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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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14. and aduance vs and inrich vs greatly with all his blessings as hee hath promised So the Apostle saith that in respect of the bare act of his preaching the Gospel he had nothing to glory of because a necessity of performing this duty was laid vpon him and a woe denounced if he performed it not but if he did not by constraint but willingly then hee should 1. Cor. 9. 16 17. haue at Gods hands a reward Finally let vs serue God with this cheerefulnesse because thereby we shall get vnto our selues an infallible marke and signe that we are in the estate of blessednesse For the Psalmist describing a blessed man bringeth in this as one of his speciall properties that his Psal 1. 2. delight is in the Law of the Lord so that hee meditateth in it day and night And therefore let vs not content our selues with cold carelesse and formall seruice but performe it vnto God with cheerefulnesse and delight without which it is neither pleasing vnto him nor profitable vnto vs And seeing this is not a flower which groweth in natures soyle but a gift of God who worketh in vs both to will and to doe of his good pleasure whereof it is that Dauid acknowledgeth the free-will offerings of himselfe and his Phil. 2. 13. people towards the building of the Temple to haue wholly proceeded 1. Chro. 29. 14. from God who had giuen them both these gifts and also willing hearts to returne them therefore let vs begge it daily at Gods hands that taking away our dulnesse and drowzinesse our auersenesse and backwardnesse vnto holy duties he will giue vs grace to serue him in all things with alacrity and cheerefulnesse ioy and delight §. Sect. 3 That we must serue God in all holy duties zealously and deuoutly The second property respecting the heart is true zeale which as wee heere consider it is a deuout consecrating of our selues wholly both in soule and body to the seruice of God and an ardent desire study and indeuour to glorifie him by walking before him in the duties of a godly life So that it is nothing but the intension of our loue and cheerefulnesse vnto these holy exercise and of our anger and mislike against all the impediments whereby wee are opposed and hindred in them And this is commended vnto vs in the Scriptures as an excellent grace the beauty and brightnesse whereof no where shineth more cleerely then in this subiect For if it be good as the Apostle saith to bee zealous in a good matter Gal. 4. 15. where can this zeale more exceed in goodnesse then when it is imployed and spent in the duties of Gods seruice and of a Christian life then the which nothing can be better It is the vitall heate and as it were the very spirits which intendeth all other graces and with the warmth of it increaseth their vertue and vigour giuing vnto them motion and making them actiue and operatiue in their seuerall functions And it is giuen vs of God as a singular Antidote against that cold and killing poyson of carnall formality and that stupid blockishnesse and senselesse dulnesse and deadnesse which naturally hath ouerspred all the powers of our body and minde in performing the duties of Gods seruice And if it bee wanting we will soone grow cold and carelesse either neglecting them altogether or performing them with a luke-warme indifference for forme and fashion sake not greatly regarding whether we doe or leaue them vndone which will make them lothsome in Gods sight But if our hearts bee inflamed with this zeale then will we feruently affect all holy duties of Gods seruice as being notable meanes of aduancing his glory and not suffer our selues to be withdrawne from them by worldly vanities which wee neglect and contemne in comparison of the other And then will we also with an holy anger oppose and ouercome all impediments and hindrances which stop vs in our Christian course and especially make warre against our owne corruptions which dull our deuotion and make vs slacke and backward to holy duties which that we may doe let vs consider that this zeale is the end of our Redemption and an vndoubted signe that Christ hath purchased vs vnto himselfe with the price of his owne blood For therefore gaue Tit. 2. 14. he himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity and purifie vnto himselfe a peculiar people zealous of good workes So that if we doe not shew our zeale in all vertuous actions and Christian duties we doe not attaine to this end and consequently plainely declare that we are not redeemed by Christ who being God equall with his Father and infinite in wisdome and power cannot faile of those ends which hee propoundeth vnto himselfe Let vs consider also that this zeale is an inseparable fruit of true repentance 2. Cor. 7. 11. as the Apostle plainely sheweth Whereof it is that Christ in his Epistle to the luke-warme Laodiceans ioyneth them together Be zealous Apoc. 3. 19. and repent because they could no otherwise approoue themselues true conuerts till leauing that state of tepedity and luke-warmenesse they were inflamed with feruent zeale of Gods glory For when we soundly seriously repent vs of our sins and especially our sloth sluggishnesse coldnesse and carelesnes in holy duties then bewailing hating our former courses we set our selues with all earnestnesse to reforme these corruptions become zealously deuout in all holy duties that we may redeeme our former lost time which we haue fruitlesly mispent in their neglect wherby it appeareth that our repentance cannot be vnfained vnlesse this zeale be ioyned with it nor any duty of a godly life sincere which is not approu'd by this property CAP. VII Of the properties which respect the whole man And first diligence in all duties of Gods seruice §. Sect. 1 That this diligence must be vsed in all good duties and about the meanes of them THe properties which respect the whole man are two diligence and constancie By diligence I vnderstand that sedulity and assiduitie industry and labour which wee are content to vse and take for the compassing and obtaining effecting and atchieuing of those things whereupon wee haue set our hearts and affections The which property doth alwayes accompany the duties of a godly life if we rightly performe them as God requireth of vs and is an inseparable fruit of those which went before For when wee performe them with alacrity and cheerefulnesse and doe esteeme them our chiefe delight then are wee not onely in our hearts zealously affected towards them but so industrious and diligent in pursuing of them that we thinke no paines or labour too much that we may bring them to good effect And then shaking off all naturall sloth and sluggishnesse all idlenesse and vnprofitablenesse wee will set our selues close to our Christian taske and performe those religious duties and that holy and spirituall seruice which our
fruits we haue found of our Baptisme and whether wee haue felt the vertue of Christ Iesus his death effectuall for the mortification of our sinfull corruptions and of his Resurrection for our spirituall quickening vnto newnesse of life Lastly in respect of the party baptized wee ought to stay that we may performe vnto him such Christian duties as God requireth First to commend him vnto God by our prayers that hee may be truly regenerate ingraffed into the body of Christ as a liuely member and so made partaker of his death merits and all his benefits Secondly that we may as free-men of this Christian Corporation by our presence giue our assent to his outward admission into the Congregation And finally that we may with the rest of the people ioyne in praising and giuing thankes vnto God in his behalfe for admitting him as a new member into the communion of Saints and entertaining him for a seruant of his owne family All which duties we neglect if wee depart before the celebration of the Sacrament and as much as in vs lyeth make them vtterly voyd by our ill example for if all should doe as wee doe as euery one may thinke such liberty belongeth vnto him which he seeth taken by another there should not any at all be left to performe them The last action which is to be performed at our departing out of the Congregation or before if the custome be so is that if there be any collections for the poore we contribute towards them according to our ability and their necessity and that with a willing and cheerfull mind knowing that 2. Cor. 9. 6 7. Heb. 13. 16. Prou. 19. 17. with these sacrifices God is well pleased that what is thus giuen is lent vnto the Lord who will bountifully repay it in this world and the world to come and giuen to Christ himselfe in his poore members who of his free and meere grace will reward these workes of mercy with an heauenly and euerlasting Math. 25. 34. inheritance in his Kingdome And these are the publike duties of Gods worship and seruice which wee ought to performe in the Congregation on his Day And that not onely in the morning with which some content themselues but we must renew them or the most of them in the afternoone as Prayer hearing the Word and singing of Psalmes c. seeing God euen in the time of the Law would haue an euening as well as morning sacrifice offered vnto him and therefore will not haue his seruice more negligently performed in this greater light of the Gospell wherein he affoordeth vs more plentifull meanes of our saluation For the performance of which duties I shall not need to giue any other directions then those which I haue before set downe for the morning exercise CAP. XLII Of such duties as are to be performed on the Lords Day after our comming from the Church §. Sect. 1 That we must meditate vpon that which we haue heard ANd these are the publike duties of Gods seruice which wee are to performe on his Holy-day The priuate duties are diuers The first is that at our comming home we meditate vpon those things which we haue heard and not onely carefully recall them to our remembrance that they may be imprinted in our memories but also apply them vnto our owne vse for the sanctifying of our hearts and affections and the reforming of our liues and conuersations purposing with a full resolution that wee will put in practice whatsoeuer we haue learned both in the forsaking of those vices and sinnes which we haue heard condemned and the imbracing and performing of those vertues and Christian duties which haue beene commended vnto vs. For if we doe not thus make it our owne and as it were couer this holy seede of Gods Word in the furrowes of our hearts the deuill will steale it away as the birds doe the seede that falleth by the high way and make it altogether vnfruitfull so that after much hearing we shall still remaine children in knowledge and in the spirituall growth of grace and godlinesse and like riuen and leaking vessels retaine little or nothing of this precious liquor because it runneth out as fast as it commeth in Secondly with this Meditation we are to loyne feruent and effectuall prayer desiring Gods blessing vpon that which we haue heard whereby it may be made effectuall for his glory and our owne saluation and the gracious assistance of his holy Spirit to bring home not onely to our memories but also to our hearts consciences those things which we haue heard and learned that we may as occasion serueth fruitfully practise them in the whole course of our liues concluding these our prayers with praise and thanksgiuing vnto God for this gracious liberty in inioying his Sabbaths and in them the exercises of Religion meanes of our saluation §. Sect. 2 Of family exercises after we are come from the Church At our meales we are to spend the time in such holy and religious conferences as may be no lesse profitable for the cheering and refreshing of our soules then our corporall food for the nourishment of our bodies and in the performance of such other Christian duties tending to piety and Gods seruice as before wee prescribed for other dayes which vpon the Lords Day aboue all the rest ought to be done with greatest zeale and deuotion which being finished it is good to sing a Psalme to Gods praise and to reade one or more Chapters of the holy Scriptures After which Christian exercises wee may if time will permit conferre together of those things which we haue heard and learned at the forenoones Sermon and by causing euery one as it were to offer his shot to make vp the whole reckoning one remembring what another hath forgotten and he againe supplying that wherein the other is defectiue whereby it will come to passe that whatsoeuer any one hath gathered of these spiritual treasures shall not onely be more firmely locked vp and deepely imprinted in his owne memory but shall also serue as a common stocke for the inriching of the whole company And this being done we are then againe by Prayer and Meditation to prepare our selues for the well performing of Gods publike seruice in the euening exercise as we did in the forenoone which being finished in that holy and religious manner before prescribed and afterwards by some meditation recalled to our remembrance for our own priuate vse it will be profitable for gouernours of families to call together their children and seruants and either by strength of their memories or helpe of their Notes taken of the Sermon to repeate as neere as they can what hath beene deliuered that so the things not marked may be better obserued and that which was forgotten may be recalled and by this repetition may more surely bee ingrauen in the memory Sometimes also it will be fit and necessary to preuent negligence in the yonger sort that the
corrupted and disabled cannot be a sufficient ground of a godly life till after our regeneration it be renewed and restored in some measure vnto that integrity and perfection which it had in our first creation And this we call good conscience which is a maine foundation of godlinesse guiding and inabling vs to the performance of all good duties which God requireth In speaking whereof we will first shew what it is and then the causes of it the effects and fruits which spring from it the properties and signes whereby wee may know it and the meanes by which we may obtaine it if it bee wanting or preserue and keepe it if we already haue it Concerning the first A good conscience is that which being renewed by Gods Spirit and a liuely faith applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and obedience doth speake peace and truly testifie vnto vs according to the Scriptures that we are redeemed out of the hands of all our enemies reconciled vnto God iustified sanctified and shall perseuere in grace vnto saluation and that all our actions are warranted by the Word and accepted of God in Iesus Christ though in themselues imperfect whereby we are comforted in all things made cheerefull and diligent in Gods seruice and willing to doe all things which may be pleasing vnto him The causes of a good conscience are diuers The principall efficient is God the Father Sonne and holy Spirit The Father bestoweth this gift vpon vs who as in the beginning he first created and placed it in vs as an vncorrupted Iudge and vnpartiall witnesse betweene him and vs so it is he alone that doth renew and repaire the ruines thereof contracted through the fall of our first parents by which together with all other faculties conscience was corrupted and either so deadded seared and benummed that it had no sense and feeling at all or when it awakened out of this deadly swowne did nothing but accuse and terrifie vs or vniustly excuse and incourage vs in our sinfull courses by presenting vnto vs false comforts §. Sect. 2 Of the meritorious cause of a good conscience The meritorious cause of it is God the Sonne and our Sauiour Iesus Christ who satisfying Gods iustice and appeasing his wrath by his death and obedience freed vs from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes reconciled vs vnto God and made our peace with him vpon which followeth peace of conscience and freedome from the accusations and terrours of it For when by the Law of God or light of nature it is set a-worke to Rom. 8. 1 33 34. affright and disquiet vs in regard of our sinnes then shewing our pardon sealed by the blood of Christ it is calmed and quieted hauing nothing to lay to our charge which Christ our surety hath not satisfied for vs. Whereof it is that our Sauiour was prophetically named The Prince of peace and prefigured vnder the type of Melchizedech because hee is not Esa 9. 6. onely the King of righteousnesse by whom we are iustified but also King of Heb. 7. 2. peace as the Apostle speaketh who making our peace with God did thereby also procure for vs peace of conscience For the Iudge hath no authority to condemne nor the witnesse to accuse nor the Iaylour to imprison nor the executioner to punish and torment when the supreme Soueraigne King of heauen and earth being satisfied by the sufferings of his Sonne hath sent vs his free pardon and wee haue pleaded it in the Court of conscience Yea rather the Iudge doth then acquit and absolue vs and the witnesse saith nothing against vs but as a messenger of good things doth testifie vnto vs this ioyfull tydings And hence it is that our Sauiour was no sooner borne vnto vs but the holy Angels were sent as Gods Heralds to proclaime this peace Glory bee vnto God in the highest and in earth peace good will towards men The which peace our Sauiour Luk. 2. 14. wrought as a Mediatour betweene God and vs by satisfying his iustice and offering himselfe as an all-sufficient sacrifice for the sinnes of all his elect So the Apostle saith It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell And hauing made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him Col. 1. 19 20. to reconcile all things to himselfe And else-where he affirmeth that we were without Christ being alients from the Common-wealth of Israel and strangers Eph. 2. v. 12. to 18. from the Couenant of promise hauing no hope and without God in the world but that now in Christ Iesus we who sometimes were farre off are made nigh by the blood of Christ For hee is our peace who hath made both one and hath broken downe the middle wall of partition betweene God and vs Hauing abolished in his flesh the enmity euen the Law of Commandements contained in ordinances to make in himselfe of twayne one new man so making peace And that he might reconcile both vnto God in one body by the crosse hauing slaine the enmity thereby And came and preached peace vnto vs both them which were a farre off and to them that were nigh And thus working our peace with God he brought also peace to our consciences when as by his blood hee had clensed them from the guilt and punishment of sinne for if the blood of Bulls and Goates sanctified to the outward purifying of the flesh how much Heb. 9. 13 14. more shall the blood of Christ who through his eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God Finally the conscience is renewed and sanctified by God the holy Ghost whilest he applieth Christ and all his benefits the vertue of his death and precious blood and maketh them effectuall for the purging of our consciences from all sinnefull corruption and spirituall defilements that wee may be inabled to performe pure and acceptable seruice vnto God §. Sect. 3 Of the instrumentall causes of a good conscience For the effecting whereof he vseth as his instruments the preaching of the Gospell and administration of the Sacraments and a liuely faith which by them both made effectuall by the inward operation of the Spirit is begotten and also confirmed and increased in vs. First the preaching of the Gospell is the instrument which the Spirit vseth whereby a good conscience is wrought in vs for when the Law preached and the curse threatned like a strange winde and tempest hath rent the mountaines and broken in pieces the rockes of our proud and hard hearts and as the earthquake and fire which Elias saw and felt hath terrified the conscience with the guilt of sinne and caused vs to hide our faces from Gods presence 1. King 19. 11 12 then the still voice of the Gospell causing these stormes to cease doth quiet and calme the conscience so as wee can without terrour yea with much ioy and comfort heare the voyce of God
speaking peace and offering vnto vs reconciliation grace and saluation in Iesus Christ assuring vs vpon the condition of a liuely faith bringing forth the fruits thereof in vnfained repentance that all Gods gracious promises respecting this life and the life to come doe belong vnto vs. In which regard it is called glad tidings which cause euen the very feete of those that bring them Rom. 10. 15. Iohn 14. 27. to seeme beautifull vnto vs and the Gospell of peace which Christ himselfe first preached Peace I leaue with you my peace I giue vnto you not as the Ephes 2. 17. Luke 10. 5. 2. Cor. 5. 20. world giueth giue I vnto you Let not your heart be troubled neyther let it be afraide And when he had reconciled vs vnto God by his Crosse and slaine enmity thereby he came also and preached this peace vnto vs And afterwards sent his Disciples as his Heralds to proclaime it to all who by faith receiued it yea as his Ambassadours to beseech vs in his stead to be reconciled vnto God By which meanes when the peace of a good conscience is begunne in vs it is thereby more and more confirmed and increased as also by the vse of the Sacraments which being as seales annexed to the couenant of grace doe confirme our faith in God promises and so worke peace and ioy in our consciences out of this assurance that Christ and all his benefits are ours and that wee in him are reconciled vnto God §. Sect. 4 That a good conscience springeth from a liuely faith For neither the Gospell nor the Sacraments no nor yet Christ himselfe will bring vnto vs this peace of conscience vnlesse wee receiue and Heb. 5. 2. apply them by the hand of faith as the best salue will not heale vnlesse it be applied to the wound nor meate nourish vs vnlesse it be receiued into the stomake nor the purest water purge vs from our filth vnlesse we be washed in it But when this precious balsam is applied to our wounded consciences and when by the hand of faith they are washed in the Lauer of his precious blood then they are healed of the sores of sinne and being rified from the guilt punishment and power of it do speake peace vnto vs and are the messengers of such ioyfull tydings as cannot be damped with any worldly tribulation According to that of the Apostle Being iustified by faith we haue peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ by whom also we Rom. 5. 1 2 3. haue accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand and reioyce in hope of the glory of God And not onely so but we glory in tribulation also c. Whereof it is that in the Scriptures faith and a good conscience are as the 1. Tim. 1. 19. cause and effect ioyned together so that one of them cannot miscarry in the storme of tentations but we shall make shipwracke of them both and together with our faith lose both our peace with God and our peace of conscience Wheras our assurance of faith will embolden vs to drawneere to the Throne of Gods grace with a true heart hauing our hearts sprinkled Heb. 10. 22. from an euill conscience and our soules washed with pure water But yet we must take heede that we doe not attribute that to the instrument which is peculiar to the principall cause nor imagine that faith by any vertue that is in it selfe doth purifie our consciences or worke peace in them For this it can no more doe then the hand it selfe can cure a sore by touching it or nourish the body and keepe it warme without food or clothes though it be the instrument to apply and put them on but it is onely our good Ionas which being cast into the raging Sea of our troubled consciences maketh them cleane and still it is the wood of his Crosse alone that is the vertue of his death and passion which being cast into these waters embitterd with the guilt of sinne that can make them to yeeld vnto vs the sweete and pleasant waters of ioy and consolation Although he will doe no more good to pacifie the stormes and sweeten the bitter torments of a raging conscience if he be not applied by a liuely faith then Ionas in the ship or the branches still growing vpon the tree and not at all cast into the tempestuous Sea and bitter waters CAP. XIIII Of the actions and effects of a good Conscience of the peace which it truly speaketh and how it differeth from the false peace of secure worldlings §. Sect. 1 That a good conscience speaketh goodnesse and peace only ANd so much of the causes of a good conscience both principall and instrumentall The next point to be considered is the actions and effects of it which are to speake peace and to testifie vnto vs truly and according to the Scriptures good and comfortable things as a Iudge acquitting and absoluing vs as an aduocate pleading for vs as a witnesse excusing and giuing euidence on our side and as a sure and faithfull friend admonishing vs that we may not fall or rebuking vs being falne that we may rise againe by vnfained repentance Where we are to consider what the conscience witnesseth and secondly the rule according to which it giueth testimonie The things which the good conscience speaketh and witnesseth are goodnesse and peace only neither is it the action of a good conscience properly to accuse and terrifie vs for sinne but to speake peace vnto vs and to iustifie vs as righteous not in our owne naturall righteousnes but in the righteousnesse of Christ applied by fayth which is most pure and perfect and in our sanctification and inherent righteousnes wrought in vs by the renewing of the holy Ghost which is but begun spotted and imperfect in this life but yet is growing towards purity and perfection and in the meane while hath the imperfections couered with Christs perfect righteousnesse and the spots and staynes of it washed away in his blood So that the good conscience is the peaceable conscience onely which witnesseth good things vnto vs as most neerly resembling the conscience of Adam in the first Creation whilst he remained in the state of innocency which onely iustified him and his actions and thereby comforted and strengthened him in Gods seruice and neuer accused or terrified him before his fall because he was pure and free from all taynt of sinne vnto which purity of Creation lost by transgression the holy Ghost reneweth the conscience by degrees vnto the highest whereof it attaineth when casting to accuse and terrify vs it iustifieth and excuseth vs before Gods Tribunall being then most good and perfect when as it is most quiet and peaceable so as we can say with Paul I haue liued in all good Acts 23 1. conscience before God vntill this day namely from the time of my first effectuall calling and conuersion §. Sect. 2 That a good conscience
