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A29371 I. Scripture-light the most sure light ... delivered in three sermons on 2 Pet. I. 19 : II. Christ in travel ... in three sermons on Isai. 53. 11 : III. A lifting up for the down-cast ... delivered in thirteen sermons on Psal. 42, 11 : four several sermons ... / preached by William Bridge ... Bridge, William, 1600?-1670. 1656 (1656) Wing B4462; ESTC R34370 561,325 608

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Ordinance you cannot withstand him wherefore saith the Apostle Take unto you the whol Armor of God that you may be able to withstand in the evil day and having done all to stand stand therefore having your loyns girt about with Truth having on the Breast-plate of Righteousness and your feet shod w●th the preparation of the Go●pel of Peace Above all take the Shield of Faith and take the Helmet of Salvation and the Sword of the Spirit and pray alwaies with all manner of prayer and supplication and watch thereunto c. Ephes 6.13 14 15 16 17 18. Answ 6 Sixtly The more delight and contentment that you find in the good Waies of God the more your hearts wil be fixed established and staked down to them Comfort and Establishment go together 2 Thes 2.17 A man wil never hold to that work long which he finds no comfort and delight in when the Devil draws a man from Duty he doth not tel him at the first that the Duty is naught or evil but he labors to clog the way of that Duty with many Difficultie● for saith he if I can make this man draw heavily and uncomfortably in his Duty he wil soon cast it off And indeed what is the reason that men are so off and on to and fro in the good Waies of God but because they do not find delight and contentment in them Do you therefore desire to be fixed and established labor more and more then to make your way to Heaven easie and comfortable to you Now that the way to Heaven may be made sweet and easie to you 1. Be sure that you do not separate between Gods Commandement and his Promise there is no one thing which God hath commanded us to do but he hath promised strength and Grace to perform it with If I look upon the Command alone then the Work doth seem hard to me but if I take in the Promise then it is most sweet and easie 2. Be sure that you apply your self unto Gods Work according unto Gods Method let that be first which he hath made first and that last which he hath made last A F●gge or ●●llet is easily drawn from the Stack if you begin alo●● but if you wil take out that first which doth lie below it wil come ha●dly So in regard of Duties there are some Duties which do lie above and some that lie beneath some are to be performed fir●t and some after first you must beleeve and then do good Trust in the Lord saith the Psalmist and do good But if you wil do good before you beleeve then it wil come off with difficulty Gods own Method observed makes his way sweet and easie 3. Be sure that you improve and make use of that variety which God hath given you Varietas refocillat variety refresheth and Gods variety is most refreshing But if I wil hold my self only to one Duty when God hath given me many and so neglect Gods variety no wonder that his Work is made hard and tedious Are you therefore weary with praying Apply your self unto Reading A●e you weary in Reading Away then to Conference Possibly you● heart may be backward to Prayer but by that time you have been a while Reading and Meditating you shal be fit for Prayer and having been a while at Prayer you shal be more fit for Conference but if you wil keep your self only to one Duty your way to Heaven wil be more difficult Observe therefore Gods vari●ty and neglect not the same 4. Be sure that you do not stint your self unto any Work or Duty so as to say Thus far wil I go and no further If a man be in a Journey and hath fixed al his Stages he rides in continual pain and fear lest he should not reach his appointed place by his time appointed But if he say I wil go as far as the Providence of God wil carry me then he rides more at ease in his mind al the day long So in our Journey to Heaven if you say thus far I wil go this day and no further then you wil go in continual pain lest you should not reach your appointed St●ge but if you say I wil pray morning evening and as much as I can hear as much as I can read and meditate as much as I can I wil go as far for H●●ven this day as I can then the Work or God wil come off w●th more ease and ●weetness and with less difficulty I speak not this against set ti●● of P●ayer and Du●y but against stinting and ●●nting God ●nd your own hearts O! let us take heed of ●●a● 5. If you would so sweeten the Waies of God as that you may be more fix●d and established therein then labor more and mo●● to natur●●ze them unto your own souls violent things nev●● hold natu●●● things do The Sun is constant in rising every 〈◊〉 for it 's natural The Stone if thrown up into the A●r doth descend con●tantly for it 's natural So i● the Wo●k of God be Natural to you you wil be constant in it and though you be pu● by it yet you wil return again and again Labor ther●fore to naturallize the Work of God to your own soul so shal it be more and more sweet and easie and you wil be more fixed setled and established therein for it is delight that doth give fixation Answ 7 Seventhly If you would be fixed and established in the good Waies of God then consider these ensuing Motives 1. Thereby you shal rid and free your selves from Temptations which wil otherwise press in and return upon you The Jews saw that Pilate was wavering and not fixed for Christ so they came upon him with new volleys of Temptations and carried him at the last but when the Disciples saw that Pauls heart was fixed on his Journey to Jerusalem they gave over their siege and l●ft him to his own thoughts and though Naomi did perswade Ruth to return unto her own Country and Kindred ye● at the last she left speaking to her for saith the Text She saw that she was stedfastly minded to go with her Ruth 1.18 As an unsetled Spirit doth lie open unto new Temptations and doth invite them so a setled fixed and established heart shal be freed from them This fixation of Soul is a great honor unto your Profession and thereby ye shal walk worthy of the Gospel Phil. 1. he that is unsetled unconstant and uneven in his course doth bring no honor unto his Profession but laies stumbling-blocks before the blind and doth offend the World do you not see say they Qui servat constantiam servat dignitatem what a giddy and unsetled People some of these Professors are but there or there is a man that doth walk closely with God there is a Christian indeed he that keeps his constancy keeps his dignity Thereby you shal rejoyce the hearts of those that are set over you in the Lord who
them not now wil I remember their iniquity M●●k the word Now Now when Now when they do come to prayer now wil I remember your iniquity saith the Lord. I know saith the Lord al your carriage in such and such a p●●ce I know your uncleanness and your adulteries when you w●●e in the dark when the curtains were drawn about you and the candle out I know your carriage at such a Tavern and upon such an Ale bench how you sate there and sc●rned and revi●●d my children I know your opposing scoffing and jeering at tho e that are Godly I know al this and now thou comest to prayer now Swearer now Adulterer now Drunkard now thou comest to duty now wil I remember thine iniquity Is it not a sad thing that the Lord should remember a mans sin at the time when he comes to prayer yet thus the Lord deales with the wicked But as for the Godly and Gracious man it is not so with him when he comes to prayer though he have many failings in duty yet the Lord remembers his mercy then the Lord remembers his loving kindness then the Lord remembers his Covenant for he is ever mindful of his Covenant O! what incouragement is here then for every man to become Godly to get into Christ and what incouragement is here for the Saints and people of God to come to duty O! you that have but a little faith have you any reason to be discouraged wil you not at last say to your soul why art thou cast down O my soul and why are thou thus discouraged Quest But suppose that I have done foolishly and have sinned in being discouraged upon al occasions suppose I have many failings in duty and the Lord doth not answer my prayer presently what shal I do that I may bear up my heart against this discouragement either in regard of my own failing in duty or in regard of Gods not answering Answ 1 First Take heed that you do not lay the stress and weight of al your comfort upon duty cither the gift of duty or the Grace of duty or the present answer of it So much as ye lay the stress and weight of your comfort upon duty so much wil you be discouraged in case you do either want duty or an answer to it When Paul was tempted and buffetted he prayed thrice For this saith he I besought the Lord thrice th●t is often and the Lord gave him no other answer than this 2 Cor. 12.8 9. Paul My Grace is sufficient for thee for my strength shal be made perfect in thy weakness Whereupon Paul saith Now therefore wil I Glory in mine infirmities that the p●wer of the Lord may rest upon me Hast thou therefore been at prayer and hast thou prayed thrice or often and hast thou no answer but this My Grace is sufficient for thee know that thou hast a Pauls answer and therefore rather Glory in this that the Lord should find thee faithful for to wait upon him than be discouraged knowing that the Lords strength shal be perfected in thy weakness Answ 2 Secondly Consider seriously and frequently of this rule That difficulty doth commend duty the more difficulties your duties do press through to God the more acceptable they are to him The less there is to sweeten your duty to you the more sweet is your duty to God It is in our performing of duty as in the offering of the Jewish Sacrifice in the offering of their Sacrifice there was two things The Sacrifice and the Obedience in offering the Sacrifice and the more difficult it was for any poor Jew by reason of poverty or the like to offer this Sacrifice the more and greater was his Obedience in offering it the more difficulty in offering the greater the Obedience offered So also it is in our Gospel Sacrifices and in al our duties there are two things in them There is the Sacrifice the duty and there is the Obedience in bringing the duty and the more difficulty in performing the duty the greater is the Obedience to God in the performing of it Now is is not an hard thing and very difficult for a man to pray and continue praying when his heart is hardned and his spirit streightned especially if he be sensible thereof then he is ready to despond and say I can pray no more and is it not a very hard thing for a man to pray and persevere in prayer when he thinks that God doth not regard his prayer then he is apt to say why should I pray any longer for God regards me not yet now if you do pray and perform your duty your obedience is the more obediential the more acceptable and if you would but think of this rule Difficulty doth commend duty and the less you have to sweeten your action the more sweet it is to God I say if you would but remember this it would both incourage you to duty and keep you from discouragement in it And lastly We must al learn to leave the event and success of our spiritual things unto God himself so shal we never be discouraged in any duty For the word of the Lord is sure and God hath spoken it Psal 55. Cast thy Gift upon the Lord Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chaldee Par. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuag 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hierom. projice super Dominum charitatem tuam Rab. Salv. Jar. abbreviate dictus Rashi vel Rasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod etiam pro dono usurpatur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Sam. 11.8 Bibl. Bomb. and he wil sustain thee he wil not suffer the righteous to be moved for ever You read it thus Cast thy Burden upon the Lord but in the Hebrew it is thy Gift Cast thy Gift upon the Lord. That is saith Shindler quicquid tibi dari donarive expetis Whatsoever thou dost desire that God should give thee cast that upon the. Lord thou comest to prayer and thou prayest for such a mercy or such a Gift cast that on God and leave it wholly to him O! but the mercy I pray for is a necessary mercy Be it so yet it is to be cast on God But it is a spiritual Gift I pray for pardon of sin the sence of Gods love growth in Grace consolation to my poor drooping soul Be it so yet thou must cast this on God Many there are that can leave the event and and success of these outward things unto God but to leave the event and success of prayer and their spiritual things unto God this they cannot understand and this they are utterly unacquainted with but whatever thy Gift be cast it upon the Lord leave the success and the event of al your spiritual things upon God what then And he wil sustain thee and thou shalt not be moved for ever Thou are moved for the present and thy heart is moved and thou art much discouraged yet do but try this way leave the
to present himself to me as an Angel of Light so he would represent Christ as an Angel of Darkness But is this true That the Lord wil not cast me off for my sins of Infirmity then will I never beleeve that my dear Savior is an hard Master If the Lord Christ wil not cast me off for my Sins of Infirmity then through the Grace of God I wil not question my Spiritual Estate and Condition for every Sin I wil grieve for every Sin of Infirmity because it is a Sin but I wil not question my Condition because it is but a Sin of Infirmity Then wil not I cast off my self and others for the Sins of Infirmities Shal Christs Eye be good and shal my Eye be bad Wil not Christ cast me off for mine Infirmities and shal I cast off others for their Infirmities God forbid Then wil not I cast off the things of Christ because of any infirmity that may adhere to them or the Dispensation of them When Christ took our Nature on him his Deity was vailed under our Humanity his Excellency under our Infirmity So now his Grace and his Dispensations are vailed under the Infirmity of our Administrations As for Example Preaching is an Ordinance of Christ yet the Sermon may be so delivered with so much weaknes of the Speaker that the Ordinance of Christ may be vailed under much Infirmity So the Admonition of a fallen Brother is an Ordinance of Christ yet it may be so administred with so much passion in the Speaker that this Ordinance may be vailed under much Infirmity Scarcely any Ordinance but is vailed under some Infirmity in regard of its Administration But is this true That the Lord wil not cast me away because of mine Infirmities Surely then I wil never cast away the Ordinances or things of Christ because of those Infirmities which may adhere or cleave unto them And if the Lord wil not cast me off for my Infirmities then through Grace I wil n●ver be discouraged from the performance of any Duty I wil pray as I can and hear as I can and though I be not able to pray as I would I wil pray as I am able and though I am not able to examine mine own heart as I would yet I will do what I am able for the Lord wil not cast me off for Infirmities and therefore I wil not cast off my Duties because of them And lastly If the Lord Jesus Christ wil not cast me off for mine Infirmities then wil I never sin because the sin is but a Sin of infirmity Wil the Lord pardon my Sin because it is but an Infirmity and shal I commit Sin upon that ground because it is but an infirmity then shal I walk contrary to God then shall I turn the Grace of God into wantonness Surely therefore I will never Sin upon that account because it is but a Sin of infirmity Thus ye see what we are to do and what gracious Resolutions we are to take up from the consideration of this great Truth Quest But though the Lord will not cast us off for our Sins of Infirmity yet there is much evil in this sin especially if we fall into it again and again What shall we therefore do that we may not fal into this same Sin so often Answ 1 Be sure that you do not forget your former Sins the slumber of Grace is a preparation to Sin and the forgetfulness of a former S●n is a preparation unto future Sin When we forget our old Sins then God leaves us to fall into new Sins as long as the sence of old Sins abide upon your heart so long you will be kept from new Sins and as the sence of old Sins doth wear off so the lust after new Sins wil come on Would you not therefore fall into the same Sin again and again then take heed that you do not forget your old Sins or lose the sence thereof Answ 2 If you would be kept from Relapses into your infirmities or other Sins then take your Sin and quench it in the blood of Christ by a fresh act of Faith over and beyond all your Resolutions and acts of Humiliation You know how it is with a Candle if it be blown out only it is easily lighted again but if you quench it in Water it is not so easily lighted again So in regard of Sin if a man blow it out with a Resolution it wil be soon recovered but if besides a mans Resolutions and Humiliations he takes his Sin and by an act of Faith doth quench it in the blood of Christ it wil not be lighted again with that ease and facility Answ 3 And if you would not fal into the same Sin again and again then watch and pray Our Savior Christ here saw that his Disciples were like to sleep again and again and I pray you what direction doth he give them Only this Watch and pray as if watching with prayer an● prayer with watchfulness were the only or chief means to keep us from falling i●to the same Sin again and again And indeed it is not all our habitual strength that can keep us from falling for then Adam in the state of Innocency would have been kept from falling nor is it want of Temptation that can secure us from falling for then the Angels in Heaven should not have fallen for they had no Temptation there but we are kept by continual dependance upon God in Christ 't is not therefore enough to watch but we must watch in Prayer neither is it enough to pray but we must pray with watchfulness What I say therefore to one I say to you al and to mine own soul Let us watch and pray and pray and watch that we enter not into this Temptation THE FALSE APOSTLE TRYED AND DISCOVERED By William Bridge Preacher of the Gospel at Yarmouth LONDON Printed by Peter Cole in Leaden-Hall and are to be sold at his Shop at the sign of the Printing-Press in Cornhil neer the Royal Exchange 1656. THE False Apostle TRYED AND DISCOVERED REVEL 2.2 And hast tryed them which say they are Apostles and are not and hast found them Lyars IT is not only the Opinion of Mr. Brightman In ●oa●●●● Apocal. septe● Eccles●s scribitur per qua● un● Catholica designatur Greg. Hom. 15. i● Ezek. Joa●nes seribit ad sep●am Ecclesias in quibus etiam universas Ecclesias septenario numero intelligimus commendari Austin Epist 106. extra septo●● Ecclesias quicquid fo●is est alicnum est optat Milevi a● Lib. 1. but of very antient Writers That these Seven Epistles written to the Seven Churches of Asia do contain the State and Condition of the whol Church of God unto the coming of Christ This First Epistle is written to languishing Ephesus holding forth the State of the Church presently after Christ and his Apostles and is a good Looking-glass for all those which begin now to languish and to lose their
