that we are going to And yet this secret intention of our end will bring us thither So when a soul hath cast up his accounts and hath renounced a worldly and sensual felicity and hath fixed his hopes and resolutions upon Heaven and is resolved to cast himself upon Christ and take God for his only portion this secret habitual resolution will do much to keep him constant in the way though his thoughts and talk be frequently on other things Yea when we are thinking of the creature and feel no actual thoughts of God it is yet God more than the creature that we think of For we did beforehand look on the creature as Gods work representing him unto the world and as his talents which we must employ for him and as every creature is related to him And this estimation of the creature is still habitually and in some secret less-perceived acts most prevalent in the soul. Though I am not alwaies sensibly thinking of the King when I use his Coin or obey his Law c. yet it is only as his Coin still that I use it and as his Laws that I obey them Weak Habits cannot do their work without great carefulness of thoughts but perfect habits will act a man with little thoughtfulness as coming near the natural way of operation And indeed the imperfection of our Habitual Godliness doth make our serious thoughts and vigilancy and industry to be the more necessary to us 6. There are some thoughts of God that are necessary to the very