speaketh peace according to the truth of Gods Word But here the carnal worldling and loose Libertine wil take occasion to presume that aboue all others they haue the best consciences because they seldome or neuer accuse them or if they doe yet they can easily put them to silence they were neuer in their liues troubled with any horrors and feares but haue had their consciences euer quiet and peaceable witnessing good things vnto them as that their sinnes are pardoned they highly in Gods fauour and shall most certainely attaine vnto saluation But for preuenting of this we haue added in the description of a good conscience that it doth not onely witnesse peaceable and good things but also that it doth giue true testimony of them So that if we would haue good consciences they must not be erronious in their euidence but peace and truth must be matched together And because they who most erre are ready with the best to brag of truth as well as of peace therefore I also added the Rule and Touchstone whereby all diuine truth is to be tryed namely when it agreeth with the truth of God reuealed in the Scriptures For conscience as I haue said is a witnesse with God testifying that which he also testifyeth and therfore when it doth excuse them whom God excuseth and secretly whispereth peace to them vnto whom in his Word he hath proclaimed it then is its testimony true and truly comfortable But when it offereth peace to them against whom hee hath proclaimed warre and excuseth them as good subiects whom his Word condemneth of high treason and wicked rebellion then is the testimonie of conscience false and erronious and can be no good ground of any sound consolation And in this case conscience is a traytor both to God and vs renouncing his seruice and that office which he hath imposed vpon it and ioyning with the enemies of our saluation to dishonour him in our destruction For it mayntaineth a false peace by giuing vs false intelligence telling vs that we are in safety when as we lye open to all danger that we are strong and well fortified against all assaults when as we are naked and haue vpon no part of the spirituall armour and like a false Sinon it testifieth that our spirituall enemies are quite departed whereas they lye in secret ambushment ready to assault and surprize vs when by beleeuing this false intelligence we are secure and neglecting the spirituall watch giue our selues ouer to worldly delights §. Sect. 3 The difference betwixt the peace of a good and bad conscience as first that the peace of the wicked proceedeth frō ignorance of their estate Euery conscience therefore is not good which is peaceable but that which speaketh peace in truth not according to our ignorant conceits blinded with pride and selfe-loue or presumptuous opinions which haue no sound ground but when it is squared by the perfect and infallible rule of the holy Scriptures whereby we may discerne whether that inward peace which wee feele in vs proceedes from a good or a bad conscience For there are many things by corrupting and defiling the conscience and making it worse and more dead and senselesse then it is in it owne nature which make it at least for time quiet and peaceable As first ignorance of God and his will which hood-winking the conscience giueth the deuill fit opportunity to carry it quickly whither hee will and like a thicke fogge and darkenesse of the night depriuing vs of light and sight doth cause vs to erre into the by-wayes of sinne whilest wee thinke that we are in that perfect path of righteousnesse that leadeth to Gods Kingdome As we see in Pauls example who in the time of his ignorance Rom. 7. 7 8 9. thought concupiscence to be no sinne which after hee was inlightened with the knowledge of the truth he discerned to bee the roote and fountaine of all wickednesse And whilest his iudgement was thus blinded his conscience spoke peace vnto him testifying that hee was aliue and in good case when as being truly informed he plainely saw that hee was dead and in the high way that leadeth to hell Such haue not their peace disturbed by conscience because being ignorant of the way it cannot admonish them when they goe out of it and being it selfe misinformed it must needs giue vnto them false euidence And though their hearts be full of sluttish corners and euen deepe dungeons full of all filthinesse yet the eye of conscience doth not discerne any annoyance because it is in the darke and is not illightened with the knowledge of Gods truth But especially this commeth to passe when as ignorance is not onely simple and naturall but imbraced and affected men purposely neglecting yea contemning and shunning the meanes of knowledge because for their greater quietnesse they would not haue conscience to take notice of their wayes As they who blesse themselues in their good meanings as sufficient to saluation and wholly neglecting Gods true seruice doe content themselues with their owne blinde deuotion and superstition Such shun those places where the light of the Gospel shineth and like Battes and Owles delight to liue in darke corners where they seldome or neuer heare a Sermon because they delight in the workes of darkenesse They hate the light of Gods truth because their workes are euill as our Sauiour speaketh and as the thiefe and adulterer waite for the twy-light and Ioh. 3. 20. make choice of the night as fittest for their purposes hating the morning as the shaddow of death because it discouereth their faults to others and bringeth them in danger to be apprehended condemned and executed So these affect the darkenesse of ignorance and abhorre the light of truth Job 24 15 16. because they would not haue conscience to take notice of their wickednesse lest like Gods Sergeant it should arrest and hale them before his Tribunall and there as an vnpartiall witnesse giue euidence against them and lest being condemned it should play the executioner tormenting and vexing them day and night with hellish horrours and deepe despaire §. Sect. 4 The peace of a good conscience proceedeth from spirituall life of an euill from senselesnesse and deadnesse Secondly peace of conscience doth often proceed not from spirituall life and motion knowing and doing Gods will but from the cleane contrary as from spirituall deadnesse idlenesse and sloth in performing those duties which God requireth For as when the body is dead it hath no sense of sicknesse wounds or any hurt which can be done vnto it so when the soule is dead in sinne the conscience hath no feeling of any waight that lieth vpon it nor of any wounds or sores of sin wherewith it is mangled and deformed And though corruption and guilt like a gangrene indangereth it euen vnto the very death yet it neuer complaineth because it hath no sense and feeling of this mischiefe and misery Besides whilest men snort in this
estate both in respect of the time present and to come In respect of the present a good conscience will make vs beare and brooke all estates not only with patience but also with comfort and ioy in the holy Ghost If we be in prosperity and abound with Gods blessings it warranteth vnto vs the lawfull vse of them and witnesseth vnto vs that we are heires and right owners and not thieues and vsurpers that they are Gods talents which being imployed to aduantage for Luk. 19. 17. Matth. 25. 21. the glory of our great Lord and good of our fellow seruants they shall be doubled and redoubled when we are called to giue account of them that they are pledges of Gods fauour in this life and earnest-pennies of euerlasting ioy and happinesse in the life to come If we be in aduersitie and affliction a good conscience like the good Angell holding vs by the hand in this firie furnace will secure vs that wee shall not receiue any harme For it will testifie vnto vs that these curses in their owne nature are through Gods mercy turned into blessings that they are testimonies of Gods loue seeing as many as he loueth he chastizeth and signes of our Apoc. 3. 19. adoption for the Lord correcteth euery sonne that he receiueth and they are Heb 12. 6. Rom. 8. 37 38. bastards and no sonnes whom he correcteth not That they will not separate Gods loue from vs but our loue from the world That they are not poysons to kill vs but medicines to cure vs of our spirituall diseases fannes and files and fires to winnow vs from our chaffe scowre vs from our rust and purifie vs from the drosse of our corruptions Finally that whatsoeuer they seeme to flesh and blood yet they shall worke together for the best Rom. 8. 28. to them that loue God and that though they be bitter and vnpleasant for the present yet they shall bring foorth the quiet fruits of righteousnesse to Heb. 12. 11. them that are exercised thereby In respect of the time to come a good conscience doth giue vnto vs truely and according to the Scriptures this comfortable and ioyfull euidence that we shall continue euer to be holy and happy perseuering to the end in Gods grace vnto saluation not by vertue of our owne strength but through the power and promises of God For he hath assured vs that he will put his feare in our hearts that wee may Ier. 32. 40. not depart from him That though we haue many fierce Wolues to assault vs and be but silly weake Sheepe vnable to make resistance yet our Shepherd Christ being infinitely stronger then they none shall be able to pull Ioh. 10. 28. Ioh. 13. 1. Ier. 31. 3. vs out of his hand That whom God loueth he loueth with an euerlasting loue and to the end that the gifts and calling of God are without repentance and finally that though we be many wayes tryed yet the Lord will neuer suffer 1. Cor. 10. 13. vs to bee tempted aboue our power but will giue a good end and issue to all our tentations §. Sect. 3 That a good conscience maketh vs cheerfull in Gods seruice Lastly a good conscience maketh vs cheerefull and diligent in Gods Esa 30. 21. 1. Ioh. 2. 27. seruice and willing to doe all things which are pleasing in his sight So the Prophet speaking of the faithfull saith that they should heare a voyce behind them saying This is the way walke ye in it when yee turne to the right hand and when ye turne to the left That is besides their outward teaching in the Ministery of the Word they should haue an inward teacher to direct and admonish them euen the Spirit of God speaking vnto them in the heart and conscience And this is that which Dauid meaneth where he saith that his reines did teach him in the night season that is the voyce Psal 16. 7. of conscience which did shew him the wayes of God and mooued him with cheerefulnesse to walke in them The which is the maine end at which the conscience aimeth in witnessing and sealing vnto vs all the former comforts For therefore the conscience giueth vnto vs that comfortable testimonie that wee are deliuered out of the hands of all our spirituall Luk. 1. 74. enemies to the end that we should not still serue them but worship our Lord and Redeemer in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the dayes of our liues that he hath bought vs at so deare a price that we should glorifie him 1. Cor. 6. 20. in our soule and body because they are not our owne but his who hath redeemed them that we are freed from sinne that it may no longer raigne in Rom. 6. 12 18. our mortall body but being deliuered out of this cruell tyrannie we should become the seruants of righteousnesse that our consciences are purged from Heb. 9. 14. dead workes that we may serue the liuing God that wee are reconciled vnto God by the death and sufferings of Christ that we may aboue all things esteeme our peace with him which was so dearely purchased and not bee inticed with the hire of the whole world to doe any thing displeasing vnto God or which might breake or disturbe our peace with him seeing this were to vnder-value this inestimable price as being of lesse worth then worldly vanities and to tread the precious blood of Christ vnder our filthy Heb. 10. 26 29. feete as an vnholy thing and euen to despite the Spirit of grace with which we are sanctified Therefore it witnesseth vnto vs that we are sanctified that we may be made carefull to bring foorth the fruits of sanctification to his glory that hath called vs out of darkenesse into this marueilous 1. Pet. 2. 9. light and out of the bondage of sinne and Satan into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God That though our sanctification be imperfect and Rom. 8. 21. stained with many corruptions yet through Christ it is accepted of God to this end that we might be made more cheerefull and diligent in seruing so gracious a Lord. For what greater incouragement can there be vnto vs in the performance of all good duties then to bee assured that our labour of loue shall not be lost and that whatsoeuer we doe shall be taken in good part and richly rewarded though neuer so imperfect if we desire and indeuour to doe the best we can Finally a good conscience giueth vnto vs this comfortable testimony that we are most happy in all estates that no estate though neuer so much crossed and afflicted may discourage vs from going on in the wayes of godlinesse seeing no misery can make vs miserable but euen our afflictions themselues shall aduance our happinesse and that we shall neuer lose either grace or glory but constantly hold out in the Christian race of godlinesse and righteousnesse vntill we be crowned with the
Garland of blessednesse that we may not be discouraged with the sense of our weakenesse and wearinesse nor with the assaults of our spirituall enemies who incounter vs in the way seeing fighting Eph. 6. 10. against them not in our owne strength but in the power of Gods might we are sure of support to hold out in the fight and haue his neuer-fayling promise of obtaining victory CAP. XVI Of the signes and properties of a good Conscience §. Sect. 1 The first signe are the causes of it THe next point to be considered is the signes whereby we may discerne whether we haue a good conscience or no that if 2. Cor. 1. 12. we haue we may with Paul reioyce in it if not wee may labour to obtaine this precious iewell Besides therefore these signes which by the diligent Reader may be easily gathered out of the former discourse there are diuers others which may be added And first if we haue a good conscience wee may discerne it by the causes of it for it is not the worke of nature which by the fall was corrupted in this as in all other faculties but the free gift of God not purchased by our owne merits not purged from naturall defilements with our owne satisfactions but purified from dead workes by the precious blood of Christ Heb. 9. 14. applied vnto vs by his holy Spirit and a liuely faith And therefore if wee feele no change in our consciences but that they still remaine the same which they alwayes were if they be not washed with the blood of Christ which purgeth them not only from the guilt of sinne but also from dead workes that wee may serue the liuing God or if their purity and peace proceede from any thing then from this that being bathed in this fountaine Zach. 13. 1. opened to the house of Dauid and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem for sinne and for vncleannesse they are assured that their sinnes are pardoned and shall neuer be imputed nor laid to their charge if they be not purified by faith which both assureth vs of saluation and also worketh by loue but Gal. 5. 6. are grounded alone vpon groundlesse presumption it is cleare and manifest that we deceiue our selues with a shaddow and haue not yet attained to a good conscience §. Sect. 2 The second signe is taken from the manner of working this good conscience The second signe is the manner of working this good conscience For it is not wrought by worldly perswasions taken from our credit pleasure or profit but by the ministery of the Word begetting faith in vs whereby the heart and conscience is purified And this it doth first by terrifying it with the sight and sense of our sinnes and the punishments due vnto them whereby we are humbled and brought to despaire of our owne strength for our recouery out of our misery and then by pacifying and comforting it by offering vnto vs in Christ the free pardon of our sinnes reconciliation with God and the eternall saluation of our soules So that heere the saying is truely verified that peace is the daughter of warre for if our consciences haue had no conflict with Gods iustice and the curse of the Law and haue not beene truly humbled in the sense of his wrath and the enmitie which hath beene betweene him and vs our peace is carnall and corrupt springing not from assurance of faith but from securitie and presumption which haue caused this ease not by recouery of health but through the numnesse and stupidity of the disease §. Sect. 3 That a good conscience is knowne by the effects of it Thirdly a good conscience is knowne by the effects for it excuseth and acquitteth vs before God of all sinne and speaketh peace vnto our hearts assuring vs that we are reconciled and in Gods fauour and grounding this testimonie vpon the infallible truth of holy Scriptures It maketh vs bold in all dangers and like armour of proofe it contemneth the gun-shot of any worldly perils It makes vs couragious in the performance of all good duties and not greatly to care who liketh or misliketh them because we carry our warrant in our bosomes which will iustifie our actions before God what censure soeuer men passe of them It maketh vs like good seruants to come often into our Masters presence because it witnesseth vnto vs that we are in his fauour and that he accepteth of vs and our seruice It maketh vs often to examine the booke of our accounts euen in the presence of our Lord and to desire him to suruey our reckonings because it testifieth vnto vs that we haue dealt faithfully with him So Dauid Examine me O Lord and prooue me try my reines and my heart After Psal 26. 2. which Audit it will iustifie vs in respect of our integritie as it did him Thou hast prooued mine heart thou hast visited me in the night thou hast tryed me and shalt find nothing Not in respect of the perfection of our performance Psal 17. 3. which is full of wants and weakenesses but of our desire and resolution as he expoundeth himselfe in the next words For I am purposed that my mouth shall not transgresse If therefore our consciences produce these Psal 130. 3. 143. 2. effects in vs it is an euident signe that they are pure and peaceable But if contrariwise they accuse and terrifie vs or excuse and acquit vs without the warrant of Gods Word If we are bold and valiant in our peace and prosperity fearing no euill but cowardly timorous when we are incountred with any danger If wee are so couragious in euill that we are not ashamed though men heare vs talke wantonly and vainely or see vs in our actions imitate the greatest number though vnlawfull and without warrant but are ready to blush if a good speech hath slipped from vs in bad company or if we be ouertaken at vnawares in performing some religious dutie by such as are ready to flowt vs for it If wee care not how little wee come into Gods presence and seldome or neuer examine the booke of our accounts betweene vs and him or else slightly and ouertly for forme and fashion sake and like vnfaithfull factors cannot indure to haue our Master audit our reckonings then are our consciences defiled and can giue no true testimony of peace vnto vs. §. Sect. 4 That a good conscience is knowne by the properties of it as first that it is pure and peaceable Fourthly a good conscience is knowne by the properties of it First as it is peaceable so also it is pure not onely from the guilt of sinne but Heb. 9. 14. also from the corruption For the blood of Christ as it doth like a soueraigne salue pacifie the rage of conscience caused by the sores of sinne so doth it draw out the corrupt matter that causeth it clensing these wounds as fast as it healeth them and as it saueth vs from this body