have much Experience yet if we do not trust in the Word of Promise under Christ over and beyond al our Experience we do evil And if al our Experience is to be reduced to the Word written then the Scripture is more excellent than al Experience but all our Experience is to be reduced unto Scripture Surely therefore the Scripture or the Word of God written is more excellent than al Experience and the Light thereof And thus I have done with the Fifth Instance Instance 6 As for Divine Providence the Scripture is a more sure Light than it For God doth somtimes try us by his Providence he doth somtimes lay a Providential Dispensation before us to try and see what we wil do So he led the Children of Israel in the Wilderness forty Yeers to try them and to know what they would do and to humble them But the Scripture is the Rule of our doing and therefore a more safe and sure Light to walk by And if the Providence of God extendeth unto al our Actions good and evil and to evil as wel as unto what is good then there is no certain Rule or Judgment to be made up from thence Now so it is that the Providence of God extendeth unto al our Sins the Jews crucified Christ Gods Providences did extend unto that Being delivered up by the determinate Counsel and fore-knowledg of God ye have taken and by wicked hands ye have crucified him Acts 2.23 When Jonah fled from God there was then present a Ship that was bound for Tarshish here was a Providence And when Josephs Brethren sold him into Egypt there came by certain Merchants who did trade into Egypt here was a Providence Now if the Providence of God do thus extend to our very Sins then we cannot make up our Judgment our Rule from a bare Providence but you may make up your Judgment and Rule from the Scripture and the Word of God written Quest Doth not God speak by Providence guide and direct by Providence somtimes Answ 1 Yea He doth somtimes guide us with his Eye as the Psalmist speaks Thus when the King could not sleep he called for the Records and ●ound therein that Mordecai had been faithful to him the Providenti●l Eye of God did guide the King to do somthing for Mordecai And when Abrahams Servant prayed and the Damsel came forth to meet him according to his Prayer The Providence of God did lead and guide to that Marriage of Isaac and Rebecca But though the Lord doth somtimes guide us with the Eye of his Providence yet if I make the Providence of God the Rule of Lawfulness or Unlawfulness then am I in a great error and exposed thereby unto al sin for then may I say if I be tempted to kill or murder my self the Providence of God is the Rule of Lawfulness or Unlawfulness Now here is a Knife a Rope a Pond or an Instrument of Death which fals in my way by unexpected Providence therefore I wil and must now murder my self Understand the thing rightly therefore I pray you thus In case that two things are before me and both are Lawful Providence opening a door to one and shutting the door upon the other it doth direct to that one and not to the other but the Providence of God doth not make a thing Lawful which is in it's self unlawful it doth direct us in doing of a thing Lawful but it doth not make a thing Lawful it is not the Rule of Lawfulness or Unlawfulness but the Scripture and the Word of God is it is the only Rule whereby I may and must make up my Judgment of Lawfulness and Unlawfulness it is that only which doth stamp Lawfulness upon an Action Surely therefore the Light of the Scripture is more excellent Light than Divine Providence And thus I have done with the Sixt Instance Instance 7 As for Humane Reason and the Light thereof Scripture-Light is more excellent than it For Though Humane Reason be a Beam of Divine Wisdom Morn praefat Lib. de vera relig prefat Lib. de Euch. Ames de traductione peccatoris ad vitam et de lum nat et Grae. Dr. Vort. de ratione humana de rebus fidei Alting Loc. com pars 1. Loc. 2 dg Tunc solum vere Deum cognoscimus quando ipsum esse credimus supra omne id quod de Deo cogitari ab homine possibile est Aquin. contra Gent. Lib. 1. Cap. 5 6. yet if it be not enlightened with an higher Light of the Gospel it cannot reach unto the things of God as it should it is Panis pauperum the poor mans Bread compared by some to the Dough which the Israelites brought out of Egypt which was prepared with much Labor and then called Panis Pauperum Deut. 16.3 But the Word of God in the Scriptures is compared to Manna called the Bread of Angels for the Gospel did come down from Heaven in a special manner for though Reason be the Gift of God yet it doth proceed from God as he is God and General Ruler of the World But the Gospel and the Light thereof did proceed from the Father by the Son to the Church Rev. 22.1 And he shewed me a pure River of Water of Life cleer as Crystal proceeding out of the Throne of God and of the Lamb. John 1.17 18. Though Reason be the Gift of God and a Beam of the Wisdom of God yet it cannot sufficiently discover a mans Sins unto him not his secret sins not his Original Sin not his Sin of Unbelief and against the Gospel but the Word of God the Scripture Light can and doth And as meer Humane Reason cannot make a sufficient discovery of Sin so it cannot strengthen against Sin and Temptation Temptations answered by Reason wil return again it cannot convert the Soul But the Word of the Lord is perfect converting the Soul P●al 19. Though the L●ght of Reason be good yet it is not a saving Light How many are there in the World who have strong Reason yet shal go to Hell and miscarry to al Eternity But the Light of the Scripture Gospel-Light is saving Light Surgunt indocti said a great Bishop and learned man et capiunt Calum et nos cum omni Doctrina nostra trudimur in infernum Poor men arise and take the Kingdom of Heaven by force when we with al our Learning are thrust into Hell Why so The poor receive the Gospel not many wise not many Learned Father I thank thee saith Christ thou hast revealed these things to Babes 'T is Revelation-Light from the Gospel that doth bring to Heaven meer Humane Reason cannot do it Quest Is there then no use of Reason and of the Light thereof Answ 1 Yea much Not only in Civil things but in the things of God comparing Spiritual things with Spiritual Dr. Voeti p. 5 6 7. de ratione humana in rebus fidei Did not Christ himself make use of Reason to
the Lord doth not onely give forth encouragement in time of discouragement and proportion his encouragements unto our discouragements but he doth make your discouragements occasional rises and bottoms unto your incouragements and comforts The Lord caused a deep sleep to come upon Adam and then he took a Rib from his side wherewith he made a help for him so doth God cause a deep sleep to come upon you in your discouragements out of which he taks a Rib and ●uilds up a help for you making the discouragements of the Saints to contribute to their very incouragements Hosea 2.14 Behold saith the Lord I wil allure her that is the Church his people and bring her into the wilderness and speak comfortably to her and I wil give her her vineyards from thence and the valley of Achor for a door of hope But a wildernessed condition is a lost condition and what comfort can one have in a lost condition True saith God ye cannot in and by your selves but there I wil speak friendly and comfortably to her and of al the times that I chuse to preach Gospel to a poor soul I chuse to do it in a wildernessed and lost condition But though the Lord do speak comfortably to us if we be in a wilderness a dry barren place where no food nor comfort is how can we be but discouraged Nay saith the Lord but I wil give her her vinyards from thence But if we sin murmur in the wilderness as the Israelites did the Lord wil cut us off as he did them a wilderness is a place of trouble wherein we are apt to murmur be discouraged Nay saith the Lord but I wil give her her vinyards from thence and the vally of Achor for a door of hope The valley of Achor was the valley of Perturbation trouble and of great discouragement when the men of Israel sled and fel before the men of Ai for the sin of Achan Joshua 7. vers the last yet it was an in-let to the Land of Canaan to the Land of rest Now saith the Lord look as it was with them though the Valley of Achor was a Valley of Trouble and Perturbation yet it was the door by which the Israelites came into the Land of Rest So shall it be with you I will make your Troubles and Discouragements the very door of your Hope the Valley of your Discouragements shall be the door and an in-let unto all your Rest and Comfort God takes the same way with the Members as he went with the Head Christs Cross an in-let of Glory his suffering time was the Valley of Achor to his Disciples and was it not a door of Hope unto them and unto all the Saints This is Gods way Discouragements bring Encouragements and the more Discouragements the Saints have the more Encouragements they shall have yea their Discouragements shall contribute to their Encouragements and be a door of Hope to them Now if the Valley of Achor shall by Promise be a door of Hope why should we be discouraged whatsoever the Valley of Achor be whatever our condition be Answ 5 A praying man can never be very miserable whatever his condition be for he hath the Ear of God the Spirit within to indite a friend in Heaven to present and God himself to receive his desires as a Father 't is a mercy to pray though I never have the mercy prayed for thereby God doth come down to us and we go up to God It is the souls Converse with God on Earth and a great ease to a burdened troubled Spirit for thereby he may go and empty all his heart into the bosom of his best friend Now every godly gracious man is a praying man more or less he prayeth It 's spoken as an Argument of Pauls ●onver●ion Behold he prayeth as Speech is common unto all men so Prayer unto all Christians God hath none of his Children born dumb as soon as one of your children is born it cries and it sucks and it ●l●eps So with every man that is born of God as soo●●s ●e is both he cries unto God in Prayer he sucks the breast of ●he Promi e and he sleeps in the bosom of God by Divine Contentment● bei●g dead unto all the world it may be he cannot pray as 〈◊〉 would but though he cannot pray as he would not hear as h●●●uld nor perform any duty as he would yet he prayeth it may be said of him behold he prayeth turn him where you will and behold he prayeth sick yet behold he prayeth temp●ed yet behold he prayeth at home or abroad yet behold he prayet● and can he be miserable while he prayeth Surely no why then should he be discouraged whatever his condition be Answ 6 If the matter of the Saints discouragements be but a cloud that wil blow over and melt away then no reason for their Discouragements whatsoever their condition be Now thus it is with the People of God though they be in a dark and very dark condition yet their darkness is but the darkness o● a cloud and as he said Nichecula est cito transibit it is but a cloud it wil soon over So may they say concerning every matter of their discouragement it is dark indeed but this darkness will over there is a storm comes down upon us but we shall see Land again the Shore again it is but a cloud but a cloud And upon this account David comforted his own heart here and checkt his soul for his immoderate dejection Why a●t thou cast down c. Hope in God For I shall yet praise him I shal be delivered this cloud will ove● it will not last it is but the darkness of a cloud Quest But how shall it appear that it is ●ut a cloud and the darkness of a cloud I think it is night and dark night with my soul yea such a night as shall never know morning indeed if I did know that the matter of my discouragement were but a cloudy darkness then I would conclude and say there is no reason for this discouragement but how shall I know whether this darkness be the darkness of a cloud or of the night Answ 1 First If the darkness be such as comes immediately after the rising and shining forth of the Promise then it is but the darkness of a cloud not of the night the Sun doth not rise to set immediately and therefore if darkness comes immediately after Sun-rising it is certainly the darkness of an Eclipse or of a Cloud not of the night There was a fair Promise rose and shined upon Joseph when the Lord said That his Sheaf should be higher than all the Sheaves of his B●●thren yet presently after that there arose a darkness upon him but i● was the darkness of a cloud and not of the ●igh 〈◊〉 why so Because he had a Promise first which did sh●● 〈◊〉 ●●m So David had a fair Promise of the Kingdom wh●●
〈…〉 ●nointed by Samuel yet a darkness presently rose upon him bu● it was the darkness of a cloud only and not of the 〈◊〉 Why Because it was such a darkness as arose immediately a●ter he ●hinings forth of a Promise And I pray you shew me any ●cripture where you find that ever any darkness arose presently a●ter the breaking shining forth of a Promise which was more than the darkness of a cloud which vanished away Or whe e do you find in all the Scripture that ever any poor soul came into the dark immediately after the giving out of a Promise but that soul did come to the light again Now as for the darkness that covers the Saints it is usually a darkness that comes after the giving and shining out of a Promise and therefore that darkness is but the darkness of a cloud and they may say a cloud a cloud and it will pass away Answ 2 Secondly If a man be so in the dark as yet he can see to work and dig up pits it argues that the darkness is but the darkness of a cloud a man cannot see to work artificially in the night but though there be much darkness by reason of a cloud yet he may see to work and to dig up pits because it is day Now in Psalm 84. the Psalmist faith at verse 5. Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee and in whose hearts are the waies of them who passing through the Valley of Baca dig up pits the rain also filleth the pits they go from strength to strength till they appear before God in Zion It is an allu●ion to the practice of the Jews when some of them went up to Jerusalem their way lay through the Valley of Baca which was a very dry Valley where no houses were where no Water was for their relief and refreshment whereupon they digged up pits and to the rain fell and they were refreshed got strength and went on to Jerusalem where they saw the Lord in his Ordinances So saith the Psalmist Blessed are they in whose heart the Law of God is There are a Generation of men in the world that have the Law of God in their hearts though they cannot act and work towards God as they would these somtimes are in a dry and barren condition where no Water or Comfort is yet if in this condition they dig up pits go to prayer wait upon God in Duty though they find no Comfort springing up in their Duty for the present yet in due time the rain of Gods Blessing will fill those dry pits and empty duties whereby their Life shall be like unto a Pool of Water and they shall go from strength of Grace to strength of Grace till they see the Lord. Know ye therefore any man that is in this Valley of Baca where no Water is yet if he can find in his heart to dig up pits to pray read hear meditate confer and perform Duties though those duties be empty of Comfort for the present yet the rain of Grace and Mercy shall fall upon those Pits and he shall go from strength to strength till he appears before the Lord in Glory Now thus it is with the Saints though darkness and a great darkness be upon them yet in that dark condition they are still digging up pits and therefore this darkness is not the darkness of the night but the darkness of a cloud and they may say this is a cloudy darkness and it wil over ere long Answ 3 Thirdly If the darkness which a man is under be such as there are some openings of Light withal then it is the darkness of a cloud and not of the night though the cloud may cause much darkness yet ever and anon it opens and there are some interims of light withal but the night opens not there are no interims of light then Now interims and intermissions of Light are sure and certain pledges of a greater light which is yet to come You know that when David fled from Absolon he was in a dark condition for the Text saith He went and he wept and he went bare-foot his own son persecutes him drives him from his Throne a great consederacy was raised against him by wicked men with the child of his own bowels here was darkness upon darkness matter of great discouragement but it was a cloud and no more You wil say How should David have known that it was but the darkness of a cloud David prayed The Lord turn the Counsels of Ahithophel into folly and before David had overcome Absolon and was restored to his Kingdom Ahithophel did hang himself David singled out Ahithophel to pray against and the Lord heard his prayer that Judgment of Ahithophel was the return of Davids Prayer here the cloud opened and this Answer of his Prayer in the interim was a Seal to David of the full deliverance that came afterwards Deus uno Sigillo Sigillat diversas materias for God seals divers matters with the same Seal So when a man is in the dark by reason of some temptation affliction or desertion which he cannot see the end of if in this interim before the full deliverance comes he hath some lesser deliverance that lesser deliverance in the interim is a Seal unto him of the future deliverance and he may say here is a pledg of my full deliverance for here is the opening of the cloud Now thus it is alwaies with the People of God they never are in any affliction temptation or desertion but before their great deliverance comes they have some special Providence some reviving in the midst of their trouble some interim of light some openings of the cloud and therefore in the midst of all they may say surely this my darkness is not the darkness of a night but of a cloud I say there is no discouragement doth befall the Saints but the matter thereof is a cloud and they may say it is but a cloud it will pass over and therefore why should they be discouraged Surely there is no reason for their discouragements whatever their condition be If these things be so Applic. How heavily doth this Doctrine fall in reproof upon some I wish I might not say some of the Servants and People of God A godly man hath no true reason for his discouragements whatever his condition is although it be never so sad and some are alwaies discouraged whatever their condition be although it be never so good whatever falls out the Saints should not be discouraged no not at any thing and yet many are discouraged at every thing and upon every occasion O! what unworthy walking is this how contrary do you walk to God And do you know what it is to walk contrary to him Hath he not said If you walk contrary to me I will walk contrary to you Object But I have reason to be discouraged for I have no sence and feeling of Gods Love Answ 1 We do not live