find that we haue it then are we to reioyce in it vsing all good meanes whereby wee may preserue and keepe safe so precious a Iewell The meanes by which we may get a good conscience if we want it are diuers The first is in our iudgements highly to esteeme it as one of Gods speciall graces and richest gifts and in our hearts and affections to loue and desire it aboue all earthly things And so will the Lord be more willing to bestow it vpon vs when we esteeme and desire it according to the worth and value of it and we also shall be more earnest in vsing all good meanes to get it and more thankefull vnto God for it when wee haue obtained it Now that wee may esteeme and desire this gift of God let vs consider First that it is most excellent and one of the chiefest parts of our happinesse giuing vs a taste and entrance into the ioyes of heauen euen whilest we are vpon earth For as the Apostle saith The Kingdome of God is not meates and drinkes but righteousnesse and peace and ioy in the holy Ghost But to what end should I speake of the excellencie Rom. 14. 17. of it which is vnspeakeable or labour to set foorth the beauty and brightnesse of this heauenly light which no mortall eye can behold in its perfect glory seeing as the Apostle telleth vs it passeth all vnderstanding Phil. 4. 7. And therefore I will content my selfe to shaddow it darkely and to giue some glimpse of it as of the Sunne in the water by touching briefly the profit and necessitie of it And for the vtility of this grace that may bee said of it which the Apostle speaketh of godlinesse that it is profitable vnto all things hauing the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come Like a witnesse it giueth euidence on our side before God and excuseth vs of all those faults which Satan accuseth vs of or the Law layeth to our charge like an Aduocate it pleadeth our cause and prooueth that wee are iust and innocent through the righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ As a iust Iudge vpon this euidence and plea it absolueth vs and the iudgement thereof shall neuer bee trauersed or reuersed in this world nor in the world to come But looke what sentence good conscience passeth on earth the supreme Iudge will ratifie at the great Day of assises in which respect if it condemne vs not heere then may wee haue confidence towards God that hee will not condemne vs hereafter As a 1. Joh. 3. 21. comfortable and true friend it alwayes beareth vs company incouraging vs when we doe well and reproouing vs when we doe amisse admonishing and warning vs to looke to our footing when wee walke in slippery places and are in danger of falling and to rise if wee doe fall for want of care in taking warning by renewing our repentance In our prosperity it is our guide to leade vs on and direct vs in the right vse of it in our afflictiō it is our comforter which speaking peace within doth make vs with patience and ioy to beare all outward crosses and calamities In time of peace or rather cessation of that conflict with the spirituall enemies of our saluation it is a faithfull Watch-man which leaues vs to inioy our rest and quiet when there is no danger but yet admonisheth vs to sleepe in our Christian armour seeing they are not gone but haue onely withdrawne their forces for their greater aduantage and in time of warre Si rectè facies hic murus abeneus esto nil conscire sibi nulla pallescere culpa Horat. ad Moecenet Ep. 1. when the enemie approcheth and is ready to incounter vs it not onely soundeth the alarme that we may start vp and stand in readinesse but also is armour of proofe and euen a brazen wall to keepe vs from danger when they assault vs. Finally it performeth all good duties to all sorts of men at all times and all places accompanying the Iudge to the bench the Lawyer to the barre the Diuine both in his Study and Pulpit the Tradesman in his shop and the Buyer and Seller in the market teaching and admonishing them how they shall carry themselues in all cases and both approouing them when they performe their dutie and rebuking them when for feare or fauour glory or gaine they doe neglect it And from hence also the necessity of a good conscience appeareth seeing it bringeth with it so much good of all which they are destitute that liue without it Yea they are subiect to the contrary euils hauing in them a witnesse that daily accuseth them and a Iudge that condemneth them no guide to leade them no friend to admonish them to incourage them in good or discourage them in euill Neither can they doe any thing pleasing vnto God for the end of the Commandement is loue out of a pure heart a good conscience 1. Tim. 1. 5. and faith vnfained of which end they faile that are destitute of it and can doe nothing but sinne against God and bring vpon themselues fearefull condemnation for if our corrupt consciences condemne vs God the righteous and vnpartiall Iudge who is greater then our consciences 1. Joh. 3. 20. will much more condemne vs as the Apostle Iohn speaketh §. Sect. 2 Of the second meanes to obtaine a good conscience Secondly we must labour to know the will of God reuealed in the Scriptures and to apply what we know vnto our selues for our owne vse For the conscience iudgeth and witnesseth with God for vs or against vs and therefore we must know what he approueth and condemneth if we would haue our iudgement and euidence to agree with his otherwise our consciences being vniust and erronious will iudge vniustly of our actions and giue in false euidence when wee put our selues vpon them for triall More especially we must labour after the knowledge both of the Law and the Gospell for the Law as it is the rule of our actions according to which they ought to be wholy conformed so also it is the rule of our consciences whereby they discerne whether they be right or crooked good or euill It is the municipall law for the peculiar gouernement of Gods subiects and the booke of Satutes set out by our Soueraigne according to which conscience is bound to iudge and giue euidence which it cannot doe vnlesse it know and be able to examine our actions according vnto this law In which regard the consciences of ignorant men do in most things misleade them into manifold errours because they are not able to iudge of their actions according to Gods Law which they know not but giue sentence of them according to their owne wills humane traditions and their owne inuentions superstitious conceits and good meanings And the like may be said of those who hauing some knowledge of Gods Law doe through negligence or prophanenesse
of getting a good conscience The meanes of preseruing it being gotten are diuers First the often renewing of our couenant of peace with God by renewing the condition of it on our part faith and repentance For as wee daily wound our consciences through our frailty in falling into sinne whereby the peace of them is disturbed and defile them by casting vpon them the filth of our corruptions so our care must be to heale daily these wounds by applying vnto them afresh by the hand of faith the soueraigne salue and balsam of Christs blood which is of sufficient and sole vertue and nothing else in the world to heale these wounds and also to wash them as often in the teares of vnfained repentance which will giue vs assurance that they are purged and clensed from all filth of sinne Secondly being clensed our continuall care must be to keepe them cleane from all sinne especially in our desires resolutions and indeuours and howsoeuer we cannot hinder Rom. 6. 12. it from dwelling in vs yet we must take heede that it doe not so raigne in vs that we should obey it willingly in the lusts thereof for sinne willingly nourished cannot possibly stand with this peace seeing they doe wound and waste the conscience which sores if they fester and putrifie with corruption will breed in them such a gnawing worme as will giue vnto vs no peace or rest but night and day will torture and torment vs. Thirdly let vs daily mortifie all our sinfull lusts as wrath enuie malice vncleane concupiscence pride and the rest which will betray conscience vnto sinne and with their loud cries and tumultuous clamours hinder it of all sound peace and quiet But especially we must crucifie all worldly lusts of ambition couetousnesse and voluptuousnesse and weane our hearts from the loue of earthly vanities which otherwise if it be entertained will set the peace of conscience vnto sale for the base price of pleasure profit and preferment as the miserable experience of these times doe too plainely teach vs. Fourthly we must often examine our consciences by the rule of Gods Word whether they giue vnto vs true euidence and iudgement the which must be done in the presence of our supreme Iudge who perfectly seeth all secrets and giueth righteous iudgement not onely of all our actions but euen of conscience also which as his Deputie iudgeth of them Euen as the Iudges of the Kingdome according to law call to account all subiects and passe sentence of their actions but yet are accountable to their Soueraigne and haue all their iudgements and determinations subiect to his censure And this is that answere 1. Pet. 3. 21. Act. 24. 16. 23. 1. of a good conscience towards God whereof S. Peter speaketh which the Apostle Paul by continuall exercise indeuoured so to make as he might be accepted of him Which that we may the better doe at the great Day of reckoning we must often put conscience to iudge and examine it selfe according to the rule of the Scriptures that the Booke of Gods Law and the booke of conscience may agree together and also desire the Lord in priuate often to try and examine vs and it that all things being cleered Psal 26. 1 2. betweene vs and him we may not come to publike shame when wee are called to giue an account in the Starre-chamber of heauen Fifthly we are to keepe our consciences cleane and vndefiled from dead workes and not to smother any sinne in them without iudgement and execution though for life and liberty it offer to bribe vs with all the honours riches and pleasures in the world For if conscience be not pure and vnpartiall in condemning all sinne it can neuer be peaceable seeing it will be bound ouer to answere before the supreme Iudge for conniuencie and partiall iudgement and for not condemning and punishing sinne as his Vicegerent according to law shall it selfe be found an accessary and guilty of that sinne which it tolerated in vs and so shal be condemned and tortured with that gnawing worme which neuer dieth Lastly we must continually meditate of the day of Iudgement when as a cleere and good conscience will be better vnto vs then ten thousand worlds The which will make vs carefull to preserue our consciences in their purity and peace seeing if they doe not approue vs at that day we can neuer be iustified before the tribunall of Gods Iudgement And as Iudges and Notaries knowing that their wise iust and iudicious King will exactly view and examine their Bookes and Records are made thereby carefull to keepe them faire and without the aspersion of any faultinesse and if they haue failed in the iust executing of their office will doe what they can to bee free from all imputation so wee being to shew our bookes of conscience before the King of heauen and earth are to be much more carefull that they may be vnblemished and without all spots of sinne and because wee often blot and blemish them in this life and haue our faults and sinnes often interlined we must labour to get out all these blots and staines by washing them often with the hand of faith in the blood of Christ and in that aqua fortis and powerfull water which flowed out of his side that so our sinnes not being found in these bookes of account may not be imputed vnto vs nor bring vpon vs that iust condemnation which they haue deserued And so much concerning a good conscience and those fundamentall vertues which are the maine grounds of a godly life THE SECOND BOOKE OF A GODLY LIFE CONTAINING THE MAINE PARTS and principall duties of it which we ought generally to performe at all times and vpon all good occasions CAP. I. Of the maine duties wherein a godly life consisteth §. Sect. 1 That a godly life consisteth in doing all those duties which God hath commanded WEE haue intreated the more largely of the maine grounds of a godly life because when the foundation is laid large and deepe the building which is erected vpon it is more firme and durable And now we are come to shew first wherein it consisteth and secondly what are the properties of it and of all the duties required in it A godly life consisteth in the conformity of our whole carriage vnto Gods reuealed will both in fleeing and forsaking all that is euill and in imbracing and practising that which is good in leauing vndone that which hee hath forbidden and in doing that which hee hath commanded And is generally required in many places of holy Scriptures Depart from euill and doe good cease to doe euill and learne to doe well Put ye off concerning the former conuersation the old man which is corrupt according Psal 34. 14. Esa 1 16. 1. Pet. 3. 11. Eph. 4. 22 23 24 to the deceitfull lusts and be renewed in the Spirit of your minde and put on that new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and
haue before spoken and now it remaineth that wee speake of the hauing of God in our hearts and affections wills and resolutions Of which we will intreate first generally and then more specially The generall duty which compriseth all the particulars is that knowing and acknowledging the Lord to be in himselfe the chiefe Goodnesse and infinite in all perfection and our most gracious and louing Father in Iesus Christ we doe adhere and cleaue vnto him with all our soules and wills hearts and affections resoluing to consecrate our selues wholy to his worship and with the vttermost of our indeuour to please him in all things by conforming our liues in all holy obedience vnto his reuealed will leauing and forsaking whatsoeuer he condemneth as euill and imbracing and practizing all that he commandeth as good And this the Lord requireth in the first place of all those who serue him Thou shalt feare the Deut 10. 20. 13. 4. Ios 22. 5. Lord thy God him shalt thou serue and to him shalt thou cleaue And againe Yee shall walke after the Lord your God and feare him and keepe his Commandements and obey his voice and yee shall serue him and cleaue vnto him So Barnabas exhorteth the new Conuerts of Antioch that with full purpose of Act. 13. 23. heart they would cleaue vnto the Lord. And the Apostle perswadeth not to the bare practice of good duties but that wee cleaue vnto that which is good Which holy resolution was in Dauid who purposed in his heart that Psal 17. 3. his mouth should not transgresse and fully resolued that if the Lord would teach him the way of his statutes he would keepe them with his whole heart and Psal 119 33 34. vnto the end The which resolution is necessary vnto all those who intend to leade a godly life wherein there are so many lets difficulties and discouragements that if wee be not fully resolued to passe by or ouercome them wee shall eyther not beginne or soone giue ouer to proceede in the Christian course And therefore our holy desires to please God in all things must be armed and confirmed with strong resolutions that we will do our vttermost indeuour to attaine vnto our desires or else they will be but like those idle and vain desires of the sluggards of which Salomon speaketh who desire and haue nothing because they are but bare wishers neuer Pro. 13. 4. purposing to take any paines for the satisfying of their desires Neither can such be said to serue God with their whole hearts but with a part only For as Philosophy teacheth vs there are two faculties in the heart of man the one called concupiscible which desireth and imbraceth that good which reason discouereth the other the irascible faculty which being displeased with those lets and oppositions that hinder the fruition of the good desired armeth vs with resolution to set vpon and ouercome them And with both these we must serue God cleauing vnto him and his will with the desires of our heart as the chiefe good and resoluing to inioy him at any price and to doe that which is pleasing vnto him notwithstanding all difficulties and dangers which oppose vs in the way §. Sect. 3 The properties of sound resolution As first that it must be vniuersall c. But seeing many men deceiue themselues with shadowes and shewes of good purposes and resolutions of cleauing vnto God and pleasing him by their seruice it will not be amisse to set downe some properties and signes whereby we may know that vnto which the Scriptures so earnestly perswade vs. And first this resolution ought to be generall and vniuersall extending it selfe not only to some few of many duties but vnto all without exception We must with Dauid haue respect vnto all Gods Commandements Psal 119. 6. Col. 110. Heb. 13. 18. and walke worthy of the Lord vnto all pleasing being fruitfull in euery good worke and hauing a good conscience in all things as the Apostle speaketh Secondly it must be diligent and painefull in the vse of all good meanes whereby we may attaine vnto our end like vnto the resolution of worldlings in compassing earthly things who spare for no paines for the atchieuing their purposes but labour night and day by Sea and land for the compassing of their riches pleasures and preferments So as wee may say with Dauid My soule followeth hard after thee and neuer rest in our Psal 63. 8. pursuite till with the Spouse in the Canticles we inioy him whom our soule loueth Thirdly it must be so magnanimous and couragious that nothing may be able to daunt or dismay it and the greater the difficulties and dangers be which crosse vs in our Christian courses the more must wee double and redouble our resolutions to withstand and ouercome them though it be with the losse of riches friends yea euen life it selfe And such a resolution was in good Ioshua who though all the people did leaue Ios 24. 15. Ruth 1. 16. the Lord vowed himselfe and his family vnto his seruice And in Ruth whose resolution of adhering to Naomi and her God could not bee hindred by any disswasion And finally in the Apostle Paul who when hee was perswaded by his friends that he should not expose himselfe to the perill of persecution by going vp to Ierusalem breaketh through all difficulties in the strength of his couragious resolution What meane you to Act. 21. 13. weepe and breake my heart for I am ready not to be bound onely but also to die at Hierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus Yea when the holy Ghost himselfe witnessed that in euery Citie bonds and afflictions did abide him his resolution made him constant in his course But none of these things saith he moue Act. 20. 23 23 me neither count I my life deare vnto my selfe so that I might finish my course with ioy c. Fourthly it is the property of this resolution of adhering vnto God to ioyne with this fortitude and magnanimity true humility not grounding our courage vpon our owne strength as Peter did who trusting to the ardencie and vnchangeablenesse of his loue towards Christ resolued that though all men should forsake him yet hee would Mat. 26. 33 34. not For if we leane vpon this weake Reede it will most faile and deceiue vs when we most rely vpon it but being humbled in the sight and sense of our owne weakenesse and frailty wee must wholly rest vpon the power and promises of God and like the child in the mothers armes wee must cling vnto him with all our strength but not so much trust to the firmenesse of our hold as to his clasping of vs knowing that if he withdraw his strength and leaue vs we shall soone cease cleauing vnto him and fall into those tentations which the deuill the world or our owne flesh shall suggest vnto vs. Wee must say with the Apostle Paul I am able
what can more strengthen our resolutions in performing faithfull seruice vnto God then to be assured by his assistance of victorie ouer all enemies strength in ouercomming all difficulties safety in all dangers and prosperous successe and an happie issue of all our indeuours And thus Moses exhorteth Iosua to resolution and courage because God had promised to be with him He it is saith hee that doth goe before thee he will be with Deut. 31. 8. thee he will not faile thee neither forsake thee feare not neither be dismayed Fourthly let vs remember that it is impossible to lose the fruit benefit of our labour whatsoeuer paines we take in Gods seruice for besides the present pay of temporal benefits we shal haue the rich rewards of eternall and heauenly happinesse of which the other are but small earnest pennies and pawnes So that if we in Gods seruice lose our earthly riches we shall haue for them heauenly treasures if our fame and reputation amongst men we shall be recompenced with eternall glory in the presence of God his Saints and Angels yea if we lose our life it selfe in losing we shall finde it Mat. 10. 39. euen an euerlasting and most happy life for one that was momentany and miserable Fifthly if we would haue this Christian resolution firme and constant it must be well grounded when we first begin and wee must expect when we enter into the course of a godly life not the fauour of men ease and prosperity but many enemies to encounter vs and many difficulties and dangers in our Christian way which if we doe not forecast before they happen and arme our resolution against them they will vtterly daunt and discourage vs at their first approching And therefore before we make purchase of this gaine of godlinesse let vs cast before-hand what it will cost vs and resolue to leaue it at no rate Sixthly let vs meditate often of the excellency vtility and necessity of a godly life in which respects it is to be preferred before all worldly things whatsoeuer seeing thereby and by no other meanes without it we are assured of Gods loue and our owne saluation of his grace in this world and glory and happinesse in the world to come Seuenthly let vs thinke of the preciousnesse of our soules which are of much more value then ten thousand worlds and that there is no other meanes to prouide for their eternall happinesse and their fruition of Gods presence which perfecteth our blessednesse in heauen then by framing our hearts to adhere vnto him with firme resolution to serue and please him whilst wee liue vpon the earth And let vs often meditate on that speech of our Sauiour What will it profit a man to win the whole world and lose his soule For heere our soules are saued or lost heere Mar. 8. 36. the acceptable time and day of saluation lasteth which if we let passe it is neuer againe to be regained but our precious soules for the price of momentany vanities shall be eternally sold to hellish torments Lastly because our resolution of adhering vnto God and pleasing him in all things is apt to faint and languish therefore our care must be often to suruey it that when we finde any faylings or vnsettlednesse in it we may repaire and strengthen it yea in truth this is a worke fit for euery morning to take a view of our spirituall state and to renew our resolution that wee will the day following vse all meanes whereby it may bee improoued and bettered inrich our selues in our spiritual stocke and to our vttermost indeuour doe all things which may please God as wee shall more fully shew heereafter Yea if we finde our resolutions weake and vnsettled we must confirme them by making with God a solemne Couenant that our hearts in all things shall adhere vnto him and start aside vpon no occasion according to the example of Asa and the rest of Gods people who entred 2. Chro. 15. 12 14 34. 31. into a Couenant to seeke the Lord God of their fathers with all their heart and with all their soule yea if neede be wee must confirme this Couenant not onely by solemne protestation but by an inuiolable oath as they did at that time and the Prophet Dauid long before them I haue sworne saith Psal 119. 106. he and will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous iudgements CAP. IIII. Of trust affiance and hope in God §. Sect. 1 Of affiance in God wherein it consisteth and of the reasons which may mooue vs vnto it THe speciall duties whereby we adhere and cleaue vnto God with all our hearts are either principall or those which arise out of them and depend vpon them the chiefe and principall are affiance the loue and feare of God By affiance wee adhere and cleaue vnto him when as knowing acknowledging beleeuing and remembring the omniscience omnipotence all sufficiency trueth and goodnesse of God towards vs we doe put our trust and affiance in him for the obtaining of all good and preseruation from all euill both in the presence and absence of all inferiour meanes Vnto which affiance the Scriptures exhort vs. So Dauid Trust in the Lord and Psal 37. 3. doe good And Salomon Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and leane not Pro. 3. 5. to thine owne vnderstanding Which if we performe wee haue diuers gracious promises made vnto vs as first that we shall be greatly rewarded Cast not away your confidence which hath great recompence of reward and be Heb. 10. 35. incompassed with all Gods mercies and fauours according to that of the Psalmist He that trusteth in the Lord mercy shall compasse him about Secondly Psal 32. 10. that wee shall bee sustained and preserued by his prouidence Cast thy Psal 55. 22. burthen vpon the Lord and he shall sustaine thee he shall neuer suffer the righteous to be mooued And againe They that trust in the Lord shall be as mount Ps 125. 1. Sion which cannot be remooued but abideth for euer Thirdly that we shall haue the good things of the earth for the present and eternall blessednesse in the life to come for he that trusteth in the Lord shall possesse the land and Esa 57 13. shall inherit his holy mountaine So Ieremie Blessed is the man that trusteth in Ier. 17. 7. the Lord and whose hope the Lord is And the Psalmist O trust and see that Psal 34 8. the Lord is good blessed is the man that trusteth in him And thus wee must trust in the Lord for the obtaining of all good and the auoiding of all euill vnto the former Dauid exhorteth Commit thy way vnto the Lord Psal 37. 5. trust also in him and he shall bring it to passe And of the other we haue him for our example The Lord is my light and my saluation whom shall I feare Psal 27. 1. the Lord is the
is proper and peculiar to him alone As religious adoration Inuocation dedicating Churches and consecrating of festiuals to their honour and such like Secondly all irreuerence in Gods seruice As when the externall worship is performed without the inward with deceitfull lippes and not with the heart and in spirit and truth which is the seruice of Hypocrites Lastly Mat. 15. 8 9. when as the publike seruice is performed without any vnanimity of the heart or vniformity of externall rites and ceremonies or with such as are vncomely apish light and opposite to the vse of edifying 1. Cor. 14. 40. §. Sect. 2 Of prayer and inuocation And these are the things which generally are commanded or forbidden in this Commandement The speciall duties which are here principally required are three Inuocation preaching and hearing the Word and the administration of the Sacraments In respect of the first there is 1. Thes 5. 17. 1. Iohn 5. 14. first required that we pray and the neglect hereof condemned Secondly that wee pray according to Gods will performing those things therein which in his Word hee requireth And these are either essentiall vnto prayer or accidentall The things essentiall respect either the person vnto Psal 50. 15. Luke 11. 2. Ephe. 2. 12. Iohn 16. 23. Rom. 8 26 27. whom we must pray which is God only and no other or the person in whose name alone we must pray namely Iesus Christ and not in the mediation or intercession of any creature Thirdly by whose helpe to wit the holy Ghost who helpeth our infirmities and teacheth vs to pray as we ought Fourthly After what manner that is before prayer with due preparation and in prayer in respect of our soules that we pray in the Psal 108. 1. Eccle 4. 17. Col. 3. 16. 1. Cor. 14. 15. spirit and not with the lips alone nor with wandring thoughts In our mindes that we pray with vnderstanding and not in an vnknowne tongue nor in ignorance not conceiuing what we vtter with our mouthes In our Eccles 5. 1. Gen. 32. 10. hearts that we pray with reuerence in respect of God and humility in respect of our selues In our bodies there is required that wee vse such voice and gestures as are most fit to stirre vp our affections and deuotions 1. Cor. 14. 40. to the religious performing of this duty Lastly there is required that wee pray for those things which are good and lawfull hauing Mat. 7. 11. all our suites warranted by the Word of God The things accidentall required in prayer are the circumstances of persons place or time In respect of persons prayer is either publike in the Congregation or priuate In respect of the place prayer is not limited 1. Tim. 2. 8. but wee haue liberty in all places to lift vp pure hands vnto God In respect of the time wee must pray without ceasing as often as any 1. Thes 5. 17. fit opportunity and occasion is offered The kinds of prayer are Iam. 1. 5. 5. 16. 1. 6. Mat. 21. 22. either petition or thankesgiuing In all our petitions there is required 1. A sense of our wants 2. Feruent desires to haue them supplied 3. A speciall faith that our requests shall be granted grounded vpon Gods promises After our petitions made we must quietly rest vpon God perswading our selues that wee shall obtaine them in due time Secondly we must carefully vse all good meanes which may serue Gods prouidence in conferring these blessings vpon vs. Thirdly If wee doe not presently obtaine we must perseuere in prayer without fainting or wearinesse The other part of prayer is giuing of thanks whereby wee praise God for all his benefits either receiued or promised vnto which the same things are Col. 3. 16. Phil. 1. 4. to be fitted which were generally required in prayer as that they be rendred to God alone in the name of Christ by the holy Ghost with vnderstanding in our mindes and reuerence and humility with thankfulnesse and cheerefulnesse in our hearts §. Sect. 3 Of the duties of Gods Ministers And so much of the duties respecting prayer Those that respect the ministery of the Word are of two sorts the first respect Gods Ministers Rom. 10. 15. 2. Cor. 5. 18 19. that preach it The second the people that heare it In respect of the Minister it is required first that his person be qualified and fitted for this high function in which regard hee ought to be once lawfully called to this office inwardly by God and outwardly by the Church Secondly he is to haue his calling approued and sealed vnto him by his sufficiency 1. Tim. 3. 2. Esa 6. 8. of gifts both in knowledge and vtterance and willingnesse of minde to imploy them to Gods glory and good of his people Secondly for the matter which he preacheth it is required that he deliuer nothing but that which is grounded vpon the pure Word of God and that he rightly expound 1. Thes 2. 13. 2. Cor. 2. 17. the Scriptures by the Scriptures and diuide the Word of God aright both in obseruing profitable doctrines out of the Text and in applying them to his hearers for instruction in the truth confutation of 1. Tim. 3. 16. errours exhortations to duties reproofe of offenders and consolation of the weake and afflicted Thirdly for the manner there is required that he speake in the euidence of the Spirit as if God by him did speake vnto 1. Cor. 2 4. the people Secondly in simplicity without any impiety of humane inuētions or affectation to shew his owne learning gifts 3. in integrity and vprightnes 1. Cor. 2. 4 5. 2. Cor. 4. 2. 2 Tim. 2. 15. 1. Thes 2. 4. 1. Cor. 4. 2. Mat. 7. 29. Tit. 2. 15. 2. 7. Ezech. 3. 8 9. Ephes 6. 19. John 7. 18. 2. Cor. 11. 2. as in Gods sight and presence chiefly ayming to please God and men 4. In fidelity hauing in his ministery no respect of persons but deliuering Gods message impartially to the noble and base rich poore friēds and strangers all alike Fifthly with authority power according to the example of our Sauiour not fearing the face of any gainsayer or opposer Sixthly with al grauity as becommeth the waightinesse of his Ambassage Seuenthly with all liberty and freedome of speech and spirit taxing and reprouing sinne wheresoeuer he findes it And finally with feruent zeale of Gods glory and the saluation of the people §. Sect. 4 Of the duties of hearers and such as respect their preparation The duties which respect the hearing of the Word are of three sorts The first such as are to bee performed before wee heare which Eccles 4. 17. Heb. 4. 2. Luke 8. 13 14. Ier. 4. 4. are two principally The one that we fit and prepare our selues before wee presume to approach into Gods presence to performe this holy duty the which is done partly by remoouing those impediments
full of imperfections and weake in those graces 2. Chro. 30. 19. which are necessary vnto the worthy receiuing of this holy Sacrament we will in that part of our liues which remaineth striue after more perfection and conscionably labour in the vse of all good meanes whereby we may increase our knowledge faith repentance and charity towards our neighbours And lastly earnest and hearty prayer vnto God for the remission of our sinnes for the assistance of his Spirit in our intended action for a new supply of sanctifying graces and for his blessing vpon his holy Ordinances the Word and Sacraments that they may be effectuall for the renewing and increasing of them in vs and for the strengthening of vs vnto the duties of a godly life In the action of receiuing wee are to be exercised both by meditation and action We are to meditate on the outward signes Bread and Wine and the things signified by them the precious Body and Blood of Christ as also of the Analogie and relation betweene them When we see the Bread and Wine set apart from a common to an holy vse we are to be put in mind thereby that so Christ was set apart and sealed to the office of Mediatourship that he might bee our Ioh 6. 27. Esa 49. 1 5. Prophet Priest and King and so worke that great worke of our Redemption When we see one Bread and one Wine consisting of many Graines and Grapes we are to be put in mind thereby that there is but 1. Tim. 2. 5. one Mediatour betweene Gods vs euen the man Iesus Christ and that he hath but one body the Catholike Church consisting of many members When 1. Cor. 12. 12 13. wee see the Bread broken and the Wine powred out wee are to call to mind that so the body of Christ was broken and crucified and his blood shed for our sinnes that it might be spirituall food for our soules to nourish them to life euerlasting When we see the Minister giue and deliuer the Bread and Wine we are to remember that so God offereth the Body and Blood of his Sonne to be receiued spiritually by faith of euery worthy receiuer The actions to be performed are first to receiue the Bread and Wine at the hands of the Ministers and to eate and drinke them with our bodily mouthes Secondly to performe an inward action answerable thereunto namely by the hand and mouth of faith to receiue and feed vpon Christs Body and Blood for our spirituall nourishment Thirdly to remember the infinite loue of God and his Christ to vs the one in giuing his deare Sonne the other his precious Body and Blood for our Redemption and being truely thankefull vnto them in our hearts for these inestimable benefits to set foorth their praises both by our lips and liues songs of Thankesgiuing and holy conuersation After the receiuing of the Supper we are to performe these duties First to bee perpetually thankefull vnto God the Father Sonne and holy Spirit as for all his benefits so especially for that great worke of our Redemption and for deriuing and assuring vnto vs the fruit of it by his Word Sacraments and holy Spirit Secondly wee must examine how wee haue profited by receiuing of the Supper for the satisfying of our spirituall hunger and the replenishing of our empty soules with the gifts and graces of Gods holy Spirit which were the maine ends for which we came to the Lords Table Lastly we are to performe carefully our purposes and promises made vnto God and our selues that we will conscionably and diligently vse all good meanes for the furthering of vs in the duties of repentance and a godly life CAP. VIII Of the duties required in the third and fourth Commandement §. Sect. 1 Of the sanctifying of Gods Name which is taken diuersly in the Scriptures c. and how it ought to be done THe third Commandement requireth that wee sanctifie Gods Name and glorifie him out of his publike and solemne seruice in the whole course of our liues and conuersation The Name of God signifieth diuers things in the Scriptures as first God himselfe and his attributes which are his Essence Secondly his Glory Thirdly his Titles as Iehouah Elohim Iah Fourthly his Word Fifthly his Religion Sixthly his Workes And to take it in vaine is to vse it in our thoughts words and workes rashly lightly and without iudgement or in vaine and to no end or falsly wickedly and contumeliously to his dishonour which is heere forbidden Contrariwise in this Commandement God requireth that we sanctifie and glorifie his holy Name and as it is Holy Reuerend and Glorious in it selfe so to vse it holily and reuerently in all our thoughts words and actions And on the other side he forbiddeth vs to vse Gods Name that is his attributes Titles Word Religion and Workes vainely that is rashly irreuerently and lightly vpon no iust cause or else prophanely falsly and contemptuously to Gods dishonour The mayne duties required of vs are first that wee effectually know beleeue and remember God and his attributes and also often thinke and meditate on them holily and Rom. 10. 10. reuerently that wee make profession of God and his attributes and vpon all occasions speake of them in like manner and that wee walke worthy such an holy knowledge and profession in our liues and conuersations Deut. 28. 58. Secondly that wee desire Gods glory in our hearts and indeuour Psal 50. 23. 1. Cor. 10. 31. to set it foorth by all meanes making it the matter of our speech and glorifying him by our praises and thankesgiuing and the end also of all our words and actions Thirdly that we vse Gods Titles and Names iudiciously in matters of waight and importance after a serious and reuerent manner and to a good end Fourthly that wee vse Gods Word religiously and holily reading meditating and conferring of it with a desire studie and indeuour to know remember and practise it That we make it our Schoolemaster to teach and instruct vs in all truth our chiefe 2. Tim. 3. 16. guide for the directing and reforming of our hearts and liues and the Luk. 11. 28. squire and rule according to which wee frame all our words and actions Fifthly that wee walke worthy our high calling and by our holinesse and Psal 119. 1. Act. 23. 1. 24. 16. righteousnesse adorne the Religion which we professe carrying our selues in all things vprightly in respect of God and inoffensiuely in respect of men Sixthly that in our thoughts words and actions wee make an holy and religious vse of all Gods workes both of creation and gouernment and both meditate and speake of them so as it may redound to Gods glory knowing him by his workes and glorifying him in them by Rom. 1. 19 20 21 Ps 19. 1. 139. 14. acknowledging them his workemanship and his wisedome power and goodnesse shining in them And also to our owne good imitating
in them Pro. 6. 6. Matth. 6. 26. Psal 32. 9. that which the Scriptures propound as good for our imitation and auoyding the contrary And finally that wee receiue them with thankesgiuing 2. Pet. 2. 22. 1. Tim. 4. 5. and sanctifie them to our vse by the Word and Prayer So also here is required that wee make an holy vse of the creatures in respect of Gods gouernement and prouidence as first for the determining of doubts and controuersies which can no otherwise be cleared and decided by casting of lots in the vse whereof we are to vse prayer vnto God and sometimes Pro. 16. 33. Act. 1. 23 24. when the occasion is waighty fasting desiring of him that by his good prouidēce he wil direct them to the right end for which we vse them And Pro. 18. 18. as before they are cast we are to referre our selues wholy to Gods determination so after wee are to rest contented and well pleased with his sentence Secondly we are to make an holy vse of Gods prouidence first in conferring rewards and blessings either vpon our selues or others In respect of our selues wee make a right vse of Gods blessings and benefits When as in our hearts we bee vnfainedly thankefull vnto God for them Psal 144. 6. 26. 12. 66. 16 when in our words we praise and magnifie his bounty and goodnesse towards vs and tell what great things he hath done for vs and when in our workes and actions we referre them wholy to Gods glory and both Psal 130. 4. Rom. 2. 4. our owne and others good taking occasion of his mercy and goodnesse to feare him and to turne vnto him from our sinnes by vnfained repentance In respect of Gods blessings bestowed vpon others we carry our selues holily when as we reioyce with them in Gods bounty and goodnes 1. Cor. 12. 26. and ioyne with them in praises and thanksgiuing The like holy vse we are Psal 35. 17. Gal. 1. 23. to make of Gods prouidence in respect of punishments and afflictions whether they bee inflicted vpon our selues or vpon others As when Iob 1. 20 21. God layeth his hand vpon vs by his iudgements and chastizements wee are to be humbled in the sight and sence of our sinnes and beare them with patience and thankfulnes acknowledging Gods mercy in that we are Lam. 3. 22. not vtterly consumed and profit by them both for the mortifying of our sinnes and for our spirituall quickning vnto new obedience So when Heb. 5. 8. we see Gods Iudgements vpon others we are to take warning by their example and communicate with the faithfull in their sorrowes bearing Iosh 22. 20. 1 Cor. 10. 6. Rom. 12. 1. Psal 58 11. a part of their griefe and magnifying Gods Iustice which hath found out the wicked to inflict vpon them deserued punishments §. Sect. 2 Of the sanctifying of Gods name in lawfull oathes More especially there is required in this Commandement that wee glorifie and sanctifie Gods name by our oathes and vowes First by our oathes Deut. 6. 13. Esa 45. 23. vnto which is required first that we honour Gods name in swearing by it vpon a iust and necessary occasion acknowledging thereby Gods infinite wisdome from which nothing canly hid his Truth which abhorreth all lies and falshoods his Iustice which when he is called to be a witnesse and Iudge will neither suffer truth and innocency to goe vnrewarded nor vntruth and guiltinesse vnpunished without respect of persons Secondly that we sweare only by the name of God either directly Esa 65. 16. Ier. 12 6. or indirectly and by no creature in heauen or earth Thirdly that wee sweare after a lawfull manner vnto which is required that we sweare in truth that is to that which is true and truly according to the perswasion Ier. 4. 2. Rom. 9. 1. of our mindes In righteousnesse binding our selues thereby only vnto things lawfull and in iudgement whereby we discerne the necessitie of it in regard that we can no otherwise cleare the truth nor be beleeued in a matter of importance which much respecteth Gods glory or our owne or neighbours good And so come to the performance of this high and holy action with all reuerence as in Gods presence duly weighing and considering the conditions and circumstances of our oath according to the Scriptures Lastly that we sweare vnto a right end namely to the glory Iosh 7. 19. of God by reuealing and ratifying a necessary and vnknowne truth which could no otherwise bee made manifest and to the good of our neighbours Heb. 6. 16. and our selues that they may be satisfied all controuersies and strifes ended all doubts and suspitions remoued and our owne truth and Exod. 22. 11. innocency declared and cleared §. Sect. 3 Of the sanctifying Gods name by making and performing our vowes The second speciall thing here required is lawfull vowes whereby we cheerefully promise vnto God some thing which may be acceptable vnto him either because we haue already found him gracious and good vnto vs which moueth vs to doe this duty out of loue and thankefulnesse or because we expect his mercy and goodnesse for some benefit to be receiued or punishment to be auoided or remoued out of our faith and hope grounded vpon Gods promises Vnto which vowes that they may bee lawfull and acceptable vnto God there are two things required namely that we make them lawfully and truly to performe them Vnto the making of a lawfull vowe is required First that it be performed as a religious Psal 76. 11. act to God and none other Secondly that it bee done after a religious and holy manner 1. In truth with a sincere and cheerefull heart 2. In 2. Chro. 15. 15. righteousnesse vnto which is required in respect of the person that hee haue power in himselfe to vow that thing or haue the consent of his gouernours Secondly that the thing vowed be lawfull and acceptable vnto God as being good and commanded or of an indifferent nature but in respect of vs good and profitable and therefore to be vsed or hurtfull and inconuenient and therefore to be auoided Thirdly that we vowe in iudgement whereby we discerne that our vowe is in the former respects lawfull and very profitable either for the aduancing of Gods glory or our owne good The last thing required is that we make it to a right end as Psal 66. 13. namely to the glory of God the good of our neighbours and our owne benefit for the exercising of our temperance and sobriety or the renewing 61. 8. and furthering of our repentance or for the strengthening of our Num. 30. 14. 1. Sam. 1. 11. faith and our good purposes and resolutions about the performance of good duties In respect of performance of our vowes there is required Eccles 5. 3. Num. 30 3. that it be done at the time appointed and without delay and