periclitari causam cujus patrocinium suscepit ibid. because it is mixt with his Thirdly If our acceptance of duty do not come in by the door of performance but by another door and that door is Christ then a Godly man hath no reason to be discouraged though there be many failings in his performance Now al our acceptance of duty comes in by Christ because our Sacrifices are mingled with Christs perfumes Revel 8. vers 4. And the smoak of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand Our prayers go unto God the Father through the hand of Christ did our prayers go immediatly out of our own hands into the Fathers hand we might have caus● to fear but it goes by the hand of Christ Christ takes it and hath it into the pre●ence of God the Father As it is with your soul or your body when you die through your body be crooked or deformed and your soul defiled yet when you die Christ meets your soul and invests it with Glory and so brings it into the presence of God the Father so it is with your duty your duty it may be deform●d defiled or a crooked duty but Christ meetes your duty and he clothes it with his Glory and so hath it into the presence of God the Father and thus it is with al the Saints and people of God surely then though they have cause to be afflicted by reason of their failing in duty yet they have no reason at al why they should be discouraged Object But I have no Parts or Gifts in duties ther●fore I am thus discouraged some there are that have great abilities in duty they pray and can pray with great abilities they go to a sermon and can bring away every word and have a great Gift in conference but as for me I am a poor creature who want al these Gifts I have no utterance in conference I have no abilities in prayer I have no memory for a Sermon my memory is even as a sieve good things run out presently I have no Gifts at al a poor Sea-man or Trades-man I am that have no Parts no Gifts in duty and have not I just cause and reason now to be discouraged Answ 1 No For whosoever you are that make this objection Do ye not know That the Glory of the second Temple was greater than the first Solomon you know built a great House and it was a Glorious building much Gold and Silver in it the second Temple was not so ful of Gold and Silver and yet it is said of the second Temple That the Glory of it was beyond the Glory of the first why this reason is given because The desire of al Nations should come into it That is Christ who is indeed The desire of al Nations De facto Gold and Silver is the desire of al Nations but De jure and by right the Lord Jesus Christ is the desire of al Nations and because that Christ the desire of al Nations should come into the Second Temple therfore the Glory of it was beyond the Glory of the first Now thy soul is the Temple of the Holy-Ghost it may be thou hast not so much Gold and Silver not such Golden Parts and Golden Gifts as another hath but if the desir● of al Nations the Lord Jesus Christ be come into thy soul hast thou any reason to complain Thus it is with every child of God though he hath not those Parts and Gifts that another hath yet the Lord Jesus the desire of al Nations is come into his Temple into his soul and therefore he hath no reason to be discouraged Answ 2 If the want of Parts and Gifts be better for you then you have no reason to be discouraged for the want of them Now you know that it is better for a man that hath but a little stock to have a little farm than to have a great farm and a little stock a man that hath but a little stock and a great farm may for the present brave it out and converse with company that are in estate beyond him but at last he wil decay and break better that a man who hath but a little stock should have a little farm sutable to his stock Now God our Father sees that thou hast a little good there are some good things found in thee but these good things this little stock is not big enough for a great farm of Parts and Gifts and because the Lord sees that thy stock of Grace is not great enough for such a great farm of Parts therefore in design of mercy he hath thus ordered it that thou shouldest have a less farm of Gifts Answ 3 If our Parts and Gifts do not commend our services and duties unto God then have you no reason to be discouraged for the want of them Now so it is that they do not commend us nor our services unto God When you have good meat in a dish possibly you wil lay flowers upon it cut Oranges and Lemons and lay upon the side of the dish but a wise man knowes that the meat is never the better for tho e flowers or for the sugar that lies on the side of the platter a wise man knowes that if those were wanting the meate were never the worse Beloved God our Father is of infinite wi●dom these Parts and Gifts are flowers indeed and they help to cook ou● a duty and to make it more acceptable to men but the Lord who is wisdom knowes that the duty is never the be●ter and he knows that when these flowers are wanting the duty is never the worse All flesh is grass and the flower th●reof and it fades away Parts and Gifts are but flesh and our wise God knows the ●eat is never the worser when these flowers are wanting Yea if I had al Parts and al Gifts that I were able to preach and speak like an Angel and that I were able to cast out Devills yet notwithstanding if I have not Christ and Grace within my Parts and Gifts will but sink me deeper into Hell Two men suppose do fall into the River one man hath bag● of Gold about him and the other none he that hath none makes a shift to swim and get away but he that hath the bags of Gold about him sinks by his Gold and he cries out as he sinks O! take away these bags of Gold this Gold undoeth me this Gold sinks me So these Golden Parts and Golden Gifts if a man hath not Grace withal hath not Christ within shall but sink him the deeper into Hell These commend us not I say nor our Service unto God nor doth the want thereof discommend us unto him Answ 4 You say and complain That you have no Parts or Gifts but I pray hath not the Lord recompenced the want of them some other way unto you Phylosophy saith of Nature Vbi deficit in uno abundat
of Gold or Silver in his hand and saith the Father if you can get this out of my hand you shall have it so the Child strives and pulls and works and then the Father opens his hand by degrees first one finger then another and then another and at last his whol hand and the child thinks he hath got the money by his own strength and labor whereas the Father intended to give it him but in that way So here God intends to give us a mercy in the way of Prayer and he sets us a praying for it and we think we obtain it by the strength of our own prayer as if we did move and change the will of God by our Duty but all the enlargements in the world make no alteration in the will of God he is immovable unchangable and the same for ever But he will give out his blessings in a way of prayer therefore it is our Duty to pray yet we must not be discouraged though we cannot pray as we would Fourthly It is usual with the Lord to restrain Prayer before he doth give enlargement and to make a man speechless before he openeth his Mou●h Luke 1. we read so of Zacharias a gracious and holy man at the 67. verse it is said of him that He was filled with the Holy Ghost and he prophesied Yet if you look into the former part of the Chapter you shall find that before he was thus filled with the Holy Ghost and Prophesied he was dumb and stricken with dumbness verse 20. saith the Angel to him And behold thou shalt be dumb and not able to speak So he continued dumb before he was filled with the Holy Ghost and prophesied It may be here is a further Mystery in this quando oramus non ideo oramus ut per hoc Divinam dispositionem immutemus sed ut impetremus id quod deus disposuit sanctorum oratio nobis impetrandum Tostat Mat. 6. for Zachary was a Levitical and a Legal Priest and our Lord and Savior Christ being to come into the world immediately who knows but that Zachary was thus stricken with dumbness to shew that the Lord will silence all our Legal Performances before he wil enlarge us with the enlargements of Christ and of the Gospel This is Gods usual way with his People it may be thou hast gone on in Duty in a Legal manner and now thou art stricken with dumbness yet if God have a design to discover more of Christ to thy soul and to enlarge thee with the Enlargements of the Holy Ghost have you any cause to complain Fifthly As for the dulness of your Heart in Duty and Prayer though dulness be an ill-sin yet the sence thereof is a good sign As the T●●stle is a good sign of a fat ground though it be an ill Weed so the sence of your dulness is a good sign though it be an ill sin for it argues that you are used to private Duties for dulness in private and pride in publick Duties is the Temptation Only here remember Three things 1. That you do not measure or judg of your everlasting Condition by your present Affection 2. That you do not forbear Duty because of your dulness in it because Duty is a great remedy against it and whither should a dead soul go but to the living God 3. That one great cause of your dulness is your doubting and discouragement and therefore no reason that you should be discouraged because of it lest you augment the same Sixtly What is Prayer and the Nature of it Prayer is the powring out of the soul to God not the powring out of words not the powring out of expressions but the powring out of the soul to God Words many times and expressions are a great way off from the soul but sighs and groans are next the soul and have more of the soul in them than words and expressions many times have now thou complainest that thy heart is straightened and dead and dull but when you are so straightened in Prayer do ye not at that time powr out sighs and groans after Prayer saying O! what freedom once I had O! Lord that I might have the like freedom again And whereas you say now that your heart is hardened in Duty consider whether there be not a great mistake about hardness and softness of heart Durum est quod tactui non cedit molle cedit A hard thing doth not yield to the touch but a soft thing doth Wax yields when it is touched because it is soft and Wool yields when it is touched because it is soft but an hard thing yields not And upon this account it is said of Pharaoh That his heart was hard why Because he did not yield to God he had not a yielding disposition Now there is many a poor soul complains that his heart is hard and yet notwithstanding he hath a yielding disposition to every Truth a yielding disposition to every Affliction and Dispensation of God Wherefore doest thou complain and say O! my heare is very hard yet if at this time thou hast a yielding disposition to yield to every Truth of God and to yield to every touch of the Lords hand know from the Lord that here is a soft heart be not mistaken but many are mistaken and because they are mistaken herein and it is b●t a mistake therefore they have no reason for to be discouraged Object But I do not only want enlargement and softenings of heart in Duty but I am oppressed and filled with distractions my heart is not only dull and dead and straightened but I feel many positive evils As the Leaves of a Tree are eaten up with Catterpillars so I may say my Duties are eaten up ●●th distractions I never go to Duty but the Lord knows a world of distractions come in upon me and have I not just cause and reason to be discouraged now Answ Surely this is a great evil for as one saith well Tantum temporis oras quantum attendis so much time you pray as you do attend in prayer and upon this account if the Lord should abstract all the out-goings of our souls in Duty and all our distractions from our prayers O! how little of prayer would be left many times It were an incivility you wil say when a Petitioner hath gotten the Kings Ear for the poor Petitioner then to turn his back upon the King and what an evil must it needs be when a poor soul hath gotten the Ear of God then to turn the back by way of distractions upon the Lord who comes down to hear his Prayer We use to say When the Candle burns the Mouse bites not or the Mouse nibbles not when the Candle doth not burn then the Mouse eats the Candle but when the Candle burns the M●use doth not bite the same And so long as a mans heart is warm and inflamed in prayer he is freed from distractions but when a mans heart is
cold in prayer then comes these ill distractions So that certainly there is a great deal of evil indeed in these distractions Yet there is no reason for Discouragement For First What Rock is there so firm or fast but hath some seams of dirt upon it and what foul is there so firm and fast and immovable in Duty but hath some seams or dirt or distractions growing upon it Abraham the Father of the Faithful had Birds coming down upon his Sacrifice and what Child of Abraham is ther● but hath these foul Birds unclean Birds of distraction one time or other coming down upon his Sacrifice Secondly If that these distractions shall not hurt the Servants of God nor their Sacrifices neither them nor their Duties then they have no reason be discouraged under them though to be humbled for them Now it is a true Rule non nocet quod non placet that which doth not please doth not hurt These distractions in Duty do not please the Saints they lie under them as a heavy burden they do not please them therefore they shall not hurt them You know what the Psalmist saith If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my Prayer Psal 66.18 Distraction in Prayer is a great iniquity if I regard this iniquity in my prayer the Lord wil not hear my Prayer But when may a man be said to regard iniquity You know that if you regard a man thae comes to your house you run and meet him at the door you bid him welcom have him in and set a stool for him and you give him entertainment but if you bid the man be gone saying I will have nothing to do with you you are my burden I pray be gone then you do not regard this man Thus it is with the Saints and People of the Lord distractions press in upon their prayer and Duty but doest thou fetch a stool doest thou give entertainment and doest thou bid welcome to these distractions No the Lord knows I bid them be gone the Lord knows they are my burden then certainly as that is true If I regard Iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my Prayer so on the contrary if I do not regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will hear my prayer A man doth somtimes open a door for one of worth and others press and croud in with him and if the Master say to his Servant why did you let all these men in he answers Sir I did not open the door for these but for another and these did press and troud in upon me and I could not hinder then is the Master satisfied and the Servant excused So in this case it is and that often with the People of God Christ stands at their door and knocks they run to meet with him in Prayer and by Prayer they open the door of their heart to him but then distractions press and croud in upon them yet they can say in truth Lord I never opened my door for these but do desire that these and al these may be put out again What then do you not think that God wil be satisfied with this answer of uprightness Surely he will and therefore though these distractions do croud in upon you here is matter of affliction but not of Discouragement Thirdly If these destractions in Duties do move the Lord to pity then thou hast no reason to be quite discouraged though humbled under these distractions Ye know how it is with a loving Father a Father hath a Son whom he loves dearly this Child of his is crazy-brained but be hath his Lucida intervalla and he will speak very good reason somtimes his Father loves to hear this Child speak when he speaks reason but all on a sudden the Child is out What then doth his Father hate him for that No but the bowels of the man yerns O! now my Child is out then the Fathers heart doth ake over this Child whom he takes pleasure in Thus it is between God and a poor soul God loves his Children dearly Cant. 2.14 he loves to hear them pray Let me hear thy voyce and see thy face saith Christ for thy voyce is sweet and thy countenance is comely God loves to hear his Children pray but every foot they are out in and then out again out and then in again But what then is the Lord moved hereby to destroy his Children No but now the heart of your Father akes and now his bowels yern Shall there be bowels in the heart of an Earthly Father this way and shal there not be bowels in the heart of God our Heavenly Father this way Surely there is Well therefore though in regard of thy distractions thou hast cause for ever to be humbled yee certainly thou hast no cause to be quite discouraged Object O! but This is not my case For though I am troubled with many distractions for which I have cause to be humbled and though my heart be dead and dull and hard in duty and though I have no Parts and Gifts in Duty yet this is not the matter of my discouragement especially but that which discourageth me concerning Duty is this I pray and pray and am never the nearer I have been praying thus long thus many yeers and am never the neerer I have an undutiful disobedient child and I have been praying thus long and he is never the better I have been praying for the sence of Gods Love thus long and am never the neerer I have been praying for such and such a spiri●ual mercy thus and thus l●ng and am never the holier God regards me not for he answe●s me not and have I not just cause and reason for my discouragements now Answ No For First Though God doth not answer you presently yet he doth hear you presently Cito semper audit tardus aliquando respondet He heard Moses when he prayed though he did not g●ant his prayer and it is a great mercy that God will receive my prayer though I never do receive the thing that I pray for and I may yet say Father I thank thee that thou hearest me alwaies But Secondly It is usual with Gods own People and dearest Children to say and think somtimes that the Lord doth not answer their prayer when the Lord doth There is a Two-fold return or Answer of Prayer There is a Visible Return of Prayer and there is an Invisible Return of Prayer As it is with the Vapors that are drawn upward by the heat of the Sun some there are that do fall again in great Rain and Hail and ye hear and s●e the returns of those vapors in the day but somtimes the Vapors fall in a dew in the night and you do not see the return thereof but you go abroad in the morning and you find the dew upon the ground although you did not see when the dew fell So here your Prayers are drawn up by the heat of