haue others do vnto vs and consequently seeing we desire that our neighbours should with all the powers of their minde and body aduance as much as in them lieth our good in all things respecting our soules bodies and states Iustice and righteousnes requireth the same at our hands towards them namely that to the vttermost of our power we be euer ready to doe all things which tend to their good and to the preseruation of their honour person life purity chastity wealth and good name not so much as intertaining a thought or first motion in our minds or hearts which in any of these or other respects may tend to their hurt and preiudice Of which Iustice or righteousnesse there are two parts the one distributiue whereby we doe giue vnto euery one their due and that which of right appertaineth vnto them in which is to be obserued a geometricall proportion which hath respect in this distribution vnto euery man according to their place person and such other relations and circumstances and is in all things carried with due regard of equity and moderation The other is commutatiue which is vsually exercized in commerce and mutuall dealings and trading one with another as in changing borrowing lending buying selling letting setting and such like affaires of this life The generall rule whereof is that we keepe from no man his right but pay euery man his debt and due In which is to be obserued an Arithmeticall proportion performing all these duties of Iustice in a strict equality without any respect of place or person §. Sect. 2 Of the dutie of sobriety towards our selues The other maine duty is sobriety which comprehendeth vnder it all duties which respect our owne persons the which in a generall sense as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Marke 5. 15. Luke 8. 35. Acts 26. 25. Tit. 1. 8. 2. 12 it is to be here vnderstood signifieth soundnesse of minde which ordereth all things to the good and safety of our persons and state And thus the word which is translated sobriety is taken in the Scriptures for a sound minde so it is said that the demoniacke was by our Sauiour Christ restored to his right minde And the Apostle saith that he was not mad but spake forth the words of truth and sobernesse that is of a right and sound minde which tended to the safety and saluation of himselfe and others and exhorteth all men to be wise vnto sobriety or to thinke soberly not straining Rom. 12. 3. their wits aboue the measure of their gifts which is the next way to cracke and lose them And thus elsewhere hee opposeth these two the one against 2. Cor. 5. 13. the other to be sober and to be besides our selues Sobriety therefore is a vertue or habit proceeding from a sound minde spirituall wisedome and iudgement whereby wee are enabled to rule and order our selues with all our powers and faculties of minde and body and all things else about which they are exercised to our good safety and saluation First it ruleth and ordereth the minde to the vsing of all good meanes whereby it may be more and more inlightened with sauing knowledge the memory as a faithfull register to retaine good things the conscience to performe its office rightly in excusing and accusing the will to chuse the good and refuse the euill and in all things to be conformable to the holy will of God the affections to couet after spirituall and heauenly things with vnlimited desires and temporall good things with moderation temperance and purity and the body in all holinesse and honour that it may be a fit temple for the holy Ghost and a ready instrument vnto the soule for all good actions And thus it ruleth the whole man and euery faculty and part of him as they are exercised about their seuerall and particular obiects causing the minde to approue or condemne the memory to retaine or cast out the conscience to accuse or excuse the will to chuse or reiect the affections to loue and desire or to hate and contemne the body to doe or leaue vndone all things good or euill when they are propounded vnto them And in respect of these seuerall sorts of obiects this vertue of sobriety hath place and is commanded in euery precept of the second Table For as it ruleth and ordereth vs about the preseruation of our honour and authority it is required in the first Commandement as about the good preseruation and saluation of our liues our soules and bodies in the sixth as about our chastity purity temperance and sobriety in the vse of meates drinkes and apparrell in the seuenth as about our goods and possessions either in getting or vsing them righteously and iustly in the eighth as about the preseruing of our good name in the ninth as about withstanding the first motions and suggestions vnto sinne and the recouering of originall righteousnesse and holy concupiscence in our mindes and hearts in the tenth and last §. Sect. 3 Of the duties of charity But seeing our Sauiour hath comprized both these duties of righteousnesse and sobriety vnder charity and hath made loue the whole summe of Matth. 22. 39. 19. 19. Gal. 5. 14. the Law our loue towards God of the first Table and our loue towards our selues and our neighbours of the second Table I will consider of them both vnder this one first generally and afterward more specially in euery seuerall Commandement For charity and true loue towards our selues mooueth vs out of a sound and right minde to performe in thought word and deed all good duties which tend to our safetie and saluation and charity towards our neighbours as it mooueth vs to loue them as our selues so to performe all duties of righteousnesse and mercy which we doe vnto our selues or would haue others doe vnto vs. Now this charity is a gift or grace of God infused into our hearts by his holy Spirit which out of the sense of Gods loue towards vs in Christ working true and feruent loue towards them againe doth mooue vs to loue our selues and all men as our selues and as Christ hath loued vs for Gods sake and in obedience to his Commandement It is a gift of God and no naturall habit for naturally as wee are haters of God and men so euen of our selues neither is any hatred of an enemy so hurtfull and pernicious vnto our soules and bodies as carnall selfe-loue which is a chiefe cause and meanes of depriuing vs heere of all grace and of glory and happinesse in the life to come And therefore the Apostle exhorting vs to loue one another telleth vs where we must haue this gift Let vs saith he loue one another 1. Ioh. 4. 7. for loue is of God Neither is it a common gift of God but a sanctifying and sauing grace of his holy Spirit for as the loue of God towards vs as the cause so our loue towards God as the effect of it is shed
offered vnto vs. Neither must we thinke it sufficient vnto a godly life to reserue his Sabbaths for Gods seruice and spend the rest of the weeke in the seruice of the world and our owne lusts nor that we serue him in some things and these in others nor on some other dayes besides the Sabbath or some part onely of euery day reseruing the rest to liue as we list But wee must constantly and continually in euery thing and at euery time performe seruice vnto God in all our actions and throughout our whole course and conuersation not onely in abstaining from all sinne which he hath forbidden but also in performing of some Christian duty of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety which he hath commanded or in vsing the meanes whereby wee may be inabled vnto them Neither is God alone serued when we performe some religious act as praying hearing the Word singing Psalmes or some eminent workes of charity and sobriety but also in the meanest duties of the basest calling yea euen in our eating and drinking lawfull sports and recreations when as wee doe them in faith which not onely assureth vs that these actions are commanded 1. Cor. 10. 31. of God and warranted by his Word but that we and our workes are accepted of him and so inableth vs to doe them with cheerefulnesse and delight as being not chiefly the seruice of men but of God And also when in doing these our ordinary businesses which belong to our callings wee doe repose our trust and affiance in God that hee will blesse vs in them and giue them such successe as shall be most for his glory and our good and inioy the fruit and benefit of them as blessings sent from God with praise and thankesgiuing And when as in them we haue an eye and due respect to God seeking in them chiefly his glory and doing them in loue and obedience to his Commandements and not for necessity only praise or profit feare of punishment or hope of reward which though we may respect secondarily and in some degree in the ordinary actions of our liues yet not first and principally if we would be accounted to doe God seruice in them And in the next place to our owne and our neighbours mutuall good especially the inriching of vs with spirituall graces and the euerlasting saluation of their and our owne soules §. Sect. 2 That no time is exempted from Gods seruice prooued first by testimonies of Scripture In which generall sense if we take the seruice of God and thus largely with these references vnderstand the Christian duties of a godly life then is there no day houre or minute wherein we are not to bee exercised in some of them And this appeareth both by testimonies of Scriptures and firme reasons The Scriptures require that our whole liues be spent in the seruice of God and that we daily performe vnto him the duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety So the Apostle would haue vs to walke daily according as God hath directed vs and make his Word the rule of our conuersation from which we must neuer swarue neither on the right Gal. 6. 16. Psal 119. 9. Ios 1. 7. hand nor on the left and to keepe a continuall watch ouer our selues lest there be at any time in any of vs an euill heart of vnbeliefe in departing from the Deut. 5. 32. Heb. 3. 12 13. liuing God and to exhort one another daily whilst it is called to day lest any of vs should be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne The Apostle Peter perswadeth vs to passe the whole time of our soiourning heere in the 1. Pet. 1. 17. Pro. 28. 14. feare of God and not some part of it onely which we can best spare and that we liue no longer the rest of our time in the flesh according to the lusts of 1. Pet. 4. 2. men but the will of God seeing the time past of our liues may be enough yea farre too much to haue walked and wrought after the will of the Gentiles The Tit. 2. 11 12. grace of God appearing hath taught vs to deny all vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly whilest wee continue in this present world And therefore hath the Lord redeemed vs that being deliuered out Luk. 1. 74 75. of the hands of our enemies we might serue him without feare in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the dayes of our life Of which we haue also examples in the Scriptures in the Saints and seruants of God who after their conuersion passed their whole time in his feare and spent their strength in doing vnto him continuall seruice So Enoch is said to haue walked Gen. 5. 22. with God that is in the whole course of his pilgrimage to haue kept him in his sight and to haue carried himselfe in all his actions as in his presence that he might be accepted of him And Dauid as he maketh it a marke of a blessed man to meditate and exercise himselfe in the Law of Psal 1. 1 2. God day and night so doth he in many places shew that it was his owne practice My mouth saith he shall shew foorth thy righteousnesse and thy Psal 71. 15. Psal 55. 17. Psa 119. 97 11● 145. 2. Act. 26. 7. 2. 46. saluation all the day for I know not the numbers thereof Euening and morning and at noone will I pray and cry aloud O how loue I thy Law it is my meditation all the day I haue inclined my heart to performe thy Statutes alway euen vnto the end Euery day will I blesse thee and will praise thy name for euer and euer So the Apostle saith of the whole Church of the Iewes that they did instantly serue God day night and particularly of himselfe that it was Act. 24. 16. his continuall exercise to haue alwayes a good conscience voide of offence towards God and towards men But the best president of all for our imitation is our Sauiour Christ who spent his whole time in doing the workes of him that sent him in the day time preaching and doing miracles and workes of mercie that he might bring saluation vnto the lost sheepe of the house of Israel and in the night sequestring himselfe for prayer meditation in the mount of Oliues Secondly God hath giuen his Law not that we should sometimes obserue his Commandements and sometimes breake them but that we might obserue them daily and continually in all things and at all times and that it might serue as a rule and squire according vnto Psal 119. 9. which we are to frame our whole liues and euery particular action For there he prescribeth duties to be performed at all times on his Sabbath and on the sixe dayes besides the generall duties which belong to all and those that respect vs in our particular callings the duties of piety whereby we offer vnto him immediate seruice and
with worldly incumbrances Whereas contrariwise if in the morning we keep no watch ouer our selues but suffer our hearts to take their liberty and to giue entertainment vnto wicked and worldly thoughts and the carnall and sensuall lusts of our corrupt flesh they will so wholly seaze vpon them hold their possession that we shall hardly admit or at least retaine any good meditations the whole day following if we set our selues to prayer or other religious duties we shall be so distracted with worldly cogitations and fleshly lusts that they will become cold and formall and quite without any vigour and efficacie CAP. XIII Of Prayer in the Morning how profitable it is and necessary and of our preparation vnto it §. Sect. 1 Of the fruit and profit of prayer ANd so much concerning the dutie of meditation wherein we are to be exercised euery morning The next religious duty which is in the morning to bee performed of vs is that we powre out our soules vnto God by feruent effectuall prayer which is a duty aboue all others to bee daily put in practice For it is a principall part of Gods seruice whereby hee will be honoured of vs whereof it is that in the Scriptures it is put for the whole worship of God It is required of vs by speciall a Hos 14. 2. Psal 50. 14 15. Matth. 7. 7. 1. Thes 5. 17. commandement in many places vnto which God hath incouraged vs to yeeld obedience by many sweete b Ioh. 16. 23. Psal 145. 18. Esa 65. 24. and gracious promises whereby he hath assured vs that he will heare vs and grant our requests It is the badge of true Religion and the neglect thereof of an vtter Atheist And therefore the Psalmist describing such an one setteth him forth by these two properties that he Psal 14. 1 4. and 53. 4. Psal 50. 23. hath said in his heart There is no God and hee hath not called vpon the Lord. It is a duty most excellent seeing thereby wee glorifie God and hee also glorifieth vs vouchsafing vnto vs who are but dust and ashes yea wretched sinners this high and honourable priuiledge to haue free accesse vnto him and to haue the eare of our great King and Soueraigne that we may make all our suites knowne vnto him with vndoubted hope to haue them heard and granted It is most profitable also vnto vs as being the chiefe meanes whereby wee attaine at the hands of God all the good things which we need and are freed from all the euils which wee feare and the key whereby we open the treasury of all Gods graces and rich gifts and 1. Job 5. 14. out of it furnish our selues with all blessings which are needfull for vs. It is most effectuall to preuaile with God for the obtaining of all the good Jam. 5. 16 17 18. Exod. 32. 10. Iosh 10. 15. things which we desire as we see in innumerable places and examples of holy Scriptures It is a notable meanes for the strengthening of our faith and affiance in God when as we haue experience that he heareth vs and granteth our requests and for the inflaming of our hearts with most feruent loue when we taste of his bounty and goodnesse in giuing vnto vs the good things which wee desire It increaseth our communion and fellowship with God and bringeth vs into familiar acquaintance with him It maketh our minds to soare aloft in heauenly meditations and being on earth it causeth vs to haue our conuersation in heauen It assureth vs that we are the children of God and heires of the heauenly inheritance seeing the same Spirit which is the spirit of supplication sealeth also vnto Rom 8. 15 26. vs our Adoption Finally let vs consider that it is a duty most necessary Ier. 10. 25. Gen. 32. 25 26. Hos 12. 4. if either we will auoyd Gods curse or will with Iacob so wrastle with him as we meane to preuaile and obtaine the blessing that if we neglect it it is a strong euidence vnto vs that we haue cast off all feare of God as Eliphaz reasoneth against Iob and that we are vtterly destitute of all sauing grace Zach. 12. 10. seeing the same Spirit is the spirit of grace and supplication §. Sect. 2 Their obiection answered who pretend want of leisure to pray Neither let any man pretend his small leisure by reason of his waighty businesse and manifold imployments as an excuse to warrant him for the neglect of a duty so high and holy so excellent profitable and necessary vnlesse he will say that he hath no leisure to be saued to glorifie God or inrich himselfe with his graces and blessings or to get the euidences of euerlasting glory and happinesse into his owne keeping and that hee is so taken vp with worldly imployments that hee hath no leisure to seeke any acquaintance with God to auoyd his curse or obtaine his blessing to goe to heauen or escape hell For shame therefore let vs cast away these no lesse prophane then friuolous excuses and to this end further consider that the greater and more important our businesse is the more need wee haue to implore by hearty prayer the blessing of God vpon our labours and indeuours before we vndertake them without which all our policy labour and indeuour will be spent in vaine either because wee shall not atchieue the thing which we attempt or if we do yet in Gods iust iudgement it shall become vnto vs a curse rather then a blessing Consider further how much time thou daily spendest in doing nothing or that which is ill and worse then nothing How much time in needlesse curiosity about thy body in dressing and feeding it and in vaine discourses about things that profit not yea corrupt rather then edifie thee How much in vnlawfull or superfluous sports and recreations in carding dicing masking reuelling hunting hawking beholding vaine sights and wanton enterludes and blush for shame that thou canst find time enough in thy greatest imployments for the satisfying of thy fleshly lusts and only wantest leisure to serue thy God and saue thine owne soule Finally let vs consider the vnwearied watchfulnesse of all the Saints of God in all ages in attending vpon this duty that they might frequently and feruently performe it day and night and set before vs the example of our Sauiour Christ himselfe who spent mornings and euenings yea whole nights in praying for vs. Which if we neglect to doe for our selues what doe we but disclaime that holy communion and shew plainely that we are not in that number what doe we else but debarre our selues of the benefit of his intercession when as we take no care by our prayers to haue it applied vnto vs Neither let any say that his purpose is not to neglect this dutie altogether but though he hath no leisure to pray euery day yet he will finde some time for it though not euery morning
steale no more but rather let him labour Eph. 4. 28. working with his hands the thing that is good Vnto which precepts of holy Scriptures prescribing labour in the duties of our callings we may adde the examples of all the Saints of God in all ages as fit patternes for our imitation who haue alwayes liued in lawfull callings and haue faithfully laboured in the duties of them as of Abel and Noah before the flood the one a Shepherd the other an Husbandman and after the flood of the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac and Iacob and all their posterity that descended of them of Moses Dauid the Kings and Prophets of the Disciples of our Sauiour Christ and especially of the Apostle Paul who as he professeth laboured more aboundantly then they all not onely 1. Cor. 15. 10. 1. Thes 2. 9. 2. Thes 3. 7 8 9. imploying himselfe in his painefull Ministery and Apostleship but labouring also with his hands that he might not be offensiue but be a good example for others to imitate Yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe who though hee were free borne and the onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne of his Father submitted himselfe as a seruant to the common Law of mankinde tying himselfe by a voluntary necessity to labour in his calling and to doe the workes of him that sent him The which hee did with Iohn 9. 4. such cheerefulnesse and delight that he professeth it to bee his meate and Iohn 4. 34. drinke to doe the will of him that sent him and to finish his worke And therefore if the Sonne and heire could not be free from labour how should any of his seruants be exempted If the Lord of the Vineyard could not bee Matth. 20. 6. priuiledged from taking paines with what face can any of the hired labourers excuse their idlenesse §. Sect. 2 That it is Gods ordinance that wee should labour in our callings Againe let vs consider that the Lord himselfe is the Author of our callings and that it is his ordinance that we should labour in them It is he that created and redeemed and continually preserueth vs who hath called and set vs in our places and hath appointed vnto euery one their worke and taske and hath not onely promised his helpe and assistance in all our labours but also hath incouraged vs to take paines by assuring vs that he will richly reward them when wee haue finished our worke And therefore if after all this we will detract our labour and spend our time in sloth and idlenesse what is it but to leaue our standings and to withdraw our selues from vnder his gouernment to neglect Gods worke and to doe seruice vnto Satan and the sinfull lusts of our owne flesh what is it but to depriue our soules of that comfort which we might haue in his company and assistance and by pretending difficulty in the atchieuing our labours to argue and accuse him of insufficiency who hath vndertaken to assist vs and by his helpe to giue good successe vnto all our iust indeuours what is it but for the inioying of short and carnall ease to our flesh to forfeit all hope of obtaining those rich heauenly and euerlasting rewards which he hath promised vnto vs as the free and gracious wages of our momentany labours §. Sect. 3 That God blesseth the diligent with many benefits Finally let vs consider the manifold benefits wherewith God hath promised to blesse our labours if we be painefull and diligent in the duties of our callings And contrariwise how much he abhorreth and condemneth sloth and idlenesse punishing them that liue in it with innumerable euils which he hath iustly caused to attend vpon it Concerning the former it may be a strong inducement to make vs diligent in our callings if we consider the benefits which accrew vpon it For whereas euery one is ready to aske Who will shew vs any good and is easily drawne to any course by the Psal 4. 6. golden chaine of gaine and aduantage the Wiseman telleth vs first generally that in all labour there is profit whereas idle talking with the lips tendeth Pro. 14. 23. onely to penurie And in many other places he setteth foorth more particularly the manifold benefits that doe accompany it For it exalteth to honour and authority according to that The hand of the diligent shall beare Pro. 12. 24. rule but the slothfull shall be vnder tribute And againe Seest thou a man diligent Pro. 22. 29. in his businesse he shall stand before Kings he shall not stand before meane men It buildeth the house and maketh and erecteth mansion places for themselues and their posterity So saith Salomon Prepare thy worke without Pro. 24. 27. and make it fit for thy selfe in the field and afterwards build thy house Contrary to the practice of many in these times who preferre building and neglect husbandry and take care to set vp faire houses before they haue any land to lay vnto them building themselues quite out of dores and like fooles making houses for wise men to dwell in It is crowned by the Lord with riches and plenty For he that tilleth the land shall be satisfied with Pro. 12. 11. 28. 19. Pro. 10. 4. 20. 13. bread and the hand of the diligent maketh rich And whereas that which commeth lightly is as idlely spent that which is gotten by honest labour is preserued and multiplied according to the saying of the Wiseman Wealth gotten by vanity shall be diminished but he that gathereth by labour Pro. 13. 11. shall increase It preserueth the body in health which languisheth with idlenesse maketh the meate pleasant by quickning the appetite and the sleepe sweete whereas the idle turne vpon the bed as a dore vpon the Eccl. 5. 12. Pro. 26. 14. hindges and not being able to rest because they haue not laboured toyle themselues with too much ease and are tired with tumbling euen vpon their beds of downe being iustly punished by God with restlesse tossing and sweating in the night because they would take no paines to serue him in the day It affordeth comfortable and liberall meanes not only for the maintenance of our selues and those that belong vnto vs but also whereby we may be beneficiall vnto others that neede our helpe and exercise our charity in the workes of mercy and in relieuing the poore members of Iesus Christ which hee will richly reward and crowne with glory and Mat. 25. 34 35. 1. Tim. 6. 18 19. Pro. 21. 25 26. happinesse at the day of Iudgement For whereas the sluggard whose hands refuse to labour getteth nothing for himselfe to satisfie his desire though hee coueteth greedily all the day long the righteous that is diligent in the workes of his calling hath not onely sufficient for his owne vse but giueth liberally to others and spareth not And this end the Apostle propoundeth to our paines in our honest callings willing men to labour Eph. 4.
and out of a desire to drinke of stolne waters because they are sweeter to a fleshly palate then surely such are well worthy to be turned out into the bare commons of penury and misery in this life and if they repent not of their folly to be eternally pounded in hell in the life to come And so much of the first kinde of cessation from our labours by lawfull recreations of which I haue spoken much more largely then at the first I intended because howsoeuer it may seeme but a light subiect to bestow much paines vpon yet I plainely perceiued that it is of no light consequence seeing it is a matter that concernes all men and not seldome but almost euery day of their liues seeing also nothing is more commonly abused vnto sinne it being one of Satans most alluring baites to intice vs to come within the compasse of his pernicious nets and snares of wickednesse and finally because that many who truely feare God and desire to vse them with a good conscience indeuouring to please him as well in their recreations as their labours yet know not how to doe it as they ought and so out of scruple and timorous doubting forbeare them altogether or else transported with their pleasure take greater liberty then God hath allowed them which though it bee sweete for the present yet in the end it turneth to bitternesse In all which respects there are few other things in the whole course and carriage of our liues for which wee stand in more neede of counsell and direction and the rather because there are few particular rules heereof in the Scriptures of which chiefly the weaker sort of Christians are capeable but onely some generals out of which they cannot so easily gather speciall directions in this behalfe vnlesse they haue some guide to goe before them CAP. XXIIII Of the duties which ought daily to bee performed at our meales §. Sect. 1 That we ought to take speciall care of our cariage at our meales THe second kind of cessation from our labours is that time which is spent daily in taking our repast and refreshing of our bodies by receiuing of our food whereby our decayed strength is repaired our health preserued and we inabled to the better performance of the duties of our callings The which is to be performed of vs not as meere naturall men but as Christians vsing therein such rules and cautions as the Word of God prescribeth vnto vs that we doe not famish our soules whilest wee feed our bodies nor weaken our spirituall part and defile our selues with sinne whilest our outward man is refreshed and strengthened with the vse of Gods creatures For as the deuill layeth in euery place baites and snares to intrap vs so especially vpon our tables and mingleth the poison of sinnefull corruption with our meates and drinkes that if we doe not vse them in the feare of God and keepe a narrow watch ouer our selues that we offend not in them they will prooue no lesse dangerous to our soules then necessary and profitable for the refreshing of our bodies And this Dauid implyeth where making many fearefull imprecations against Psal 69. 22. his owne and our Sauiour Christs desperate enemies he prayeth that their table might become a snare before them and that that which should Iob 1. 5. haue beene for their welfare should become a trap The which made holy Iob so carefull to sanctifie his children after the dayes of their feasting and to offer burnt sacrifices to expiate their sins because he well knew how prone they were through humane frailty to offend against God by abusing of his blessings §. Sect. 2 Of the duties which ought to be performed before we eate and first that we must sanctifie the creatures to our vse by the Word Let vs therefore in the next place consider the duties which belong to all Christians in receiuing of their food the which are to be performed either before we eate at our meales or afterwards Before we eate our duty is to sanctifie the creatures by the Word and prayer for howsoeuer euery creature of God is good in it selfe yet it is not so vnto vs vnlesse it be sanctified vnto our vse They are sanctified by the Word when as the vse of them is warranted vnto vs by the Scriptures that is when as we doe not receiue them as absolute owners of them but acknowledging God the Author and chiefe Lord both of them and vs doe receiue them at his hands as his free gifts the which he bestowed vpon vs first by his law of Gen. 1. 26. to 30. 9. 3. creation not onely making all the creatures for mans vse but also by his word giuing him dominion and lordship ouer them and liberty to vse them for his food and nourishment But this first gift and donation from God is no sufficient warrant vnto vs seeing through the fall of our first parents we lost all our dominion right and interest which we had vnto the creatures vnlesse our Charter be renewed by Christ who by satisfying Gods Iustice for our sinnes hath recouered our right and reentered vs into our possession which we lost by Adam and hath purchased for vs that glorious liberty of the sonnes of God whereby we may with a good conscience freely vse all Gods creatures without any doubting scruple or superstition for our necessity and profit yea for our comfort and delight So that now we are not to put any difference betweene meates seeing vnto the pure all things are pure and euery creature thus sanctified is Tit. 1. 15. good and if for conscience sake we abstaine from flesh more then fish or any one meate more then another we shall shew heereby that wee are not taught of Christ but that we haue as the Apostle plainely speaketh 1. Tim. 4. 1 3. learned this lesson in the schoole of the deuill Onely our care must bee that we bee ingrafted into Christ by a liuely faith by whom onely wee haue right vnto the creatures and that wee know our liberty to the end we may vse it without doubting For otherwise we are intruders and vsurpers who hauing no right vnto any of Gods blessings shall haue a fearefull account to make for incroaching vpon them and as it were like theeues liuing vpon the spoile §. Sect. 3 That we ought to sanctifie the creatures to our vse by prayer and thanksgiuing But howsoeuer it is necessary that we be alwayes in this state of Christian liberty and haue the knowledge and acknowledgement of it habitually in vs yet not that we should euery time we eate particularly meditate of all these things onely it is sufficient that hauing this Charter of our liberty in our keeping we bring it out as oft as wee haue occasion especially when our right vnto the creatures is called into question either by the deuill the world or our owne flesh And that acknowledging God to bee the Author of all these
causing vs to inioy them with peace and safety Whereas there are many afflicted and poore seruants of God who would be glad to feede vpon our reuersions and leauings and are in danger before they rise from their table to haue their throats cut and their meates mingled with their blood Yea consider that thou inioyest from God not onely this plenty with peace and safety of body and state but also with it the light of the Gospell and the food of thy soule whereby thou mayest be strengthened in all grace and nourished vnto life euerlasting which many poore soules haue not at all or secretly and by stealth with extreme hazzard of their states and liues Vnto which meditation of Gods mercy and bounty let vs ioyne the consideration of our owne vilenesse and vnworthinesse in which if God should looke vpon vs he might iustly depriue vs of all his benefits and not suffer vs to haue a bit of bread to satisfie our hunger nor a drop of drinke to quench our thirst Let vs remember that at our meales we are to nourish two ghests the soule as well as the body and let our chiefe care be to giue best welcome to our best ghest the which will bring vnto vs chiefest comfort For what food our body receiueth it keepeth not but within a few houres is againe vexed with hunger but the foode of the soule shall still remaine and wee shall haue the fruit and benefit of it in this life and the life to come Let vs consider that as we feed in great part vpon mortall and corruptible creatures so our bodies like our meates are mortall and corruptible and therefore following our Sauiours counsell let our chiefe care be for our immortall soules and to labour not for the meate that perisheth but for that which endureth Ioh. 6. 27. to euerlasting life Finally let vs remember that this our food is part of that allowance which our heauenly Father giueth vnto vs as his houshold seruants that being strengthened heereby we may more cheerefully doe him seruice in performing those duties which he requireth of vs and therefore as God maketh his creatures to serue vs so let vs dedicate and deuote our selues wholly to the seruice of our great Lord and Creatour vsing so his blessings as that they may bee helpes and furtherances and no impediments and lets vnto the well-performing of all Christian duties §. Sect. 5 Of the duties which ought to bee performed at our meales first that wee vse Gods creatures with temperance and sobriety And these are the duties which we are as much as conueniently wee can to performe before or at the beginning of our meales The duties which we are to practise whilst we are eating and drinking are diuers First our care must be that wee vse the creatures of God with temperance and sobriety so as they may serue for the satisfying of our hunger and the sustentation and strengthening of our fraile nature which if it be not misguided by our corruption is in it selfe content with a little and not tend to their weakning and disabling vnto all good imployments for the feeding and refreshing of our bodies that they may bee fit seruants for our soules in all Christian duties and not the filling and glutting of them whereby they become till they be emptied vnprofitable burthens to the soule and good for nothing but sloth and sleepe Now this temperance must shew it selfe in two kinds first in our prouision and secondly in the applying of it to our owne vse Our prouision of meates and drinkes ought not to be ouer-costly and curious excessiue and superfluous which becommeth not Christians which professe sobriety but rather heathens epicures and belly-gods who place a great part of their happinesse in pampring their flesh with all kinds of voluptuousnesse But ordinarily our prouisions ought to be competent not excessiue and curious and rather sauour of frugality then of lauish waste and prodigall superfluity Yet that our Christian moderation and frugality may not be pretended and abused of any as a maske to hide vnder it their base and sordid auarice and niggardlinesse we are in this temperance of our prouisions to obserue these cautions First that therein we haue respect to our place and calling our meanes and ability making our prouision for our tables so as it may be fitting and suteable in these respects on the one side not exceeding our meanes seeing frugality is the nurse and fountaine of true bounty and on the other that it doe not come much short of them our charge and other necessary expences being considered And thus Dauid a King numbreth it among Gods speciall fauours that he had not only giuen him sufficient maintenance and conuenient food but had thorowly furnished his table as beseemed a King and had not onely filled his cup but caused it also to Psal 23. 5. ouerflow Secondly that we haue respect to the times for howsoeuer ordinarily our moderation must be bounded with parcimony yet at times extraordinary as at our solemne feasts and when we giue entertainment either to strangers or our superiour friends much respected of vs it must inlarge it selfe euen vnto liberality and large bounty And thus Abraham feasted his friends at the weaning of Isaac and Leui is said to haue made Luk. 5. 29. a great feast to giue our Sauiour Christ entertainment and our Sauiour himselfe at the marriage-feast turned the water into wine by miracle that there might be sufficient plenty Thirdly wee must take heed that our Ioh. 2. 7. moderation in our prouisions tend to the maintenance and not the decay of good hospitality which is so much commended vnto vs in the Scriptures Heb. 13. 2. Neither doth one vertue or Christian duty if it be right true exclude another but cōtrariwise are inseparably linked giuing to each other mutuall support and ayde and they which seeme to be in this number and doe not thus are but shaddowes false and counterfeit Fourthly we must be carefull that it be no hindrance to the poore and to the workes of mercy and Christian charity but contrariwise what we saue by this moderation in prouision from that which our state and ability might wel affoord to spend we must not hoord it vp for our priuate vse but liberally bestow it in almes-deeds and other religious and Christian vses knowing that our riches are not absolutely our owne but lent vnto vs of God to be imployed for the glory of our Master and good of our fellow-seruants §. Sect. 6 That we must be temperate and moderate in respect of the quantity of our meates and drinkes But especially our temperance and Christian moderation must shew it selfe in our eating and drinking and that both in respect of the quantity and also the quality of our food First for the quantity our care must be that we at least ordinarily eate and drinke no more then is fit for the sufficing of nature and the preseruing
malice will not allow vs as commendable So the Apostle exhorteth vs to doe all good duties without murmuring and disputings that we may be blamelesse and harmelesse Phil. 2. 15. the sonnes of God without rebuke in the middest of a crooked and peruerse nation among whom we should shine as lights in the world Heerein indeede like the Sunne which though wicked men may at some times hate because it discouereth their workes of darkenesse yet are they so conuinced with its beauty and excellency that they cannot for shame speake against it Thus also he exhorteth Titus to shew himselfe in all things a patterne of good Tit. 2. 7 8. workes in doctrine shewing vncorruptnesse grauity sincerity sound speach that cannot be condemned that he who is of the contrary part may bee ashamed hauing no euill to say of him And thus the Apostle Peter perswadeth vs not onely to sanctifie the Lord in our hearts but also to make profession of the hope that is in vs vpon all good occasions hauing a good conscience that 1. Pet. 3. 15 16. whereas they who speake euill of vs as of euill doers they may bee ashamed that falsly accuse our good conuersation in Christ Secondly it is not enough that we be vnblameable in our cōuersation and without the spots blemishes of knowne sins but we must also walke worthy our high calling and adorne Eph. 4. 1. our profession by our practice of holinesse and righteousnesse that so wee may not only stop their mouthes but also if it be possible may be meanes of their conuersion when they shall see the light of our holy conuersation So our Sauiour requireth of vs that our lights should shine so before men that they seeing our good workes may glorifie our Father which is in heauen Matth. 5. 16. And the Apostle Peter exhorteth Christians to abstaine from fleshly lusts 1. Pet. 2. 11 12. and to haue their conuersation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they spake against them as euill doers they might by their good workes which they should behold glorifie God in the day of visitation And though wee cannot bring forth alike fruits of piety when we are in company with them that will not ioyne with vs in holy exercises yet at least let vs not neglect ciuility and morality as the Apostle speaketh prouide things honest in the sight of Rom. 12. 17. all men Thirdly though they will not be reclaimed neither by our words nor example yet we must not for this mingle spleene and choller with our zeale but carry our selues in all meekenesse and mildnesse patience and forbearance and though wee cannot by all our indeuours vnite them vnto vs in the bonds of loue yet let vs by all good meanes mooue them to keepe the peace and binde them to their good behauiour whilest they are in our company assuring our selues that if meekenesse and loue ioyned with strong reasons and good perswasions will not preuaile with them then much lesse will rough words and chollericke speeches for heere the Apostle Iames saying is fitly verified The wrath of man doth not accomplish Iam. 1. 20. the righteousnesse of God And this the Apostle presseth with great vehemency If it be possible saith he as much as in you lyeth liue peaceably with Rom. 12. 18. all men But yet we must not be so zealous of peace that we doe cowardly betray the truth nor for peace sake forgoe our owne piety For wee must so follow peace with all men as that we follow holinesse also without which no Hab. 12. 14. man shall see the Lord or hereby lose any opportunity of furthering our neighbours saluation For we must by the Apostles direction so follow Rom. 14. 19. after the things which make for peace as that wee by no meanes neglect the things whereby one may edifie another And therefore if those with whom we conuerse be not desperate sinners and more likely to hurt vs for our good will then to receiue any good to themselues by our reproofes we may admonish and rebuke them in the spirit of meekenesse and loue for their sinnes that we may reclaime them or at least if they be such as in Christian prudence we may not make so bold with them yet at least let vs shew our dislike when wee see God dishonoured by our countenance or some other signes that wee doe not become accessaries to their wickednesse Neither let any man account it Christian meekenesse and patience to sit by and say nothing when Gods holy Name is prophaned Religion scorned and the banners of wickednesse displayed seeing the Angel of the Church of Ephesus which was so much commended for patience had also this praise annexed that he could not beare with them which were euill And Apoc. 2. 2. therefore it is no patience when we let men goe on in their wickednesse and giue them neither by word nor countenance any signe of our dislike but want of zeale and Christian courage yea dastardly cowardize and too much loue of the world which maketh vs more carefull to please men then God himselfe Finally we must not by such wicked company bee out-countenanced in any good nor be mooued to neglect any Christian duty which present occasion maketh necessary For if they be not ashamed to serue the deuill by their professed wickednes let vs not be ashamed to serue our gracious God by performing such duties as he requireth of vs If they with all boldnesse glory in their prophanenesse let not vs bee bashfull in the profession and practice of religious and pious actions But as the Apostle Paul gaue thankes and blessed the creatures in the middest Act. 27. 35. of Infidels before he would feede on them so let vs with like boldnesse vse good communication reade the Scriptures sing Psalmes performe all other Christian duties notwithstanding that prophane men bee in the company Seeing thereby we shall keepe a good conscience before God and men and may if God giue a blessing to these holy exercises not onely edifie those who are alike minded with vs but also gaine them likewise vnto vs by our good example who are as yet otherwise disposed By all which good duties if we preuaile nothing at all our best course will be as soone as wee can to quit our selues of such company and more carefully afterwards make choyce of better For consorting with such companions longer then we neede indangereth vs to be tainted and corrupted with their euill manners and if we continue with such as we can by no good meanes make better we are in great hazzard to be made worse as hereafter we shall more fully shew CAP. XXVIII Of Christian conferences which we must vse when we are in company for our mutuall good §. Sect. 1 That our speeches must bee gracious and prudent AND these are the duties which generally concerne our whole conuersation in company The speciall duties respect either our