Gods Love in Christ some return upon you again in the day visibly some return in the night invisibly when you see them not there is a visible and there is an invisible return of Prayer What more usual with Gods People than to say and think tha● the Lord doth not hear their Prayer nor make return to them when indeed he doth and that visibly unto others also Luke 1. you read of Zacharias and Elizabeth that they were very righteous verse 6. They were both righteous before God And Zacharias and Elizabeth had no Children but Zacharias prayed for Children for at verse 13. the Angel said unto him Fear not Zacharias for thy prayer is heard and thy Wife Elizabeth shall bear a Son and thou shalt call his name John The Lord heard his Prayer and sent an Angel to tel him his prayer was hea●d but Zacha●ias doubted thereof verse 18. Zacharias said unto the Angel Whereby shall I know this for I am an old man and my Wife well stricken in yeers Here he doubts and it was his sin thus to doubt as you may see by verse 20. Behold thou shalt be dumb and not able to speak until the day that these things shall be performed because thou beleevest not my words Here plainly now was a return of prayer yea here was a visible return of Prayer and yet Zacharias though a Godly and a Holy man doub●ed whether the Lord had heard his Prayer or no. So that I say this is no new thing with Gods own People and dearest Children to say and think somtimes That the Lord doth not answer their P●ayer when the Lord indeed doth an●wer and tha● visibly too But Thirdly If the Lords not hearing granting and answering your Prayers presently be ●omtimes matter of great encouragement then it is not alwaies a matter of discouragement Now the Lords not hearing and granting your prayer pre●e●tly is somtimes matter of great encouragement You have divers ●hildren at your Table some yonger and some elder some Babes and little ones some grown wh●n you come to carve out your meat unto them you carve first to the little ones and you do no● carve first to the greater for say you these little ones will cry and they have not Patience to stay and there●ore they sh●●l be first ●erved but those greater have more wi● and more patience and they will stay Beloved thus now it is between God and us The Lord hath two sorts of Children that come to him in Prayer and h● intends to serve them both but he looks upon those that are weak and serves them first as for th●●● that are strong●● and have more faith and patience saith the Lord you are able to stay I see your faith and patience and therefore I wil serve the little ones first but as for you I wil serve you last Thus it was with Abraham after the Lord had made Abraham a Promise of a Seed he made him stay a great while Why Because he saw he had faith to stay So now thou hast not presently a return or answer to thy prayer Why Because the Lord it may be sees thou hast strength faith and patience to stay And is not this rather matter of encouragement than discouragement But Fourthly Who ever stayed and waited long upon God but he had more than he prayed for Either God answers your prayers presently or if he do not he will not only pay you the principal but he wil pay you forbearance money and you shal have good Security and a pledg for the principal too The desire is a pledg of the thing desired Prayer is a pledg of the thing prayed for a waiting heart is a pledg of the thing waited for and the longer you stay the more your hearts shal be weaned from the thing prayed for and the more you shal be taught to wait upon God and somtimes a waiting frame of heart is a greater mercy than the thing waited for By this means also you shal be weaned from your prayer so as not to rest on it A Child may so love the Nu●se as to forget the Mother and one may possibly so love Duty as to forget Christ but by Gods delaying to answer you are weaned from this Nurse and kept from resting on it Or it may be you came to Duty with too high esteem of your own performance and too low esteem of the Duty it self Hereby God teachech you to come to the Duty with high esteem of it and with low esteem of your own doing it Yea the longer you stay the more you shal be humbled and your self-despising thoughts because you cannot pray may please God more than your best prayer You see that when a man angles he throws his line into the Water and there is the hook and the bait those are heavy then there is the Cork and that is light and when the Fisher or the Angler sees that the light cork is drawn under water now the Fish bites saith he now there is hope now there is somthing coming So you go to prayer and there is somwhat heavy and weighty in your spirit but there is somthing that is of a corky and light Nature in your spirit the longer you stay the more your Cork shall be drawn under water that lightness of Spirit shal be drawn under water and so the more you shall be humble and humbled Thereby you are caught to fan your prayers There is much Chaff amongst the good Wheat of our Duties and Gods delaying time is our fanning time when the Fish doth not bite the Fisher mends his bait it may be saith he my hook is not well baited So should you do when you take nothing by prayer Gods delay cals for your amending Yea by this means you may remember how you delayed the Lord he spake often to you and it was long ere you heard him shal we think it long ere he hear us when it was so long ere we heard him it may be you have forgotten your delayes of God but by this forbearance he doth Graciously mind you thereof Yea by Gods forbearance to answer you the Lord teacheth you to forbear Gods forbearance doth teach us forbearance and is that nothing let al this be considered and you wil say indeed here is more matter of incouragement than discouragement Fiftly If you would be discouraged in case God should alwaies answer your prayer presently then you have no reason to be discouraged because he doth not answer you presently But now if the Lord should alwaies answer thy duty and prayer presently you would be discouraged why because you would say thus I look into the scripture and there I find that God doth not alwayes answer his children presently his children have prayed and then they have waited and this hath been the way that God hath taken with his children now God doth not take this way with me and therefore I fear I am none of Gods children and so you would
be discouraged Now I say if you would be discouraged in case the Lord should alwaies answer your prayer presently then you have no reason to be discouraged because he doth not hear you presently but you would be discouraged in case the Lord should alwaies hear you presently you would say then God doth go the same way with me that he goes and hath gone with his children Surely therefore you that are the Saints and people of God have no reason for your discouragement in this respect Object 1 O! but I fear that God doth not only delay his answer but that he denyes my prayer Answ 1 It may be so for God doth somtimes deny his own people the thing they pray for Ye ask and have not saith James because ye ask amiss Yet they were the people of God Abulensis observes that God doth somtimes grant a wicked man his petition and deny a Godly man his petition that he may encourage wicked men to pray and teach good men not to rest on their prayers Answ 2 Yet Secondly quicquid placet tibi ut petatur a te procul-dubio plac●t et tibi ut et id ●rgiaris pet●●ti pr●sertim●● i●sum largiri t●●i c●lat ad gloraim pe● a●● v●ro expediat ad s●●●tem Parist●ns 346. If the thing you ask of God be pleasing to him he doth stil beare up your heart in praying and depending on him it argues rather that he delayes than denies For Psal 10.17 The preparing of your heart and the inclining of his eare go together and 1. John 3. vers 22. The Apostle saith And whatever wee ask we receive of him because as a sign thereof we keep his Commandements and do the things that are pleasing in his sight Object 2 O! but there lyes my grief for I have not kept his Commandements and God I fear is displeased and angry with me Answ Be it so did Jonah keep his Commandements when he ran to Tarshish and was not God angry with him when he threw him into the Sea yet even then he prayed the Lord heard his prayer And did not Christ seem to be displeased and angry with the poor Canaanitish woman when he said unto her It is not meet to take the childrens bread and call it before doggs Object 3 O! but she did beleeve but I fear God wil never hear my prayer at al because there is so much unbelief in my prayer as there was not in hers Answ But was it not so with D●vid I said in my hast I am cast out of thy sight Psal 31. nevertheless the Lord heard my prayer What unbeleif was here I said in m● hast I am cast out of thy sight Nevertheless the Lord heard his prayer Object 4 O! but I am affra●● yet that the Lord wil never hear my prayer or regard my duty because I am so Selfish in it I come unto God in mine affliction and my affliction makes me go to prayer my affliction doth make me pray I cry by reason of my affliction and this is selfish Answ And did not those seek themselves at first who came unto Christ for cure Omnis amor incipit a seipso al true love begins in self-love the sweetest flower grows on a dirty stalk And I pray what think you yet of Jonah The Lord heard me saith he out of hell and yet I cryed saith he by reason of mine affliction Object 5 O! but I fear the Lord wil never hear my prayer because I was no better prepared yea not at al prepared thereunto Answ Do you not know how the Lord dealt by Hezekiah Hezekiah prayed 2 Chron. 30.18 19 20. The Lord shew mercy to every one that is not prepared according to the preparation of the Sanctuary and saith the text the Lord hearkened and hea ed the people Yea God can rain without clouds without preparations Object 6 O! but yet I am affraid the Lord wil not hear my prayer or regard my duty for I am a man or a w●man of great distempers many passions and frowardnesses in my life and conversation Answ But what thi●k ye of Elijah Elijah prayed that there might be no rain and there was no rain ●or three yeers and a half and he prayed for rain and there was rain and yee saith the Apostle He was a m●n ●f like passions as we are Jam. 5.17 Object 7 O! but I fear I am affraid the Lord wil not regard my prayer or du y for I am such a one or such a one or such a one Answ What an one what an one art thou Art thou such a one as beginnest to look towards Christ but yet not fully come off you know what was said concerning Cornelius Acts 10.31 Cornelius thy prayer is come up before me Yet he did but begin to look towards Christ Are thou such a one as the Publican was the Publican stood and smote himself upon the breast and he said O Lord be merciful unto me a sinner And our Savior saith Luke 18.13 14. He went away justified rather than his fellow Or art thou such an one as the poor Prodigal he said to his Father I am not worthy to be called ●hy Son make me as one of thine hired servants and the Father heard him and over-granted his petition And if al these things be true what is there that can justly discourage any poor drooping doubting soul in regard of duty shal his want of Parts Gifts or his abundance of distractions c. No for though a Godly man have but weak Parts or Gifts Though his spirit and his heart be dul dead and streightened Though he labor under many distractions in duty Though the Lord hide his face and deser an answer to his prayer Though the Lord seem to be angry Though there be much unbeleif in his duty Though there be a great deal of selfishness Though his heart be not prepared according to the preparation of the Sanctuary Though he be a man of many passions and great distempers yet notwithstanding al this he hath no just cause or warrant to be discouraged cause there is to be humbled under al these things but no just cause to be discouraged and cast down Applic. 1 And if so then by way of Application 〈…〉 incouragement is here to every poor droopi●g 〈…〉 u●●o God in duty though dead though dul 〈…〉 yet to come unto God in duty Applic. 2 And what a mighty difference is he●● b●tween a 〈…〉 wicked man a wicked man goes to p●ayer and 〈…〉 abomin●tion to the Lord. And if you look 〈…〉 8 you shal find at Vers 13. That the 〈…〉 men thus That when they do come to prayer and to offer a sacrifice to him that then he wil remember their iniquity At vers 12. I have written to you the great things of my law but they are accounted as a strange thing they Sa●●●fice fl●sh f●r the Sacrifices of my offering but the Lord accep●eth
reading of a Story although it doth not concern him for saith he although this Story doth not concern me yet I take a complacency and contentment in the reading of it because here I read of the Valor of such a man and of the Faithfulness of such a man to his friend and of the excellent Carriages and Vertues of men Now my Beloved is there no excellency in God himself to content the soul Is there no Faithfulness in God Is there no Love and Mercy in God himself Is not the Lord the God of all Consolation and God of Mercy without relation to my Condition Is there not an Ocean of Excellent Love and Grace in God himself How many sweet Stories of Love and Grace may you read in this little Book of the Bible Besides a man that hath no Assurance now and then may have some Promise thrown into his Soul to uphold him with When Elijah was by the Brook and could not enjoy the ordinary meat of the Land a Raven brought him meat And when ever was any godly man in such a condition but he had one Raven or other to bring him Comfort Somtimes a Temptation is a Raven God makes it so somtimes a Desertion is a Raven somtimes Affliction somtimes a Particular Word and Promise is thrown into his soul and is there no comfort there I say though a man do want Assurance for the present he may live comfortably Surely therefore a Godly man hath no reason for his discouragement although for the present he doth want Assurance Object But I do not only want this setled Assurance of Gods Love and so the ordinary food of the Land but I have no Raven to bring me any Comfort I mean I have no Promise no particular Word to bring in Comfort unto my soul and to uphold me in my dark condition th●●gh I do want a setled Assurance yet if I had a particular Word and Promise to uphold my soul until I had this Assurance I should not be discouraged but I want this setled Assurance and I have no particular Word or Promise to uphold my soul with until it come and therefore I am thus discouraged have I not reason now Answ 1 I Answer No. For Christian what particular Word or Promise would'st thou have Have ye not the whol Gospel before you a bag of Golden Promises A Father hath two Children and he comes unto one and gives unto that Child a piece of Gold there Child saith he supply thy want with that but unto the other Child he saith here Child I know thou are in want and there are Bags of Silver and Gold in my Study take the Key of my Study and go in and take what thou wilt Is not this latter in as good a condition as the former or rather better Thus it is with the Saints the Lord is pleased to give now and then a particular Word to some of his Children but unto others he saith rather Here take the Key of Faith for Faith is the Key and hath a power to unlock all the Promises I give thee Faith and by this Faith I give thee a power to go into all my Promises Is not this latter in as good a Condition as the other Thus it is I say with all the Servants of God Having therefore these Promises saith the Apostle c. 2. Cor. 7.1 Answ 2 Secondly If the Promise of Grace do belong to you then you cannot say I have no Word no Promise to uphold me with Now that the Promise of Grace doth belong to you is cleared thus 1. Your very resting on the Promise makes it to belong to you and it becomes yours by your resting on it but you do or have rested on the Promise 2. If the Command doth belong to you then why not the Promise Doth not the Word of Commandement belong to you viz. Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not steal Thou shalt not commit adultery Doth this word of Command belong to you Yea surely for the Command saith Thou and Thou and Thou shalt not c. and that word Thou doth include Me the word of Promise hath its Thou and Thee and Thy also Psal 37. Trust in the Lord and do good so shalt Thou dwell in the Land and verily Thou shalt be fed ver 3. Delight Thy self in the Lord and he shall give Thee the desire of Thy heart ver 5. And if you put your self within the compass of the Commandements Thou God will put you within the compass of the Promises Thou 3. If you may and it be your Duty to rest on the Promise then it belongs to you now you may rest on the Promise of Grace and Holiness for Sanctification and it is your Duty so to do else it were no sin not to rest on the Promise but unbelief and not resting on the Promise is a sin only ye must know that there is a great difference between the Promise of Consolation and the Promise of Sanctification to apply the Promise of Comfort without endeavor after Holiness is presumption but to apply the Promise of Sanctification that I may be more holy is no presumption but my Duty and if it be your Duty to apply and rest on this Promise then it belongs to you Object 2 O! but yet When I go unto the Word or the Scripture I find that Gods Promise still runs upon some Condition and I cannot perform that Condition I do not find that condition in my self and therefore I fear that I may not go unto these Promises and that I have no right to them Answ 1 But what if a good and gracious man may apply a Conditional Promise although he hath not performed the Condition Pray look into Nehemiah chap. 1 and there you will find That the Jews being in Captivity Nehemiah goes unto God in prayer and doth press the Promise which God had made unto the Jews by his Servant Moses verse 8. Remember I beseech thee thy Word that thou commandedst thy Servant Moses saying If ye transgress I wil scatter ye abroad among the Nations but if ye turn unto me and keep my Commandements and do them though there were of you cast unto the utmost part of the Earth yet will I gather them from thence and I will bring them unto the place that I have chosen to set my Name there Now these are thy Servants and thy People whom thou hast redeemed by thy great Power The Jews in Babylon were scattered according to the Word but alas they did not return unto the Lord and leave their sins according to the Condition of the Promise yet notwithstanding Nehemiah goes unto the Lord and presseth this Ptomise and the Lord heard him and he had acceptance as ye find in the following Chapter Answ 2 Secondly What if the Condition of one Promise be the thing promised in another Promise will ye then fear that the Promise doth not belong to you because you have not performed the Condition
a fault and a man takes the one and correct him and let the other go it argues rather that he is his Father than not So though Chastisements do not alwaies argue God to be our Father yet it doth rather argue his Fatherly Love than not Answ 2 And is there any thing in God that is not a friend to all the Saints When a man is a friend to another not only his Purse is his Friend his Estate is his Friend his Staff is his Friend but his Sword is his Friend So if God be a Friend to a man then not only his Love is his Friend and his Mercy his Friend but his Sword is his Friend his Anger is his Friend Now God is a Friend to all the Saints and therefore his very Anger and Justice is a Friend too But Answ 3 In the third place What are those visible Characters of Love which are engraven upon an Affliction First If Affliction be a blessing to one then it doth come from Love and if a man can bless God under Affliction then it is a blessing to him Jobs Affliction was a blessing to him Why Because he blessed God under it The Lord gives and the Lord takes away blessed be his Name c. Secondly If an Affliction do end in our Love to God then it comes from Gods Love to us for our Love is but a reflection of Gods Love and it doth flow from his and if I can say I love God never the worser for this Affliction then I may say God loves me never the lesser notwithstanding this Affliction Thirdly If an Affliction teacheth the mind of God then it doth come from Love As many as he loveth he chastiseth And blessed is the man whom thou chastiseth and teachest out of thy Law So that if Affliction be a teaching Affliction then it doth come from Love Fourthly If it be laid on in measure and imposed in due and seasonable time so as a man may grow thereby then it doth come from Love When a man intendeth to kill and destroy a Tree or to bring it unto the fire he cuts it at any time so as it shal grow no more but if he cut it in a due time it argueth that he intendeth it for growth So when God pruneth and cuts by Afflictions in such a time as men may grow in Grace it argues his Love Fifthly When God is especially present in Affliction and more present in an Affliction than at another time it argues that the Affliction doth come from Love Now whoever you are that make this Objection and fear the Affliction doth not come from Love are you not able to say Thus I find it indeed though I have been much afflicted yet through Grace I have b●en able to bless the Lord under my Affliction and to say The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away c. I love the Lord never the lesser for mine Affliction and the Lord hath taught me much in this mine Affliction I have gained more by my sickness than by many a Sermon yea and he hath cut me in due time for if I had not met with such an Affliction at such a time I did not know what evil I should have fallen into and this I must needs say I have had more of Gods Presence in my Affliction than ever I had before Well then be of good Comfort though your Affliction be very grievous yet it doth come from Love And thus it is with all the Saints and People of God and therefore why should they be discouraged whatever their Affliction be Object 8 But though a Christian have no reason to be discouraged in regard of his own private Affliction yet hath he not reason to be discouraged when it goes ill with the Publick And thus it is now with us we see how it is with this poor Nation Troubles and Calamities from every Part therefore I am thus discouraged and have I not cause to be cast down and to be much disquieted now Answ Indeed this is a sad thing and O! that we could weep day and night and pray too for this poor bleeding Nation If ever Gods People here in England had cause to be afflicted troubled and humbled under the hand of the Lord and to run together in Prayer surely they have reason now yet saith the Scripture Say to the Righteous in evil times it shall go well with him Did ever any Calamity come down like a storm upon a Kingdom but God did provide some hiding for his own Children Did he not provide an Ark for Noah in the time of the Flood and a Mountain for Lot in the time of the fire of Sodom The worst that man can do is but to kill his neighbor Death is the worst that can fall and what is death but an in-let to Eternal Life unto the People of God When the Saints in the Primitive Times came to bear witness by their deaths unto the Truth of Christ then they said Now we begin to be Christians indeed now we begin to be like to Christ There is a Three-fold Death Spiritual Death in sin Eternal Death for sin And Temporal Death which came in by sin If God spare me from the two former Deaths the Spiritu●l Death and Eternal Death and only inflict the Temporal Death have I any cause to complain Thus it is with the Saints though they die Temporally yet they are free from the Spiritual and Eternal Death and what Godly man may not say I could not live long in Nature and shall I now bear witness unto the Truth with this little spot of time that remains Christ died for us the Just for the Unjust and shal not I that am unjust be willing to die for the just The worst of all is Death the worst of Death is gain When my Body is broken may I not say if Godly now a poor Pitcher is broken and shall go no more to the Well now a poor Prisoner my soul is delivered and I go home unto my Father But if you look into Rev. 7. you shal ●ind what a glorious issue God doth give unto al his People in the times of publick troubles ver 9. After this I beheld and so a great multitude which no man could number of all Nations Kindreds and People stood before the Throne and before the Lamb cloathed with white Robes and Palms in their hands A Robe is a Garment of Majesty Palms are an Ensign of Victory and saith he I saw them with Robes and Palm● The world looks upon my Servants as poor and of low spirits but saith Christ I look upon them as under a royal Princely Garment in Robes and of a Princely spirit And though the world look upon them as discomforted yet saith Christ here they shal overcome for they have Palms in their hands but who are these This Scripture tels ver 14. These are they which come out of great Tribulations and have washed their Robes and made them
out your skil and strength and hath no design but of Love upon you wil you then be discouraged Thus it is with all the Saints surely therefore they have no reason to be cast down in this respect Object 3 O! but I am not so much troubled about my outward Condition as about the condition of my Soul the Lord knows my Souls Condition is very sad for somtimes I am under the Ordinances and somtimes not somtimes I can stir out to an Ordinance but somtimes oppositions keep me at home I am not under a setled Ordinance and when I am under the Ordinance I get little good thereby I hear and I do not remember my heart is hard and dead and dull and it is little that I profit and therefore I am thus discouraged have I not cause and reason now Answ 1 No not yet For ●i●st As for your want of Ordinances if God lead you to the want of an Ordinance he wil make the very want of an Ordinance to ●e an Ordinance to you When the Children of Israel came into the Land of Canaan where there was ordinary food then Manna ceased but when ordinary food could not be had as in the Wilderness then they had Manna Bread that was baked in the Clouds then they had Angels Food immediately from God and immediate Mercies that come immediately out of the hand of God are the sweetest Mercies God doth alwaies give some opportunities of good unto his People either of doing good or receiving good and the less opportunity they have of receiving good usually the more opportunity they have of doing good what though your hand be empty of receiving opportunities yet if your hand be full of doing opportunities have you any cause to be discouraged God knows how to give the comfort of an Ordinance in the want of an Ordinance When Jonah was in the Whales belly he prayed and in his prayer he looked towards the Temple though he was absent from it and the Lord heard his prayer And Beloved if the Lord do remember your carriage labor of Love Longings Groanings Mournings after the Ordinances as much when you want them as he remembers your enlargements under them then you have no reason to be discouraged in this respect Now look into Psal 132. and you shal see how David presseth the Lord to remember him verse 1. Lord remember David and all his afflictions he was in great Afflictions and he desired the Lord to remember him but under what Notion would he have the Lord remember him why saith he remember him How he sware unto the Lord verse 2. and vowed unto the mighty God of Jacob surely I will not come into the Tabernacle of my House nor go up into my Bed I will not give sleep to mine eyes or slumber to mine eye-lids until I have found out a place for the Lord an Habitation for the mighty God of Jacob. He wanted the Ordinance and his heart was restless after it and now he desires the Lord to remember him for this So that I say God wil in a special manner remember your carriage labor of Love longings and groanings after Ordinances when you want them O! but though the Lord do remember us in due time yet what shal we do in the mean time Mark what follows at verse 6. Lo we heard of it at Ephrata we found it in the fields of the woods What is that Lo we heard of it at Ephrata we heard of it that is we heard of the Ark which he had spoken of before and the Habitation of the mighty God of Jacob. We heard of it at Ephrata as if he should say it was commonly reported and thought that the Lord would settle his Ark and his House and Habitation at Ephrata at Bethlehem a plentiful place but now we have found it in the fields of the Wood. Now we find that the Lord wil settle his House and his Ark at Jerusalem which is compassed about with Hills full of Woods in the Fields of the Forrest have we found it Beloved our eye is all upon Ephrata upon Bethlebem upon the plentiful place but the Lord doth so order things in his Goodness that when he brings his People into the Woods the Fields the Forrest there they find his Ark his Presence and his Habitation in the midst of it And what godly man is there whom God hath called at any time from the Ordinance but he may say thus Lo we heard of it at Ephrata but we have found it in the Fields of the Woods and if you do not find the Presence of God and the Ark of God and his Habitation at Ephrata yet if ye find him in the Fields of the Woods in the barren Forrests have you any cause to complain No surely you have not O! but I am in a plentiful place for the present I am at Ephrata I am not in the barren Fields I am under plentiful and precious Ordinances but I do not remember I hear and I remember not Answ 2 Secondly Therefore ye must know That as for your want of Memory there is an Head-Memory and there is an Heart-Memory Some have an Head-Memory whereby they are able to give an account presently of all they have heard in their due order but they want an Heart-Memory to suggest the things to them when they should use the same Some again have an Heart-Memory so as they can remember the things when they should use them but they have no Head-Memory Now if you can remember the things as you are to use them though you forget the words and Method have you any cause to complain 〈◊〉 ●●ugh the words heard do depart from you yet your heart 〈◊〉 ●e kept sweet by the hearing of them Water is often poured into a Vessel and runs out presently yet it keeps the Vessel sweet So now though you hear and hear and hear again and you cannot remember and the things heard do not stay by you as you desire yet your soul may be kept sweet thereby Answ 3 Thirdly As for your Deadness It is some life to feel ones own deadness for there is a Death and a Deadness as I may so speak There is a Life and a Liveliness a man may be alive and yet not lively as a sick person So a man may be under some deadness and yet not be dead unto death There is a deadness that is opposite to liveliness and there is a deadness that is opposite to life Now you complain O! my heart is dead my heart is dead this argues that it is but a deadness that is opposite to liveliness else you could not feel your own deadness A man that is stark dead cannot feel that he is dead I say therefore in that you feel your own deadness it argues that it is but a deadness that is opposite to liveliness and not that deadness that is opposite to Life it self and if you be alive in opposition to death though you have a