both because being grounded in the principles and maine parts of diuinity wee shall bee able to referre all things wee heare to their heads and also to examine Doctrines according to the analogie of Faith For seeing there will be many false christs and antichrists false prophets false teachers and rauenous wolues that will come in sheepes clothing wee must not receiue all that is preached in a pulpit but try all things and take 1. Thes 5. 21. that onely which is good The which wee cannot doe if wee be vnacquainted with the Scriptures and destitute of the knowledge of the principles of Christian Religion Where by the way wee may note the reason why most men euen in the chiefe Cities and places where the Gospell hath beene long preached yea euen such as make most sincere profession of Religion are so void of all sound iudgment in hearing Sermons that they are more affected with the strength of the voice thē the powerfulnes of arguments looke more after the manner then after the matter to a ready and fluent speech then soundnes of Doctrine and faithfull handling of the text Why also they so little profit by their much hearing for their increase in knowledge strengthning of their faith the sanctifying of their hearts walking in a settled course of a Christiā life Finally why they with such earnestnes flock after new commers so easly harken vnto euery new opinion though the broacher of it haue onely a shew of sanctity and be quite destitute of al good learning or sound knowledge of Diuinity namely because the people being vngrounded ignorāt of the principles of Religion are wholy vnstayd and vnsettled in their iudgments wanting the spirit of discerning are not possibly able to make any good choyce Fourthly This exercise is most profitable for such as are weake in the spiritual growth and but babes in Christ because it is the fittest food for their Spirituall nourishment seeing in respect of their weakenes which maketh them vnable to disgest stronger meat they would quickly be famished fall into a deepe consumption of all grace if there were not prepared for them meats of such easie and light disgestion For stones as we know will doe little children as much good as the whole loafe they wanting strength to cut it or teeth to chew it and so also it is in the spirituall nourishment the weaklings being as vncapable of high mysteries deepe points of Diuinity and difficult and perplexed controuersies as of a speech vttered in a strange language And therefore as it must be the teachers care and wisedome to prepare fit nourishment for those vnder their charge and to feede babes 1. Cor. 3. 2. Heb. 5. 12 13. in Christ with milke or when they prouide stronger meate for their sake who are of riper age yet as much as they can they must like louing nurses haue also therein respect to their little ones diuiding and as it were chewing this more solid meate and making it soft and easie with familiar similitudes and plaine examples as our Sauiour taught his Disciples not according to the greatnesse of his diuine wisedome but so as they were Marke 4. 33. able to heare it So on the other side those which are children in knowledge must chiefely affect that food which is fittest for their nourishment and not out of foolish wantonnesse and vaine curiosity affect the hearing of learned discourses high points of diuinity and hidden mysteries when as they are ignorant of the easie principles as it is the custome of many simple people who most applaud and magnifie their teachers when their speeches most exceed the pitch and reach of their shallow vnderstanding Fifthly they shall by this exercise be inabled to giue an account of their faith not in some few points onely like smatterers but in all which are 1. Pet. 3. 15. substantiall and fundamentall The which will be a notable incouragement to the profession of Christ and the true Religion especially in the time of persecution when wee distinctly know what wee hold and beleeue and wherein wee differ from our aduersaries the want whereof is a great hinderance to Christian apologie and a speciall meanes to make vs to deny Christ before men seeing the most are ashamed to make profession of that truth whereof when they are examined they can giue no Matth. 10. 34. account to suffer for that Religion which they cannot defend or at least disttinctly conceine or to take vpon them like Christs Champions to fight for the truth against the enemies of it euen to the shedding of their blood when as they haue no skill in handling the sword of the Spirit Lastly heereby they shall not onely bee informed in the wayes of godlinesse but also incited and inabled to walke in them as we see in the example Gen. 22. 24. 63. of Isaac who by his fathers instruction became obedient to the death prayeth and meditateth in fields and in all things followed his fathers steps And of his seruant likewise who being trained vp by Abraham and catechized in the knowledge of God and his truth carryeth himselfe religiously towards God and faithfully towards his Master And also of Salomon who being taught by his father to esteeme and labour after aboue all things wisedome and vnderstanding afterwards when God putteth him to his choyce to aske and obtaine whatsoeuer he would he Pro. 4. 4 5. desireth an vnderstanding heart that hee might iudge the people and discerne betweene good and bad Vnto which wee might adde innumerable more examples both of former and latter times all which may serue as strong inducements to perswade all weake Christians both young 1. King 3. 9. and olde to bee diligent in this exercise if at least they haue any care to know Gods will or make any conscience of yeelding obedience vnto it CAP. XXXII Of family duties which respect wise and religious gouernement §. Sect. 1 What things are required vnto wise gouernement ANd these are the duties of gouernours in families which respect instruction The second mayne duty is wise and religious gouernment whereby they are to mooue and draw their inferiours to put in practice and to make an holy vse of all which they teach them in their liues and conuersations vnto which some things are required in the persons of their gouernours and some things in the administration of their gouernment In their persons diuers things are required As first wisedome and Christian prudence in all their courses that they may not onely guide themselues in their owne wayes but be able also to giue direction vnto all that belong vnto them For that which the Apostle Peter requireth specially of husbands doth generally belong vnto all gouernours that they dwell with their 1. Pet. 3. 7. inferiours according to knowledge as being a principal meanes to gaine from them due honour and authority Secondly that they bee not light and vaine in
absence of inferiour meanes Fifthly we must be frequent feruent in Prayer and lastly when we are freed frō any afflictions we must be thankfull and render vnto God praise and thanksgiuing And thus with as much breuity as I could I haue set down how we are to carry our selues in the time of our afflictions if any need or desire to haue these heads maine points more fully and largely handled I referre them to the third part of my Christian Warfare where I purposely haue entreated of this subiect CAP. XXXVI Of those Christian duties which are to be performed in the Euening and Night §. Sect. 1 That the Euening must not bee spent in sloth and idlenesse HAuing intreated of those Christian duties belonging to the day it now followeth that wee set downe some directions how wee are to behaue our selues when the day is ended And these are such as concerne our carriage in the Euening before wee goe to rest or afterwards when wee are laid in our beds In the Euening if we be not taken vp with the duties of our callings wherein in the day wee were imployed as it is the case of many whose states trades and necessary occasions require the continuance of their labours we must not vpon the cessation of our paines thinke our selues at full liberty to thinke speake and doe what we list as it is the practice of many who when they cannot worke any longer in their callings spend their long Euenings in the winter season either in sloth and idlenesse or in vnlawfull gaming or in vaine fruitlesse and oftentimes hurtfull and vnsauoury communication by traducing their absent neighbours and blemishing their credits with slanders or vncharitable truths or corrupting those that are present by light and wanton discourses but we must be carefull of spending our precious time in some meditations speeches and actions which are profitable for our selues and for the edification of those that are in our company and society For though it may bee very lawfull and sometime necessary after our wearisome businesses are dispatched to take some liberty and to spend some conuenient time in resting of our bodies or refreshing our minds with some honest recreations yet me thinkes it is too much that so great a part of our time should be so imployed seeing our liues are so short and vncertaine and our affaires of much greater waight and importance which tend mainely to the aduancement of Gods glory and our owne saluation being so many might with much more profit and true comfort challenge vnto them a great part of this time In which regard though I would not prescribe lawes to bind the consciences of my brethren but leaue vnto them their liberty to bee guided with Christian prudence yet I would as in other things so herein also giue my aduice namely that they would improoue this time to the best as becommeth wise redeemers of it so as they may giue some good account of it vnto God when he calleth them vnto it and not thinke that he hath giuen vnto them the comfortable warmth of the fire to make them freeze harder in the dregs of sinne nor the light of their candles that they should act by them the workes of darkenesse but that he bestoweth vpon these corporall comforts that they might be furtherances vnto their soules in the spirituall growth vsing such good exercises as may tend to the inlightening of their mindes in the knowledge of God and his will and may warme their hearts with true and feruent zeale in the louing and imbracing of them §. Sect. 2 Of the Euening exercises as Meditation reading and Christian conferences And first it were fit that some little part of this time after the surceasing of our labours were spent in some short meditation wherein wee are to recount and recall to our remembrance the speciall fauours and mercies of God which in the day past hee hath vouchsafed vnto vs either in deliuering vs from dangers corporall or spirituall of sinne or of punishment or in bestowing vpon vs reall and positiue benefits as his blessing vpon our labours whereby they haue prospered vnder our hands the comfort of his creatures the loue and assistance of our friends and such like lifting vp our hearts vnto God in the acknowledgement of these benefits and rendring vnto him such thankes and praise as is due vnto him Secondly as wee haue best opportunity both in respect of our leasure and our company it were good to spend some part of this time in reading of the Scriptures or other holy and religious writings the Histories of the Church or some such Ciuill and Morall Bookes and Stories as may make vs grow in grace and spirituall wisedome or at least in honest prudence whereby we may be directed for the better carriage of our selues in the affaires of this life by adding vnto our owne knowledge the wisedome of others and the experience of former times Thirdly as occasion serueth it is good to spend some part of this time in Christian conferences either with our friends and familiars that accompany vs or with those of our owne family husbands wiues children seruants labouring in our speeches to build vp one another in all sauing grace and to bee mutually bettered in the more cleare vnderstanding of the truth more hearty imbracing it in our hearts and affections and the more zealous and fruitfull practice of it in our liues But though I chiefly commend these Christian and religious conferences yet would I not be so taken as though I meant hereby to exclude all others for it is lawfull also to spend some of our time in ciuill discourses and about the affaires of this life the duties of our callings our worldly estates the disposing and ordering of our businesse or any other subiect not idle vnprofitable or sinfull which present occasion shall offer vnto vs as most seasonable Onely I would aduise that wee doe not as it is the common custome amongst the most spend our time so wholly about these as that wee doe thereby exclude the other which in their nature are much more excellent and for our vse farre more profitable and necessary Lastly wee must spend some part of this time in praysing God by singing of Psalmes as our company and occasions will giue vs opportunity but aboue all other exercises wee must constantly either before or after Supper as in our discretion wee see best and fittest for the assembling of our company pray with our families as before wee gaue direction for the like exercise in the Morning Of both which my purpose is God assisting to set downe some formes in the end of this Worke for the direction and benefit of weaker Christians §. Sect. 3 Duties to be done at our going to bed And these are the duties which are to be performed in the euening In the night we are also to watch ouer our thoughts and actions that they may in some sort bee sutable to
mine heart to performe thy Statutes alway euen vnto the end Concerning the former it is not sufficient to intitle vs vnto true godlinesse that we be religious by fits hauing our good and bad dayes or that wee spend some time in religious exercises and then thinke that we are set at liberty to liue as wee list and to follow the lusts of our owne flesh that wee sometime performe Christian duties when our worldly profits or pleasures will giue vs any leasure and neglect or slightly performe them when wee haue other imployments or as it were in some religious humour and pang of deuotion caused by feare of some approching iudgement or by smart of some present affliction For inconstancie which is a fruit of folly will not stand with true godlinesse which is the head and prime part of spirituall wisedome the which as it inableth vs to choose that which is best so also Psal 111. 10. to be constant in our choyce Whereas folly and impiety are full of vanity and lightnesse causing men according to that sway which they beare in them to be vnsettled and inconstant in all their wayes if at least they haue any inclination vnto religious duties and be not wholly settled vpon their dregs and like Meteors hanging in the ayre sometimes moouing towards heauen and soone after falling backe againe towards the earth But no further progresse hath any made in piety then hee hath profited in the constant practice of religious duties and they who are sometimes hot and sometimes cold and sometimes betweene both luke-warme who one while performe seruice vnto God and another while neglect it now deuout and seemingly zealous in good things and soone after cold and negligent carnall and prophane haue iust cause to suspect themselues that as yet they haue made no sound entrance into the practice of godlinesse §. Sect. 2 The former point illustrated by some comparisons For the course of Christianity in the Scriptures is compared to the Kings high-way and they who goe on in it to trauellers going on in their iourney towards their owne Country and therefore to be sometime seene in this way is no signe that in good earnest wee trauell in it if wee sometimes goe forward and sometime backward but rather that wee are walking for recreation and will giue ouer when we feele any wearynesse Euen theeues and robbers doe sometimes crosse the high-way though their ordinary haunt be in the woods and mountaines yea will trauell in it for a while that they may be thought true men and so get the better aduantage by being vnsuspected of executing their designes but it is onely the honest traueller that goeth constantly in his iourney and trauelleth in it from morning to night It is compared likewise to the running of a Race wherein none get the Garland but they who runne as they 1. Cor. 9. 24. ought and as runners doe not sometime run and sometimes stand still one while hold the right course and another while leauing it spend their time and trauell in by-wayes or in going by fits forward and backward for so they should be Non-proficients ridding no ground and after much labour lost be as farre from the Goale and Garland as they were at the beginning when they first set foorth so none get the Garland of glory who doe not runne constantly in the Race of godlinesse and they who runne by fits and starts sometimes going forward and sometime standing still or going backeward or out of the way become heereby Non-proficients in Christianity and after that by much vnsettled rambling vp and downe they haue tyred themselues in this course they are like the blind Horse in the Mill in the same place and case they were in the beginning no more mortified to sinne nor richer in sauing graces no more expert and actiue in Christian duties no neerer the Goale nor surer of the Garland at the end of their liues then when they first entred into the profession of Religion Yea oftentimes hauing wearied themselues in this fruitlesse labour and seeing the small benefit that they haue reaped of it for want of hope and assurance of euer getting either the Garland of grace or the Crowne of glory they quite giue out and ceasing any longer to run in the Christian Race doe returne backe againe like the Dog to his vomit and run as fast as euer they did in their old wicked courses that so they may not lose all but may gaine at least the prizes of worldly vanities which Satan offereth vnto those who run swiftest in the wayes of wickednesse Finally the Christian life is our spirituall Husbandry in which there cannot be without losse any intermission of our labour but one businesse being finished another presently is to bee vndertaken After breaking vp of our fallow grounds and plowing there must bee sowing and harrowing after seed time weeding and then reaping and carrying into the barne Neither must the spare time between these maine imployments bee spent in idlenesse but in tending of our cattell which are the helpes of husbandry in making and mending of our fences in lopping and topping plashing and pruning threshing out of the Corne that it may be fit for our owne vse or carryed out to the Market with many other imployments of like nature So is there no intermission of our paines in the spirituall Husbandry but after one duty performed we must set our selues about another and spend our whole time either in preparing our hearts that they may be fit grounds to receiue the seede of Gods Word or about the art of sowing or couering the seede that it may not be stolne away or in weeding it from vices and corruptions when it beginneth to grow or in preseruing and strengthening all the good helpes and meanes which will inable and further vs in all our Christian labours or in making or repairing our spirituall fences which may keepe out the beasts of the field and enemies of our Christian thrift or in reaping the present crop of Gods sauing graces which will comfortably sustaine vs in the full assurance and expectation of the euerlasting Haruest of heauenly happinesse §. Sect. 3 A complaint of mens vn constancie in performing the duties of a godly life And yet alas how many of vs who seeme most forward in the profession of Christianity that haue not in the greatest part of their life come to any settled constancie in performing the duties of godlinesse How many professe themselues trauellers towards our heauenly Countrey and yet are vnconstant in all their wayes and vnsettled in all their courses sometime performing the duties of a godly life and sometime neglecting them altogether seruing God one day or in some small part of it spending the rest of their time in seruing Satan the world and their own lusts How many that make a faire shew as though they would run the Christian Race who one while go forward and another while as out of breath
into act when wee haue had fit occasion Our worldlinesse and earthly mindednesse which haue made vs by affecting transitory trifles to neglect spirituall and heauenly excellencies and neglecting Gods seruice to serue Satan in hope of receiuing this base wages and rewards of iniquity Our little profiting by the long inioying and vsing of the light of the Gospell and plentifull meanes of our saluation for the inriching of our selues with Gods spirituall and sauing graces knowledge faith affiance loue zeale patience or the fruitfull exercizing of them in the duties of a godly life which hath come to passe by our irreuerent slothfull and sluggish vsing of the meanes nor bringing vnto them any faith zeale feruency of spirit or a good conscience Our want of Christian valour and resolution in the Christian warfare and our often yeelding vnto the tentations of Satan the world and our own flesh Finally our abuse of prosperity and temporary blessings which being giuen vs of God as present wages in our hands to make vs more cheerfull in his seruice we haue abused as meanes and occasions to make vs more sinfull more forgetfull of God and negligent and cold in his seruice more proud worldly and vnconscionable in all our courses And when we haue called to our remembrance these and such other sinnes whereby we haue been hindred in the wayes of godlinesse and haue vnfainedly lamented and bewailed them with bitter griefe and resolued amendment for the time to come then are we also to renew and strengthen our faith by applying afresh vnto vs the gracious promises of the Gospell which are made in Christ vnto all repentant sinners The which often renewing of our couenant with God will be a notable meanes of strengthening vs vnto all the duties of a godly life seeing this couenant of grace is the ground and foundation of them God hauing promised therein that hee will take away from vs our stony hearts and giue vs hearts of flesh and that hee Ezek. 11. 19 20. and 36. 26. will put a new spirit within vs that we may walke in his statutes and keepe his ordinances and doe them That he will giue vs one heart and one way that wee Ier. 31. 33. and 32. 40. may feare him for euer and put his Law in our inward parts and write it in our hearts that we shall not depart from him And as thus on Gods part wee are strengthened vnto all good duties by his Spirit which hee promiseth and giueth vnto vs so also on our part this renewing of our faith inabling vs hereunto for the more we are assured of the remission of our sinnes and of all Gods benefits both spirituall in this life and heauenly in the life to come the more we loue him who hath so loued vs and of his infinite bounty hath multiplied vpon vs such inestimable blessings and Nehem. 10. 29. the more wee loue him the more loth wee are to doe any thing which may displease him and the more forward and willing to glorifie him and to performe all good duties acceptable in his sight §. Sect. 6 That we must take more care to approue our wayes to God and our owne consciences then vnto men The second rule is that we chiefly labour to approoue all our workes and wayes to God and our owne consciences rather then vnto men the testimony whereof is much more to be esteemed then publike fame and humane censures For fame being but a breath of the often deceiued multitude may also deceiue vs by giuing a false testimony either on the worser or better part but our cōsciences which are priuy euen to our secret actions and inward intentions in doing them will not easily bee corrupted to giue in false euidence especially in those who are sanctified and regenerate Humane and vulgar censures are often false and friuolous ridiculous and impious applauding that which God condemneth and condemning that which he commendeth and commonly that best pleaseth the multitude which displeaseth him They call him honourable not who honoureth God and is honoured of him who is a sonne of God brother of Christ and heire of heauen but who is innobled by the vertues of his parents or who hath bought glorious titles as it were a slaue in the market or as the Centurion his freedome with a great summe They call him rich and happy who is poore beggerly naked and vtterly destitute of the riches of Gods graces because he hath some worldly pelfe which euery day may be taken from him or he from it And hee of the world is esteemed valorous and magnanimous who is so impotent in ruling his passions that he cannot beare the least iniury without taking reuenge and contrariwise he base and cowardly who dissembleth wrongs and according to Christs Commandement doth readily forgiue them leauing vengeance to God vnto whō alone it belongeth Though nothing is more contrary to true fortitude or the magnanimous constancy of a sound and well-settled minde then with euery wind of words to bee moued out of a right state and with other mens folly to become furious and frantique But a good conscience giueth in true euidence as witnessing with God or that which he witnesseth not out of a blind opinion mis-led by passion but according to the booke of holy Scriptures with which this booke of conscience commonly agreeth And therefore if wee would leade a godly life and constantly performe those Christian duties which are pleasing vnto God let vs lightly regard the censure of the multitude who ordinarily outface and discountenance vertue and piety and commend and magnifie vice and wickednesse iustifie those whom God condemneth and condemne those that hee iustifieth accounting their false praises a great dishonour and their scornes and disgraces for innocency and piety our praise and glory seeing he cannot be but honourable whom God honoureth nor want glory whom Christ his Saints and holy Angels approue and applaud And contrariwise let vs highly esteeme in all our actions the testimony of our owne conscience which will restraine vs from secret sinnes as well as from open and notorious and mooue and incite vs to all Christian duties euen in our secret closets when there is none by to censure our actions And as no wise man in running of a race is much moued with the speeches of the standers by which hee assuredly knoweth to be false and friuolous thinking euer the better of himselfe when he is cast behind all the rest of the company because they commend his speed or the worse when he hath outstripped them and is neere the goale because they discommend him for his slownesse so neither must we be lifted vp with a good conceit of our selues when others commend vs for our swiftnesse in the spirituall race if our owne consciences tell vs that wee are slow and behind all the rest with whom wee contend for the Garland nor yet deiected and discouraged when they dispraise vs if we are priuie vnto