them is wrought by the Spirit and Finger of God in order to mans Salvation yet out of malice do blaspheme the same But why is this Sin above all other Sins Unpardonable Quest 2 Answ Not in regard of Difficulty only or because it is hardly pardoned as some would for many Sins are hardly pardoned and yet are not the Sins against the Holy Ghost Peccatum dicitur irremissibile septem de causis vide Altissi●dorens Lib. 2. Tract 30. in Sent. for Zanchy doth wel observe if this Sin were only impardon because it is hardly pardoned then a m●n might pray for tho●●●at in this Sin but the Apostle saith There is a Sin unto 〈◊〉 I do not say that ye shall pray for it 1 John 5.16 The●●ore the impardonableness of it doth not lie here 2. Neither is it impardonable only in regard of event Because in event it shal never be pardoned for th●re are many Sins which in event shal never be pardoned which yet are not the Sins against the Holy Ghost There is many a wicked man that goes to Hel whose Sins in event are not pardoned and yet he did never sin against the Holy Ghost So that this Sin is not impardonable only in regard of event 3. Neither is it impardonable because it is so great as doth exceed the Power and Mercy of God for Gods Mercy and Power in forgiving sins is like himself Infinite If that be a good Argument that David useth Forgive my sin for it is wondrous great then the greatness of the Sin cannot be the only reason of the impardonableness of it There is nothing greater than that which is infinite Nunquam remittetur quod intellige regulatiter nam nec Divina potentia nec Divina miserecordia alligata est ad non remittendum spiritua blasphemiam sed secundum reg●larem cursum eveniet non remissio quod comitem semper habet obstinationem Cajetan in Matth. 12. Dupliciter dicitur peccatum irremissibile dicitur uno quod nunquam remittetur alio dicitur irremissibile quod remitti non potest et sic non sequitur iste est similiter impenitens ergo habet peccatum irremissibile Holcot de imputabilitate peccati but Gods Mercy is Infinite 4. Neither is it impardonable because it is against the means of Pardon for then the Sin against the free Love of the Father and the Sin against the Son should be impardonable 5. Neither is it impardonable because a man doth not repent thereof for then al Sins unrepented of should be Sins against the Holy Ghost It is true That those who commit this Sin cannot repent as the Apostle speaks It is impossible that they should be renewed to repentance Heb. 6. because God doth give them up to impenitency but we do not find in Scripture that their not repenting is made the reason of the impardonableness of this Sin But the Sin is impardonable because there is no Sacrifice laid out by Gods Appointment for it If any man sin wilfully there remaineth no more Sacrifice Heb. 10. and without blood and Sacrifice there is no remission He that sinned ignorantly Numb 15. was pardoned Why Because there was a Sacrifice laid out for him but if any man sinned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an high hand he was to bear his own sin Why Because there was no Sacrifice laid out for him But why was there no Sacrifice for that Sin Not because the man did not repent after it but because that in the committing of that Sin he did despise the Commandement of God So now God hath declared That every Sin and Blasphemy against the Father and Son may be forgiven but if men come to that height of Sin as maliciously to oppose and blaspheme that very way and work of Gods Spirit which they have been convinced of by the Spirit then there shal be no Sacrifice for that and so no remission and pardon And thus now ye have seen what the Sin against the Holy Ghost is in what respects it is not and in what respects it is unpardonable and so the Doctrine cleered and proved That the Sin against the Holy Ghost is the impardonable Sin which shal never be forgiven neither in this world nor in the world to come The Application follows Applic. 1 If the Sin against the Holy Ghost be the Impardonable Sin Then surely the Holy Ghost is God very God true God as the Father is For can it be a greater evil or more dangerous to sin against a Creature than against God the Father It is God that is sin'd against now the Holy Ghost is sin'd against yea the Impardonable Sin is against the Holy Ghost The Socianians say That if he be a Person he must needs be God true God but ye see by this Scripture that he is joyned with the other Person of the Son so also he is joyned with the Father and the Son in Matth. 28. In whose Name we are to baptize he who hath a Name and in whose Name somthing is to be done must needs be a Person And I pray you what is proper and peculiar to a Person is not Understanding Willing and Speaking these are al given to the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.11 1 Cor. 12.11 and Rom. 8.26.27 Acts 13.2 Acts 20.23 But I need go no further than this Text here the Spirit is joyned with the Son and the Sin against the Holy Spirit is made the impardonable Sin surely therefore he is verily and truly God as the Father is Applic. 2 If this Doctrine be true then what a necessity is there upon us al to know and understand what this Sin against the Holy Ghost is for if a man have sinned this Sin we are to forbear praying for him 1 John 5.16 therefore we may know what this Sin is and we may know that another hath committed the same for how can we forbear prayer for him if we do not know and understand what this Sin is the not knowing what this Sin is makes many men fal into it before they are aware When the Laws of a Nation are written in an unknown Tongue the People break them before they are aware because they do not know them So the not knowing what this Sin is makes many a poor soul to fal into it yea the not knowing what this Sin is breeds many scruples doubts and fears in new Converts O! saith one I have sinned that great Sin against the Holy Ghost and I saith another have sinned the impardonable Sin and why but because the man doth not know what this Sin is O! what a necessity therefore is thereupon us al to know and understand what this Sin is and wherein it doth consist Applic. 3 If the Sin against the Holy Ghost be the unpardonable Sin what Mercy and what Grace is it that the Lord hath kept us from this great Sin that though ye have fallen into great and hainous sins and the Lord hath suffered you to fall into such sins
out of any evil habit passion or ignorance but meerly from the liberty of his own wil because it pleaseth him and because he doth hate that which his own Conviction tels him is right and good Now have you sin'd thus Surely no for then you would not be troubled about it but be wel pleased with it Obj. 8. O! But yet I fear I have sinned this great Sin for I have forsaken God and God hath forsaken me God is gone Christ is gone and Mercy is gone O! what freedom once I had but now God is departed from me God hath forsaken me and I fear it is upon this account Because I have sinned this great Sin Ans But doth not David say How long O Lord wilt thou forget me forsake me And our Savior himself saith My God my God why hast thou forsaken me There is a gradual forsaking and there is a total As with a man that goes from his house possibly he go●s a Voyage or is from home a quarter half a yeer or a yeer but he doth not leave his House for his Wi●e his Children and Goods are there stil But another man goes aw●y from his House the House is let and he carries away al his Goods this is a total departure the other gradual So now it is with the Lord he doth somtimes forsake his own Childr●n for a time but he doth not pul down his Hangings or carry away his Goods he doth not go away but returns again this is gradual But there is a total forsaking of a man and then he giv●s him up to his Sin Now this is not the burden that you lie under for if God had thus forsaken you you would be given up to your Sins and you would give up your selves unto ●l Uncleanness Object 9 O! But I am afraid yet that I am under the worst forsaking and that therefore I have sinned this great Sin for I do lie despairing saying God is gone and Mercy gone I am in the dark O! I despair I despair and upon this account I fear I have sinned this great Sin the Sin against the Holy Ghost Answ For Answer You know what Heman said I remember God and am troubled O Lord saith he all thy waves are gone over my head the waves of thy wrath are gone over my head and yet a Pen-man of Scripture Aretius tels us of a certain man in his time It is no feigned story saith he but I saw the man with my own Eyes one that had been a most vile and desperate Sinner a Drunkard a Swearer a Wanton a Gamester and so he continued to his gray hairs but at the last it pleased God to set his Sins in order before him and the man was so troubled in Conscience that he threw himself down upon the ground calling unto Satan to take him away provoking Satan to take him away Devil take thy own I am thy own take thy own whereupon saith Aretius prayer was made for him Christians prayed they fasted and prayed they prayed night and day and it pleased God at last this poor man revived converted to God lived a godly life and died comfortably So that it is not an easy thing saith he to pronounce what the Sin against the Holy Ghost is But now whosoever you are that have labored under this fear as indeed this fear I know hath oppressed many give me leave to ask you four or five short Questions The First is Whether canst thou not find in thy heart to forgive men that do trespass against thee Do not you find a disposition in your own heart to forgive others Yes I praise the Lord that I do Now if you can find in your heart to forgive others I am sure God can find in his heart to forgive you and therefore you have not sinned this great sin which is unpardonable Secondly Whether I or no have you ever opposed the waies of God the People of God and that out of malice No I confess I have opposed them but the Lord knows I did it ignorantly it was not out of malice then remember the description of this Sin Thirdly VVhether I or no do not you desire to be humbled for every Sin though it be never so smal Yes for though I know that my greatest Humiliation cannot placare Deum make an attonement for my Sin yet I know that the least Humiliation in truth doth placere Deo please God and it is my Duty to be humbled for every sin for the least sin is a great evil and he that commands Humiliation for the one commands it for the other also and through Grace I desire to be humbled for every sin why then you cannot have sin'd against the Holy Ghost for it is impossible that they that sin this Sin should be renewed to Repentance Fourthly Whether I or no do not you desire above all things the breathings of the Spirit of God upon your heart Yes O! that God would come and breath upon my poor soul in Duty But those that sin against the Holy Ghost do despight to the Spirit of Grace Hebrews 10. Fiftly Where do you find in al the Bible That those that sin this Sin against the Holy Ghost are afraid that they have sinned it those that sin against the Holy Ghost are never afraid that they have sinned against the Holy Ghost This alone satisfied Mistriss Drake a Woman much troubled in Conscience she was afraid she had sinned against the Holy Ghost Mr. Dod of blessed Memory came to her and told her That therefore she had not sinned the Sin against the Holy Ghost Because she feared she had sinned it for those that sin the Sin against the Holy Ghost are never afraid that they have sinned it and she acknowledged it did satisfie her and she was thereupon comforted Now therefore where is the man or woman that hath labored under such a fear as this O! I have sinned this unpardonable Sin Art thou one that fearest thou hast sinned it I tel thee from the Lord thou art free from it and thou maist go home and say thus Though I have sinned much for which the Lord humble me yet I bless God I am kept from this great Sin And O! my beloved what a mercy is it That among all the sins that we have committed That yet we should be kept from this great Sin The greater the evil is the greater is the mercy to be kept from it Now I pray What is the misery of this Sin Is it not a great misery to be past Prayer to be thrown out of the Prayers of the Saints For such a one pray not saith the Apostle Is it not a great misery for a man to be beyond the line of Mercy a man that hath sinned this Sin against the Holy Ghost is worser Spiritually than a man that is sick of the Plague outwardly for if a man be sick of the Plague ye pray for him and say Lord have mercy upon him but if a
death there is a sin which may stand with Grace and there is a sin which cannot stand with Grace there is the spot of the Godly and there is the spot of the Wicked there is a gross sin a reigning sin and there is a sin of infirmity there is a sin for which God wil leave and cast off the sinner witness Judas's sin the sin of the false Disciple and there is a sin for which God wil not cast one off witness the sin of these true Disciples O! then what cause have we to make it out to our own souls whether our sins be sins of infirmity or not Quest But it seems that all the sins of the Godly are not sins of Infirmity and God will not cast off a Godly man for any sin What advantage therefore hath this sin of Infirmity above other sins or what disadvantage do the other sins of the Godly labor under which this sin of infirmity doth not Answ 1 Much very much For though my sin be great yet if it be a sin of Infirmity it shal not hinder the present acceptance of my Duty Hezekiah and the People were not prepared according to the preparation of the Sanctuary that was his and their weakness but he prayed and the Lord heard his prayer So David said in his hast I am cast out of thy sight this was his infirmity yet he prayed withal and saith he N●vertheless thou heard'st the voyce of my supplication But if a man a good man do fall into a foul gross and scandalous sin though the Lord pardon it to him afterward yet it wil suspend his present communion with God Answ 2 Although my sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity it shall not hinder the sence of my Justification A foul and scandalous breach upon our Sanctification wil make a breach upon the sence of our Justification but though the sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity it shal not make a breach upon the sence of our Justification Answ 3 Though my sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity there is a pardon that lies in course for it and though it be good to repent of every sin with a distinct and particular Repentance yet it is not necessary that there should be a particular Repentance for every sin of Infirmity If a man though a good man do commit a gros● foul and scandalous sin there must be a particular Repentance for it and without that there wil be no peace no true peace in his soul but if the sin be only a sin of infirmity a general Repentance may and wil serve for that Who knows the errors of his Life saith David Lord clense thou me from my secret faults Answ 4 Though a mans sin be great yet if it be but an Infirmity it shal never bring a scourge upon his Family It is a great misery to a good Parent to see his Family scourged for his sin Possibly the sins of a Godly man may bring a rod on his Family Because of this saith the Lord to David the Sword shall never depart from thine house But now if the sin be only a sin of Infirmity my Family shal never be scourged for that Answ 5 And though my sin be great yet if it be but a sin of Infirmity it shal never spoil my Gifts nor make them unprofitable If a man have great Gifts praying exercising Gifts and his Life be scandalous what saith the World I this man hath exceeding good Gifts indeed but do ye see how he lives A scandalous Life soils and spoils his Gifts and doth make them unuseful But now if my sin be only a Sin of infirmity it shal never soil my Gifts so as to make them unuseful and unprofitable unto others Surely then there is a great and a vast difference between this Sin of Infirmity and another Sin and therefore why should we not labor to make it out with cleerness to our own souls what kind of sins our sins are Every man almost thinks that his Sin is a Sin of Infirmity Come to the Drunkard Swearer Adulterer Opposer and these wil tel you that their Sins are but Sins of Infirmity they wil rail at and oppose the People of God and yet their sins are but Sins of Infirmity Swear and swear dayly yet their sins are but Sins of Infirmity go to the Tap-house Play-house Whore-house and yet their Sins but Sins of Infirmity the vilest of men think their Sins are only Infirmities But is there such a great difference between Sins and Sins this and the other Sins Then why should we not look wishly into our condition consider our waies and labor to make it out with cleerness to our own souls whether our Sins be Sins of Infirmity or not Quest But suppose that upon due search and examination I find that my Sin is no other than a sin of Infirmity which will not cast me off although through my weakness I do fall into it again and again what then Answ Then several Duties follow and accordingly you are to take up these and the like gracious Resolutions If my Sin be a Sin of Infirmity and no other then through Grace Deletur iniquita● manet infirmitas August Sed Quare Deus talia peccata sinit fieri à suis cur sic impingere eos permittit respondetur ex effectis ideo ita permittit Deus ut occasionem accipiat multarum bonarum rerum non enim labantur sancti ut pereunt sed ut copiose eis Deus benefaciat ut lapsus principio operetur humilitatem deinde invocationem ut nos excitet ut nobis ipsis irascamur et nos damnemus ut majori studio caveamus Luth. in Gen. cap. 20. wil I observe what Gods design is in suffering and leaving such Infirmities in me and wil labor what I can and may to promote and advance that design God could have freed me from all Sin these Infirmities as wel as the greater but God hath some great designs in leaving of these Infirmities as that I may be alwaies humbled that I may be alwaies upon the work of mortification that Jesus Christ may be the more sweet and precious to me that I may live in continual dependance on him that I may not gather up the assurance of my Salvation only from my Sanctification but from the free Grace of God and his absolute Promise that I may be weary of my present state and groan after Heaven where no imperfections are and that I may learn to pity others and therefore through Grace I wil do what I can to help on these Designs If my Sin be but a Sin of Infirmity and God will not cast me off for it then through the Grace of God wil I never beleeve these false reports of Christ and those misrepresentations of him which Satan would put upon him whereby he would perswade me and others that our Lord Christ is an hard Master as Satan doth labor
Extraordinary or Ordinary If Extraordinary then he is either a Proph●t who doth foretel things to come and they do come to pass or he is an Evangelist whose Office was to accompany and minister unto the Apostles When the Apostles ●herefore ceased then the Evangelists ceased for sublato subjecto tollitur adjunctum Or he is an Apostle who hath seen the Lord and is immediately sent by him whose Commission extendeth unto all the World who is infallible in regard of Doctrine delivered having the Gifts of Tongues given him not by Industry but by Inspiration of the Holy Ghost and doth work Miracles And therefore if any man say that he is an Apostle and yet hath not seen the Lord Christ nor hath these Gifts of Tongues nor can work Miracles then he is a false Apostle and a false Teacher in that kind But if a man be called to an Ordinary Office then 1. He must be apparently Godly not only free from Vice and Scandal but Holy and blameless shining with positive Vertues as wel as free from Scandalous sins 1 Tim. 3. Tit. 1. 2. He must be qualified and gifted for the work of preaching being apt to teach anointed with the Unction of the Holy One not that he must necessarily have the extraordinary Gifts of the Holy Ghost for when the Apostle Paul sets down the due qualifications of a Minister 1 Tim. 3. there is not one word of that 3. Being gifted and duely qualified he must be chosen or desired by the Church Acts 14.23 4. Then having consented he must be separated to the Work of the Ministry And therefore if any man say that he is a Teacher in Office ordinarily called and yet be prophane scandalous or vicious or ignorant being not fitly qualified or is not desired or chosen by the Church and separated to the Work of the Ministry he is a false Teacher in this kind But whether a mans Cal be Ordinary or Extraordinary whether he be called ad Opus to a Work or ad Munus to an Office he must make out his Cal to others 't is not enough to say I am sent of God I tel thee I am sent of God The Apostles themselves made out their Cal to others Do ye require a proof of my Ministry or Apostleship saies the Apostle Paul then thus and thus So that though a man do pretend that he is sent of God and that he hath seen the Lord yet if he be not able to give an account thereof unto others he is surely a False Apostle and a False Teacher Thus may you try and discover men by their Cal. Secondly As for Doctrine Teachers may and must be tried by their Doctrine 1 John 4.1 Particular Doctrines whereby men may be tried are many I wil name some briefly because I intend this Work no further than to this one Exercise First therefore The true Apostles never did decry the Scriptures but under God and Christ did exalt the Scriptures They called them the Word of God Rom. 9.6 2 Cor. 4.2 They told us that the Scriptures are a sufficient Rule and able to make us wise unto Salvation 2 Tim. 3.14.16 17. That they are the only Rule and Judg of al Doctrines whereby we are to try the same according to that of the Prophet Esai To the Law and to the Testimony if any one walk not according to this Rule there is no Light in him Chap. 8. That these Scriptures may be expounded 2 Pet. 1.20 The Apostles never did deny the Original saying I deny the Hebrew or I deny the Greek but of●en cited the Original Hebrew yea the Septuagintal Greek This was the true Apostles Doctrine in regard of the Scripture As for Christ The true Apostles never did deny the Deity of Christ whilst he lived here on Earth nor the Humanity of Christ in Heaven But for his Deity the Apostle tel us that he is very God and the only wise God 1 John 5.20 And for the Body of Christ The true Apostles tel us That he did not only rise from the dead but his Body ascended and that he is man stil 2 Tim. 2.5 There is one Mediator the man Jesus Christ As for the Ordinances The Apostles never did deny the Ordinances but have told us that the Ministration of the Gospel is more glorious than that of Moses because this was to continue 2 Cor. 3. they did not destroy but erect these Ordinances by Commission from Christ As I have ordained in all the Churches saith Paul And more particularly 1. They did not deny the Ministry not the Being of a setled Ministry Rom. 12.7 though by the hand of Man Tit. 1. For this cause left I thee in Crete that thou should'st ordain Elders in every City nor the maintenance the setled maintenance of Ministers 1 Cor. 9.14 Even so hath the Lord ordained that those that preach the Gospel should live on the Gospel 2. As they did not deny the Ministry so they did not deny Water Baptism but they rather called for Water Baptism because Cornelius had received the Spirit Acts 10.47 They did not lay a necessity upon the Disciples to be plunged into the River or Water for the Jaylor and Cornelius were baptized in their Houses Nor did they ever forbid Infant Baptism but tel us that Children of Beleevers are Holy 2 Cor. 7. 3. As the true Apostles did not deny Water Baptism so they did not cry down the Lords Supper but tel us plainly That thereby we hold forth the Lords Death til he come 4. As they did contend for the Supper so they commanded singing First That the whol Church should sing for the whol Church of Ephesus and the whol Church of Colosse are commanded to sing Ephes 5. 18. Collos 3.16 Secondly That the whol Church should sing the Psalms of David for by those Titles Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs the P●alms of David are distinguished Thirdly That this singing should be performed with an audible voyce and not in the heart only for faith the Apostle in the same Scriptures Speaking and singing with Grace in your hearts Affirmabant autem h●nc fu●●se summam vel culpae suae vel erroris quod essent soliti stato die ante lucem convenire carmenque Christo quasi Deo dic●re secum invicem Plin. Epist ad Trajan Vel communi voce dicere Magde●urgens Hist Cant. 2 C. 6. Fourthly That these Psalms or Hymns or Spiritual Songs should be sung by many together not by one alone but by the whol Church for the Evangelist tels us that Christ and his Disciples sung an Hymn and so went out after Supper If only one sang and the rest consented then that one was Christ or some one of the Disciples Christ it was not for if he had sung an Hymn it would have been said that he sung and the Hymn would have been set down as it 's said he prayed and his Prayer recorded John 17. Nor was it one of the Disciples for
sunt indicativi modi temporisque futuri quem●dmodum in Latinis verum ea minus probatae sunt fidei Estius in loc that al our Books excepting three do read these Words in the Optative Mood And Estius though the vulgar Latin renders them in the Future Tense of the Indicative saith that al such Copies are of less Credit and that although the words should be in the Future Tense it comes al to the same reckoning for as much as the Hebrews whom the New Testament follows much do ordinarily put Futures for Optatives as wel as for Preceptives So Numb 20.17 we translate the words thus Let us I pray thee pass through thy Country 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuag 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuag Ibo nunc Montan. and yet the word in the Hebrew is in the Future Tense We will pass through c. So Jer. 40.15 we read Let me go I pray thee and I will smite Ishmael and yet the word in the Hebrew is I will go and smite Ishmael So that according to the Hebrew the Future is ordinarily put for the optative in a way of desire and Petition But the words here used are in the Optative Mood and therefore by that Argument 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we cannot conclude these words to be spoken in the way of a Promise It 's true indeed That they contain matter of much comfort and relief for those that suffer under the temptations of Satan or oppositions of the World but so they do also though they be spoken in a way of Prayer And it is usual with the Apostles to conclude their Epistles with a short Prayer Postquam satis incubuit in monitiones nunc se ad precationem convertit nam frustra in nerem fundetur Doctrina nisi Deus per Spiritum suum operetur Calvin in Loc. and that Prayer with a Doxology And so doth the Apostle here The God of all Grace who hath called you c. perfect stablish strengthen and settle you to whom be Glory for ever and ever a Promise is not so concluded but a Prayer is I conceive therefore that these words are spoken in way of a Prayer wherein ye have 1 The Mercy and the Blessing prayed for 2 The Arguments ensuring it 1 As for the Mercy and Blessing prayed for it is expressed in four words Perfect Stablish Strengthen Quod pluribus verbis rem unam designat Petrus nempe fidelium confirmationem hoc ideo facit ut sciamus rarae esse difficultatis cursum nostrum persequi et proinde singulari Dei gratia opus esse Calvin in Loc. and Settle you Some think they are Synonimous all intending the same thing the confirmation and perseverance of those disper●ed Christian-Jews But though they may aim at the same general thing yet there are several particulars under that general which the words seem to point at The first word which we render Perfect should I think be translated otherwise It is the same word that is used Matth. 4.21 Mark 1.19 Significat ergo Apostolus telam bonorum operum quam teximus facile ac cito ●n hac vita rumpi nisi accedat Dei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gerard. for mending of their Nets and the same that is used Gal. 6.1 You that are Spiritual RESTORE such an one with the Spirit of Meekness and it signifies such a restoring as is of unjoynted Members Now these Christians being scattered the Apostle praies Significat enim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 membra in corpore luxata reponere Ibid. Beza compingat Erasm instauret that God would please to joynt them again Thus the God of al Grace after you have suffered and been shattered bring you into order restore and repair you But suppose that God restore and mend us yet we may fal again True but I do not only pray for you saith Peter that ye may be restored and mended but that you may be confirmed so as ye may not fal away The God of all Grace stablish you also The word signifies to fasten 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat figere firmiter statuere Septuag utuntur pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stare fecit quod alibi exponunt pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alibi pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alibi pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat roborare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 valeo opponitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fundare and confirm and establish So Rom. 1.11 1 Thes 3.1 2. But though we be so confirmed by the Grace of God that we cannot fal away yet we may be weak and labor under great Infirmity True But I have prayed for you that you may be strengthened also But though we be strong and confirmed so as we shal never fal quite away from Grace yet we may be unsetled True but I have not only prayed against your Apostacy but against your unsettlement The God of all Grace restore stablish strengthen and settle you even as the Foundation of the House is setled So that he doth not only pray for these Saints that they may be restored and put into joynt in opposition to their scattering but for confirmation in opposition to Apostacy and for settlement in opposition to al unstedfastness and for strength of Grace in opposition unto weakness the cause and ground of all unsetledness Now these Graces he doth assure them of by divers Arguments 1. Some drawn from the Nature of God he is the God of al Grace not of Grace only as the Syriack reads the words omitting the word All but he is the God of All Grace and therefore though you have need of much Grace yet you need not be discouraged for the God whom you deal with is a God of al Grace and under this Title have I prayed unto him for you It 's good closing with God in Prayer by that Title and Attribute which is most suitable to our Condition 2. Other Arguments are drawn from the precedent Work of God upon them Who hath called you unto his eternal Glory Now the Gifts and Calling of God are without Repentance Whom he hath called them he hath also glorified and therefore seeing he hath called you Emphaticum quoque illud quod in Graeco textu haec verba 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conjunguntur cum sequentibus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ostendit enim Apostolus ex eodem gratiae sonte et primam ad gloriam Coelestem vocationem et ultimam hujus beneficii consummationem provenire Gerard. you may be assured that he wil confirm strengthen and settle you Gods Calling-Grace doth assure us of his Confirming-Grace he that hath called you unto eternal Glory Even He 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Emphatical and omitted in the English to be read thus The God of all Grace who hath called you c. he himself establish you c. But our sufferings do stil abound for we are
a dispersed People Be it so yet your Sufferings are but a Modicum a little 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both in regard of measure and time and after you have thus suffered a little and a little while the God of al Grace wil restore stablish strengthen and settle you This have I prayed for you So that the Doctrine from the Verse is this DOCT. It is a great Blessing of God and worthy of all our Prayer to be Established and Setled in the Truth and Good Waies of God Setling Grace and Mercy in opposition both to outward and inward trouble is a great Mercy and well worth praying for It is a great Mercy and Blessing to be outwardly setled The Apostle speaks here in reference to that opposition and hatred which they met with from the world in scattering them as a People and as a Church for saith he verse 9. Be stedfast in the Faith knowing that the same Afflictions are accomplished in your Brethren that are in the world As also in reference to those Temptations of Satan which they labored under for saith he verse 5. Your Adversary the Devil as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whom he may devour So that I say 1 It is a great Mercy for a Nation and State to be setled 2 A Mercy and great Blessing for a Church to be setled 3 A great Blessing and Mercy for a Particular Soul to be setled in the good VVaies of God First It is a great Mercy and Blessing for a Nation or Kingdom to be in a setled Estate and Condition outwardly for it is the Mercy promised and promised Mercies are no smal Mercies Now the Lord promiseth to his People when he deals with them in a way of Mercy to settle and establish them Jer. 24.6 For I will set mine eyes upon them for good and I will bring them again to this land and I will build them and not pull them down and I wil plant them and not pluck them up So chap. 32. verse 37. And I will cause them to dwel safely yea verse 41. I will rejoyce over them to do them good and I will plant them in this Land assuredly with my whol heart and with my whol soul This also was that Mercy which the Lord Promised to David 2 Sam. 7.16 But thine House and thy Kingdom shall be established for ever before thee and thy Throne shal be established for ever And if ye look into 2 Chron. 9.8 ye shal find that this establishing of a Nation or Kingdom is both a sign and a fruit of Gods Love Blessed be the Lord thy God said the Queen of Sheba to Solomon which delighteth in thee to set thee on his Throne to be King for the Lord thy God because thy God loved Israel to establish them for ever therefore made he thee King over them c. On the other side when God is angry with a People then he pours a Spirit of Giddiness and Perversness on them that they run to and fro and stagger like a drunken man and are as the Leaf shaken with every wind 1 Kings 14.15 The Lord threatens Israel to smite them as a reed is shaken in the water because they had made them Groves provoking the Lord to anger A great Judgment then it is to be shaken like a reed in the Water This also is a Fruit of Gods Anger and when a People are in this posture it argues that God hath smitten them in his Anger But when may a People be said to be thus smitten as a Reed shaken in the Water Even then when they are driven to and fro with every wind when they are easily moved and put by their Station Sicut solet moveri arundo in aqua Scilicet quia arundines faciliter moventur in aqua quocunque vento impellente aut levi aquarum decursu ita Israell incideret ìn magnas calamitates et Deus faceret cum tam passibilem ut à quocunque insurgente contra eum posset percuti Abulens in Loc. so that any one that rises up against them may afflict them and lay them low And if this unsetled shaking Condition be a great Judgment upon a Nation or People then surely the contrary is a great Mercy it is a great Blessing indeed for any Kingdom or Nation to be in a setled Estate and Condition Secondly As it is a Mercy and Blessing for a Nation to be settled and established so for the Church of God For when the Church hath this rest then it is edified walking in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost Acts 9.31 Establishment is the Mercy promised to the Church also Esai 2.2 It shall come to pass in the last daies that the Mountain of the Lords House shall be established in the top of the Mountains What is more setled on Earth than a Mountain The House of the Lord shal be as a Mountain upon the Mountains in the last daies great shal be the glory of the latter Daies As the Sins and Apostacies of the latter Daies shal be the greatest Sins and Apostacies so the Glory of the Churches shal be the greatest in the last daies And the Establishment of the Churches is not only promised but promised as part of the Glory of the latter Times It is that Mercy and Blessing which the Apostles labored for continually 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 F●rst they took a great deal of pains to convert and bring men home to God being converted the Apostles then formed them into several Churches and Churches being planted then their great work and business was to Establish them Acts 14.21 And when they had preached the Gospel to that City or had Gospellized that City and had taught many or had Discipled many or those that were sit and worthy they returned again to Lystra to Iconium and Antioch confirming the souls of the Disciples and exhorting them to continue in the Faith c. This they also prayed for and therefore as the Apostle Peter shuts up his Epistle with this Prayer for the dispersed Christian-Jews so the Apostle Paul doth close up his Epistle to the Corinths with the same desire and Prayer for them 2 Cor. 13. And this also we wish even your perfection verse 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Rom. 16.25 he concludes thus Now to him that is of power to establish you c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the Apostle Paul useth two of these four words that are used by Peter The closing wish doth alwaies fal upon some precious mercy And as it is the Mercy prayed for so somtimes it is made the Signal Mercy whereby the Church is declared to be the Church of Christ Whose House ye are saith the Apostle to the Hebrews if you hold fast the Confidence of your rejoycing stedfast to the end An House is setled fixed and established a Tent is removable but an House is not so unworthy are those of the Name of the House
these Verses First they subdued Kingdoms verse 33. who through Faith subdued Kingdoms so the Judges did and so David also And 2. They wrought Righteousness so Samuel did Whose Ox have I taken and so David did When he spared Saul And 3. They obtained Promises Promises that is the thing promised God is so Faithful saith Beza in fulfilling his Promises that the Promise is put for the thing promised they obtained the Promises that is the thing promised Now the Promise they obtained it was not the great Promise of the Messias for so at verse 39. They received not the Promise that is the great Promise of the Messias but the Promises they obtained were particular Promises of deliverance Victories and Kingdoms so they obtained Promises and so Gideon and Barak David and others did And then they stopped the mouths of Lyons so David and Daniel did And they quenched the violence of Fire so the three Children did And escaped the edg or mouth of the Sword so Elijah and Elisha did And out of weakness were made strong so He●ekiah was And they waxed valiant in Fight and turned to flight the Armies of the Aliens so the Judges and David did And Women received their dead raised to Life again so the Woman of Sareptha and the Shuna●●te did So that now here you may see what great things the Beleevers of the old Testament did by Faith And so the Doctrine that I shal pitch upon at this time riseth from al the words and not from any particular Clause or passage but from the whol Doct. That true saving faith will do very great things It is true Faith that the Apostle here speaks of as appears by the whol Chapter and these things that they did as appears to the Reader at first view were great things So that I shal not need to spend any time for cleering of the Doctrine from the words that it doth arise from and al these Verses and words they are witnesses to it they cry out this Doctrine with one Voyce True saving Faith will do very great things For the opening and cleering whereof I shal labor to shew 1. That true saving Faith is a doing working stirring Grace 2. That true saving Faith will do great things And 3. How Faith comes to do such great things First True saving Faith is a doing Grace an active working doing operative Grace the more Spirits any thing hath the more active it is Faith true saving Faith hath the Spirit of the Gospel in it the Gospel is the Ministration of the Spirit and true saving Faith it hath the Spirit of this Spiritful Dispensation and therfore it must needs be a very spiritual and a working Grace It is called a work it self in 1 Thes 1.3 Remembring without ceasing your work Faith and in 2 Thes 1.11 The work of Faith with power Our Lord and Savior Christ saith it is the Work of God This is the Work of God that ye beleeve it is in it self a work And Secondly It is a friend to work true saving Faith it is a Work and it is a great Friend to work it is not an idle Houswife What is our Sanctification but our Faith incarnate it works Love and it works by Love and Love is very inventive active and expensive it is a friend to work a work in it self and a friend to work And Thirdly It is also the first worker in the Soul Trust in the Lord and do good not first do good and then trust in the Lord trust in the Lord first trust in the Lord and do good it is the work that sets other works on work the wheel that sets al other wheels a going without which a man is idle though he be at work As a Child may be very busie at his play yet but play and a Servant may be very busie about his own imployment and yet his Master counts it an idleness because he is not about his work appointed him So now a man may be very busie in regard of the world and yet he may be idle God-ward Nisi a Deo agendo nil ages Faith must be the first Worker and if Faith be not the first al other works are as nothing Yea Fourthly As Faith is a Work and a Friend of Work and a first Worker so it is an Universal Work Faith is that Grace that can turn its hand to every Work some can work exactly at one thing but they are bunglers at another but Faith true saving Faith can turn its hand to every business Possibly a man may be sick and he cannot pray himself but yet he may beleeve though Prayer cannot turn its hand to this Condition yet Faith can Possibly a man may be very poor and is not able to help another Liberality cannot turn its hand to this Condition but Faith can work in it Fiftly And not only so but Faith works best when it works alone when it works al alone If Comfort come and sence and feeling come Faith knows how to use these but though a man have no Sence and no Comfort yet Faith can work and Faith works best when it works alone when it work● al alone without these auxiliaries Sixtly Yea Faith works best somtimes when it works in the dark as it works best when it works alone so somtimes it works best in the dark Men can work wel in the light but not in the dark but though a mans condition be very dark yet Faith can work then Faith works best when it works in the dark Faith loves to work like Christ and Christs greatest action of Obedience was in the darkest time when he was on the Cross I remember a Speech of that good old man Mr. Dod when a man that was troubled in his mind lay a dying he said to him Sir what wil you say to Christ when he was dying did he not say My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And was not Christs highest piece of Obedience upon the Cross in the dark in a dark condition Faith works best somtimes in the dark Seventhly Yet further Faith it works best at the last and the longer it works the better for Faith grows by experience and the longer that Faith works the more experience it gets and the more experience Faith gets the stronger it is and therefore Faith works best at the last Now put al these together Faith is a Work and Faith is a Friend to Work and Faith is the first Worker and Faith is an Universal Worker and Faith works best when it works al alone and Faith works best somtimes in the dark and Faith works best at the last and certainly you have the first namely this That true saving Faith is a doing Grace it is a working Grace But Secondly You wil say What are those great things that Faith will do for we have heard that Faith is a doing Grace that is the Doctrine Faith will do and do great things but what are those great
in by way of performance but by way of Christ Page 94 Object I have no parts in Duty therefore I am discouraged ibid. Answ 1 God accepts the desire for Christs sake Page 94 2 Thy parts are ●●swerable to thy grace Page 95 3 Parts and gifts do not commend our Services unto God ibid. 4 Parts recompenced some other way Page 96 Object I want the grace and holiness of Duty ibid. Answ Pearls may grow on Rocks so may some graces on thy rockie heart Page 97 1 Are you contented with the straightness of your condition Answ Negatively ib. 2 If your condition here be no other than the condition of the Saints you have no cause to be discouraged ibid. 3 You would fain have enlargements represent your condition to God Page 98 4 It is Gods way to restrain prayer before he gives enlargements ibid. 5 Dulness in prayer is an ill sin yet the sence thereof is a good sign Page 99 6 Prayer is not powring out of many words but the powring out of the Soul unto God ibid. Object I am not only dull in duty bu● full of distraction Page 100 Answ This is a great evil yet no cause of discouragement for three Reasons ibid. 1 All men have some distractions in d●ty ibid. 2 Distractions shall not hurt us because they please us not Page 101 3 Our distractions move the Lord to pity us ibid. Object I pray and am never the nearer should not that discourage me Page 102 Answ Negatively 1 It is a great mercy that God wil receive my prayer though I never receive the thing I pray for ibid. 2 Gods Children usually think God hears not their prayers when he doth ibid. 3 The Lord not granting your prayer is not alwaies matter of discouragement but somtimes of encouragement Page 103 4 Whoever waited on God by prayer but be received more than he prayed for Page 104 5 Should God presently answer our prayers alwaies we should be discouraged Page 105 Object 1. I fear God denieth my prayer ibid. 1 Answ Affirmatively It may be so to his own children ibid. 2 If the thing you pray for be good for you and you continue praying it is a sign that God rather delaies than denies you ibid. Object 2. I fear God is angry with me Page 106 Answ Was not God angry with Jonah and the Canaanitish woman Page 106 Object 3. But she beleeved there is much unbelief in my prayer ibid. Answ Was it not so with David ibid. Object 4. I am self-ish and pray only by reason of affliction ibid. Answ So it was with Jonah ibid. Object 5. My prayer is not well prepared ibid. Answ Hezekiah prayed for those that came unprepared ibid. Object 6. I am full of passions ibid. Answ What think you of Elijah ibid. Object 7. My condition is such or such ibid. Answ The condition of distressed men paralel'd in Scripture when they look toward Christ ib. Application 1 What encouragements here are for all poor souls to come unto Christ Page 107 2 What a vast difference there is here between a godly and a wicked man ibid. Quest What must I do against discouragements that come from mine own failing in duty or Gods not answering me Page 108 Answ 1 Lay not the weight of your comfort upon duty ibid. 2 Consider that difficulty commends duty ibid. 3 Leave the success of our spiritual things unto God himself Page 109 Sermon VII INSTANCE IV. Object O! I want assurance of the love of God must I not be then discouraged Page 111 Answ Negatively Yet it is a sore evil Page 112 He that wants the assurance of Gods love is neither fit to receive mercy from God nor to praise God ibid. He that wants the assurance of Gods love converseth too much with Satan ibid. Quest How may it appear we must not be discouraged when we want this assurance Page 113 1 Answ negatively For want of Assurance is not that unbelief that condemneth us ib. 2 Want of Assurance shal turn to the Saints good Page 114 They gain experience by it to see the emptiness of their own righteousness ibid. A man learns thus to comfort others Page 115 3 A good man may have comfort though he want assurance Page 115 Object I have no Promise to bring me comfort Page 116 Answ Negatively 1 That must not discourage a Christian for have you not the word of the Gospel ib. 2 The promise of grace belongeth to you proved by three Reasons 1 You do or have rested on the Promise 2. If the Command belong unto you why not the Promise 3. It is your duty to rest on the Promise Page 117 Object 2. Gods Promise in Scripture runs upon some Condition which I cannot perform ib. Answ 1 A good man may apply the Promise though he hath not performed the Condition ib. 2 The condition of one promise is the thing promised in another promise Page 118 3 The condition of the promise is performed for you better than you can perform it ib. Object Instead of a promise there is a threatening on my Soul Page 119 Answ 1 God hath two Arms to draw his Children to him the Arm of Love and the Arm of Anger ibid. 2 Joshua somtimes lost the sight of the promise and for the threatening you know how it was with David Page 120 3 A Threatening from God may be repealed but a promise shall never be repealed ibid. The Reason is God never repeals in the matter of the Gospel Page 121 Object I have assurance of Gods displeasure must I not then be discouraged Page 122 Answ Negatively 1 It may be you look on the back side of Gods dispensation wherein appears his Anger ibid. 2 There is no such testimony of Reprobation in all the Scripture ibid. Object I have been without assurance these many yeers yet living under Gospel means therefore I look for none Page 123 Answ Negatively 1 Our evidence for Heaven is in Gods keeping ibid. 2 Consider four Propositions 1 A man may have saving Faith who hath no assurance of Gods love ibid. 2 A man may have strong Faith and assurance yet many doubts Page 124 3 A man may have strong faith and assurance yet for a long time be deprived of the feeling of it ib. 4 A godly man may live and die doubting ibid. 3 Though some may die doubting and yet be saved a man may from Scripture fetch Arguments from whence he may ordinarily conclude he shal be saved Page 125 Arg. 1. There is a faith of Reliance from whence we may conclude a faith of Assurance Page 125 Arg. 2. God hath done great things for thy soul in trouble thou maiest conclude he will do more ibid. Arg. 3. If thy heart be upright in the matter of assurance God wil give it thee ibid. Arg. 4. If a man can praise God for what he hath though his condition be very sad Page 126 Arg. 5. If the Lord be the health of your countenance you shall
man have sinned this Sin he is past Prayer and past Pardon he is past Sacrifice the truth is this man is in the Devils case The Devil you know is reserved in Chains unto the great Day and he cannot get out So if a man hath sinned this Sin though he live ten yeers twenty yeers or thirty yeers he is reserved in Chains and he shal never be pardoned he is upon the Devils ground O! what a misery is it to commit this Sin O! what a mercy is it then to be kept from it Now here is Hope for the greatest Sinner in the Congregation upon this account saith our Savior All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men except the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost Hast thou therefore been a great Sinner Hast thou been a Drunkard Hast thou been a Wanton Hast thou been a Swearer Hast thou been an Opposer of the People of the Lord and hath the Lord kept thee from this great transgression Man or Woman here is Hope yet Who would not then turn to God Come Drunkard Swearer Wanton here is yet hope for thy soul who would not come in to Christ And O! What Comfort is here for Beleevers that are in Christ If thou beest in Christ and a Beleever thou canst not sin this Sin that look as it is with a man that hath sinned this Sin he cannot be pardoned so if a man be the Child of God a Beleever in Christ he cannot sin this Sin for he that is born of God sinneth not neither can he for the Seed of God abides in him O! you that are Beleevers comfort your selves with this Truth Here is Comfort for all the People of the Lord from this Doctrine Applic. 4 But in the fourth place If the Sin against the Holy Ghost be indeed the unpardonable Sin what cause have we al to look to our steps to our words to our actions Beloved this Sin against the Holy Ghost is the Professors Sin a man less than a Professor cannot sin this Sin against the holy Ghost this Sin against the holy Ghost is the knowing mans sin a man less than a knowing man cannot sin the Sin against the holy Ghost And as I said before a man may possibly go very far in sin and yet not commit this great unpardonable Sin So now on the other side I say Possibly a man may go very far in Religion and yet he may sin this Sin These Pharisees that committed it had the Key of Knowledg knowing they were and very knowing in the Scriptures as for Zeal they travelled Sea and Land to make a Proselyte for their Practice they fasted twice a week exceeding strict in observing the Sabboth day the Lights of the Church and the Eyes of all the People were upon them for their Guides and yet these men sinned this Sin against the Holy Ghost O! what care should there be in al our souls how had we al need to look to our waies The more Truth revealed the more danger of sinning this Sin the more great Works of God are done by the very Spirit and Finger of God if men do oppose and blaspheme the more danger of sinning this great Sin Now I wil appeal to you When was there ever more Light revealed than in these daies of ours yet when more opposing and blaspheming of it When were there ever such great Works done by the very Spirit and Finger of God and yet when more opposing and blaspheming Are there not some that have been convinced that the Spirit of God breathed upon their hearts in such and such Ordinances and such and such Waies and yet now oppose and blaspheme those very waies of God wherein they said heretofore they had the Spirit of God Are there not some that are convinced that in these Times great things are done by the very Finger by the Power and Arm of God among us and that in order to our salvation and yet how do men speak against them and blaspheme I wil not say that these men do it out of malice and therefore I do not charge this Sin against the Holy Ghost upon them But beloved in the Lord this is certain That in knowing Times Times when God is doing great things by his own Finger then is this Sin stirring most The Times of Christ and of the Apostles were Times of great Light when God wrought by his own Finger then was this Sin committed Now in these Times there is much breaking forth of Light and great things done by the very Finger of God therefore I say there is great danger if men do now blaspheme wherefore I say again take heed to your souls you that are Professors look to your steps in these daies of ours Quest But you wil say We grant indeed that this Sin against the Holy Ghost is the unpardonable Sin and wo be to them that do fal into it and it cannot be committed but by a knowing man but what shall we do that we may be kept from this great Transgression that whatsoever sin we do fall into yet we may be kept from this great Evil and this unpardonable Sin Answ I would that you would mind and consider the Description which you have heard and think of it But I wil tel you what David did saith David O Lord keep back thy Servant from presumptuous sins so shall I be free from the great transgression It seems then that presumptuous sinning makes way to this great Transgression When is a man said to sin presumptuously When a man sins upon this score That God wil shew mercy to him saying I know indeed it is not good for me to go to such a wicked Company it is a sin so to do but I wil venture and repent afterwards for God wil shew mercy To venture upon a sin presuming that God wil shew mercy and that a man shal repent afterwards is presumption and presumptuous sinning makes way to this great Transgression therefore would you be kept from this great Transgression go to God with David and say O Lord keep back thy Servant from presumptuous sins so shall I be free from the great transgression Again Be alwaies humbled for lesser sins He shal never fal into the greatest that is alwaies humbled for the least he shal never fall into the worst that is alwaies humbled for the smallest Besides Fear is the Keeper of Innocency Timor innocentiae custos Fear is the Guard of Innocency If you alwaies fear to commit it you shal never commit the same In case that you do at any time fal into sin say Well but through the Grace of God though I commit what is evil I wil never oppose what is good by the Grace of God I wil carry this Rule along with me Though I commit what is evil I wil never oppose what is good In case any great Work be done before you that lies beyond your reach and beyond your fatham say Though I do not understand