the souldiers at Joh. 24. 14 15. his Sepulchre and theeues and adulterers that lye in wait to make spoyle of their neighbours goods and chastity and yet sleepe and snort in the deepe lethargie of sinne and wickednesse So that it is not the bodily watchfulnesse or sleepe that is commanded or forbidden for of this as of all of like kinde the Apostles saying is verified namely that bodily exercise profiteth little yea it hurteth much if we rest in it as the deed done or doe it as a worke satisfactory and meritorious not subduing the flesh but puffing it vp with pride and presumption nor inabling vs to Gods seruice but making the body vnfit to bee a ready instrument for the soule whilest by immoderate watching it is weakened and infeebled and becommeth more dull and drowzie more lumpish and vncheerfull to all good duties of a godly life §. Sect. 3 The former poynt proued by the Scriptures And yet I deny not but that there may be good vse of bodily watching when as it is moderate and seasonable not onely in respect of ciuill and morall affaires as the dispatching of our necessary businesse ministring to our friends vpon their bed of sicknesse and such like but also as it conduceth vnto spirituall ends as when it furthereth vs in keeping our spirituall watch is not rested in as a bodily exercise but referred and destinated to an holy and religious end As when with Dauid Paul and Silas Act. 12 12. and 20. 7. we abridge our selues of sleepe that wee may praise God by singing of Psalmes or lifting vp in silence our thankfull hearts vnto God for extraordinary benefits or when with our Sauiour Christ and his Church in persecution we spend the night in prayer and other religious exercises And thus our Sauiour requireth of his Apostles bodily watchfulnesse to a spirituall end Watch and pray saith he that ye fall not into tentation But yet the Christian waking and watching which in the Scriptures is so much commended vnto vs is not corporall but spirituall or onely corporall so farre foorth as the Spirituall thereby may be aduanced and furthered For which the Word of God is so cleare that it needs not the light of any other Comment Awake thou that sleepest and arise vp from the dead and Christ Eph. 5. 14 15 16 shall giue thee light Out of which sleepe of sinne when they are awakened he exhorteth them to keepe the Christian watch See then that ye walke circumspectly Col. 4. 2. not as fooles but as wise redeeming the time because the dayes are euil And againe Continue in prayer and watch in the same with thanksgiuing So hauing Eph. 6. 18. commended vnto vs the spirituall armour he willeth vs to pray alwayes and watch thereunto with all perseuerance And yet more plainly Awake to righteousnesse 1. Cor. 15. 34. 16. 13. and sinne not Watch ye stand fast in the faith quite your selues like men be strong Neither doth the Apostle inhibit bodily sleepe and naturall rest but carnall security and sleepe in sinne Ye are saith he children of light 1. Thes 5. 5 6 7 8. and of the day not of night nor of darkenesse therefore let vs not sleepe as doe others but let vs watch and be sober c. putting on the brest-plate of faith and loue and for an helmet the hope of saluation §. Sect. 4 What the Christian watchfulnesse is By all which it appeareth that the Christian watchfulnesse which is commended vnto vs in the Scriptures is not bodily and naturall but supernaturall and spirituall Now let vs consider in the next place what it is and wherein it consisteth Concerning the former The Christian and spirituall watch is an heedfull obseruation of our selues in all things and a serious carefull and diligent circumspection ouer all our wayes that wee may please God by doing his will and neither commit any sinne which hee hath forbidden nor omit any duty which hee hath commanded The which description setteth foorth vnto vs the nature of the Christian watch as it is commended vnto vs in the holy Scriptures Thus the Lord inioyning this watch by Moses the Captaine of his people saith Take heed to thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently lest thou forget Deut. 4. 9 23. the things which thine eyes haue seene and lest they depart from thine heart all the dayes of thy life And our Sauiour prescribing it doeth expresse it in these words Take yee heed watch and pray for yee know not when Mar. 13. 33 34. the time is watch yee therefore lest comming suddenly hee finde you sleeping So the Apostle expoundeth that phrase of awaking out of sleepe and arising Eph. 5. 14 15 16 from the dead in the next words See that yee walke circumspectly not as fooles but as wise redeeming the time because the dayes are euill And exhorting the Watch-men of the Church to keepe diligently this watch hee willeth them to take heed vnto themselues and to all the flocke ouer which Act. 20. 28 31. the holy Ghost had made them ouerseers to feed the Church of God which he had purchased with his blood §. Sect. 5 That this watch is to be kept in all things Now if we would know wherein this obseruation and circumspection consisteth and in what it is to be vsed and exercised the Apostle telleth vs that it must not be in some few things onely the rest being neglected but in all things whatsoeuer Watch thou in all things so that wee must keepe 2. Tim. 4. 5. this watch at all times in all places vpon all occasions when we are alone and when we are in company abroad and at home in the workes of our callings and in our recreations when we haue to deale with others and when we are exercised in our owne businesse in ciuill affaires and morall actions and in our religious duties which we performe vnto God as hearing reading praying meditating according to that of our Sauiour Take heed how ye heare watch and pray And seeing the deuill layeth baites Luk. 8. 18. and snares to catch vs in all places and in all things we must be very heedfull and circumspect that we doe not fall into his nets of perdition When wee are alone we must take heed that wee be not idle and vnprofitable wholly taken vp with worldly thoughts and sinfull imaginations nor ouertaken by Satans tentations inticing vs to the committing of secret sinnes seeing solitude exempteth vs from the feare either of shame or punishment When we are to goe into company we must looke to our selues that we be not corrupted with euill examples and vaine and rotten communication and that we doe not thus corrupt others but edifie them by our sauoury speeches and holy conuersation When we looke to be taken vp in Christian conferences we must watch ouer our selues that wee fall not through selfe-loue ouer-weening our owne gifts into pride and vaine-glory nor
our selues enioyned to doe it when they promise we are to hope when they threaten we are to be terrified as if the iudgement were denounced against vs and when they forbid any sinne we are to thinke that they forbid it vnto vs. By which application we shall make all the rich treasures contained in the Scriptures wholy our owne and in such a powerfull and peculiar maner enioy the fruit and benefit of them as if they had beene wholy written for vs and for none other else besides vs. §. Sect. 8 That we must reade orderly with diligence and constancy The last rule to be obserued in our reading is that we proceed in it after an orderly maner with diligence and constancie and not by fits and snatches here a Chapter and there another or onely the beginnings of bookes and then laying them aside and taking others in hand of which we are as soone wearie as of the former only out of nouelty and to feed our vaine curiosity without any true desire of edification and spirituall profit But when vpon sound aduice wee haue made choyce of a booke we are not to giue it ouer till we come to the end Yea if we finde it sound and sauoury vsefull and profitable we are to read it againe and againe as before I haue shewed neuer thinking that we haue perused it sufficiently till we haue thorowly vnderstood it layd it vp in our memories applied it to our hearts and drawne it into vse and practice The which constant course as we must obserue in our studie of other godly bookes so especially in reading the holy Scriptures the which must not be read by pieces without order as the Booke hapneth to open when we take it into our hand but the best way is in our ordinarie course to begin at the beginning and so to proceed till we come to the end The which will be a notable helpe both for the vnderstanding of the matter and the History of the Bible when as we obserue the coherence and how one thing dependeth vpon another which if it be interrupted causeth much obscuritie and maketh vs vnacquainted with the whole Counsell of God seeing by reason of this confusion we shall reade many things often and as many others neuer at all The which rule hath place in our ordinarie course of reading onely for vpon extraordinary occasions it is fit and necessarie to reade in any place as the occasion requireth As also some speciall parts of holy Scriptures more often then others which are most full and fertill of spirituall instructions and most profitable for edification which out of our ordinarie course we may reade when we get any fit leisure and opportunitie Againe though in our ordinarie reading no portion of Scriptures is alwaies to be passed ouer seeing all is profitable for some vses and purposes yet sauing other mens better iudgement I thinke that some parts may be read much more seldome then others especially by common Christians of meane knowledge and capacity who are able to make little vse of them as the Chapters which containe nothing but Genealogies those in the New Matth. 1. Luk. 3. Testament excepted the Leuiticall law abrogated by Christ contayning the ceremonies of Gods seruice wherof we can make vse only as they were types shadowes of Christ which cannot easily be done by ordinarie wits the building of the Tabernacle Temple with many Chapters in diuers of the Prophets which are either so obscure or so fitted to diuers Nations against whom they denounced Gods iudgements that few can vnderstand them who are not acquainted with the state of those Countries and Histories of those times which are out of the reach of ordinary Christians to whom chiefely I write and not so vsefull as other parts of holy Scriptures to those who are most learned for the helping them forward in the duties of a godly life but only profitably serue for speciall purposes and vses for which the Holy Ghost did principally intend them In which regard I haue found it profitable to reade ouer the whole Scriptures seriously twice or thrice and to obserue as we goe both these Chapters of lesse ordinarie vse and others of greatest excellencie and most profitable for our edification and as we goe to prefix before them with our pen a seuerall marke as for example before the former sort this * before the other this ❀ or some such like that we may readily chuse the one vpon extraordinary occasions and more seldome reade the other in our ordinary course The which I prescribe to none but onely propound and so leaue it vnto euery ones choyce either to vse or not to vse it as they shall thinke most fit for their owne profit Onely this I would perswade euery good Christian as a matter most profitable and necessary that they would reade the holy Scriptures with all diligence not only at their idle houres when they haue nothing else to doe but making it one of their most important businesses to borrow some time for it frō their ordinary imployments yea euen from their sleepe rather then to want time any day studiously to reade some part of holy Scriptures and finally that they bee not onely thus diligent by fits and flashes reading much one day and nothing in another but that they keepe themselues constantly as neere as they can to a settled course seeing he commeth sooner and more surely to his iourneys end who obserueth a discreet constancy in his trauels though he goeth but a slow pace then another who by spurts and fits rideth vpon his gallop and not minding his iourney spendeth the most part of his time in needlesse stayes vpon the way §. Sect. 9 Of the fittest time for this exercise of reading And so much concerning the things which are to be obserued in the manner of our reading The next poynt to bee considered is the time which we may most fitly allot to this exercise when we are to performe it and how long it must be continued For either of which no certaine rule can be giuen but they must be left to be determined by euery Christians discretion and deuotion according to their seuerall occasions and opportunities We are generally fittest for this and other spirituall exercises of like nature in the morning when our spirits and wits are freshest or if we be not drowzie when we goe to bed because things which are last thought vpon are better imprinted in the memory when as they haue had without disturbance of other businesse some time of settling especially if we recall them to mind the next morning But some mens businesses will allow rather some other time in some other part of the day hauing then little enough for more necessary duties as prayer and meditation In which regard the Christian is to bee left vnto his owne discreet choyce when his occasions will giue him fittest opportunity so that they doe not neglect it altogether Some who abound
in leisure and meanes may chuse that time which they finde most fit others which earne their liuings by their labours or are otherwise taken vp with many and important businesses either priuate or publike must take such times as will best stand with their waighty affaires Yet let euery one allow a little to this profitable exercise and euen those who are most pinched with pouerty and so pressed with the waight of important imployments that they can finde no leisure in the weeke dayes yet in any case let them not omit it vpon the Lords Day which is wholly to bee set apart from all worldly businesses and to be all spent in such spirituall exercises So likewise the time of continuing in reading cannot bee stinted and limited to any certaine and constant space but must bee measured by our deuotion and other affaires Only this may be generally said that seeing much reading is a wearines to the flesh and wearines dulleth the appetite and causeth distaste therefore it is best not to reade ouermuch at one time but to leaue with an appetite that we may returne vnto it againe with more delight and not to let wearines and satiety but wisdome and discretion put an end vnto it §. Sect. 10 Of the wofull neglect of this holy exercise But though this counsell be good yet few in these dayes do greatly need it seeing it is so wofully neglected amongst the most who professe Christianity that there is much more need of a spur to hasten our speed then of a bridle to restraine vs from running our selues out of breath For many there are who otherwise in their iudgements hold this exercise of reading as commendable and profitable that are yet so wholly addicted to the world that they can scarce finde any leisure in any one day of the weeke to spend some time in this religious exercise but are wholly taken vp with such imployments as will bring vnto them some earthly profit or with the cares of this life and forecasting of their businesse for their best aduantage Others abounding in leisure rather then they will spend any time in this profitable exercise the which notwithstanding is irkesome and tedious when they are idle and haue nothing to doe do wholly giue themselues ouer to sports and pastimes hunting and hawking carding and dicing dancing and reuelling or else idle and vaine communication and complementall visitations heereby preparing against themselues a fearefull reckoning when being called to giue vp their accounts before the supreme Iudge of heauen and earth how they haue spent that precious time which he hath allowed vnto them to glorifie him and make their Calling and Election sure they shall be constrained to giue euidence against themselues out of the bookes of their owne consciences that they haue spent almost all their time in things vaine and wicked seruing therby the diuell the world and their owne carnall lusts and little or none at all in spirituall exercises and in the duties of Gods seruice Neither will it at this day any thing auaile vs to say that we had so much worldly busines that we could not intend this and such religious exercises seeing God in his Law hath absolutely required them not dispencing with vs vpon any Deut. 17. 19. pretence of busines For euen Kings and great Commanders who haue greatest and most important imployments both in warre and peace are Josh 1. 8. not withstanding expresly inioyned to reade and meditate in Gods Law The which was accordingly performed by holy Dauid though hee had as many distractions and waighty imployments as any other Yea then it Psal 119. will be told vs if we will not know it before that we were chiefly sent into the world that we might do seruice vnto our Lord and Master who hath created and redeemed vs which therfore ought to haue bin preferred before all other imployments that the duties of Gods seruice and meanes fitting vs vnto it was that one thing necessary and our main and chiefe busines Luk. 10. ●2 vnto which all other businesses worldly affaires which tend only to maintain our momentany and vncertaine liues to vphold our brittle mutable estates for a moment of time in respect of eternity ought to haue Mat. 6. 33. giuen place if both of them could not stand together as they ordinarily might if we were not too greedy in pursuing these worldly trifles with an vnsatiable appetite or wanted not wisedome and discretion to performe duties of both kinds in due order and time CAP. XXXI That reading is a notable meanes to further vs in the duties of a godly life §. Sect. 1 That reading is a most profitable exercise THe second maine poynt which I propounded is that reading of the Scriptures and other holy and religious bookes is a notable helpe and furtherance vnto a godly life The which may easily be vnderstood by that which is already spoken and needeth not any large discourse to proue it And yet it will not bee amisse to say something of it not so much to informe or conuince the iudgement of the truth as to perswade the heart to put it in practice And first generally it may be said that to what vses soeuer the Scriptures are profitable and necessary to the same purposes reading of them which is the meanes whereby we deriue from them these benefits is necessary and profitable seeing though they be a most rich treasury of all goodnesse yet they will doe vs little good if they be locked vp and not by reading and preaching opened vnto vs. So that we may truly say that reading of the Scriptures doth nourish our soules seeing it conueyeth vnto them the food whereby they are nourished that it cureth vs of all our spirituall sores and sicknesses seeing it conueyeth and applyeth vnto vs the soueraigne salues and medicines whereby wee are recouered that it guideth vs in the way of truth because it openeth vnto vs the light which serueth to direct vs. Yea it serueth to all vses and purposes whereby we may be furthered in all duties of godlinesse seeing it discouereth vnto vs that diuine brightnesse of the supreme and vncreated wisedome the reading whereof as one Hieronym ad Celant de Instit matrisfam saith sharpeneth the sense inlargeth the vnderstanding heateth our lukewarmenesse rowzeth vp our sloth extinguisheth the darts of lust moueth mourning draweth from vs teares maketh vs to approch neere vnto God who when we reade conferreth with vs by his holy Spirit In which respects he perswadeth in another place that it should bee our chiefe care to study and know the diuine Law wherein we may see the examples of Gods Saints as present before our eyes and by the counsell thereof learne what is to be done and what auoyded For it is a great helpe vnto holinesse and righteousnesse of life to replenish the mind with the diuine Oracles and to be alwayes meditating in our hearts vpon those
things which we desire to practise in our liues §. Sect. 2 That by reading the mind is much inlightened in the knowledge of Gods will More especially this exercise of reading doth singularly further vs in a godly life as it doth inlighten our vnderstandings in the knowledge of Gods will vnto which we are to yeeld obedience and sheweth vnto vs the way in which we must walke To which purpose no exercise whatsoeuer is so vsefull and effectuall For howsoeuer the preaching and hearing of the Word haue a superiour priuiledge in the worke of our Regeneration and conuersion and for the working of sauing graces in vs as faith repentance and the rest yet for the inlightening of the mind with the full knowledge of the truth after wee are conuerted and illuminated in some measure this exercise of reading hath many speciall priuiledges For first wee may vse it as oft as wee will and haue any desire to gaine knowledge but the other can be had but at certaine times nor then neither in euery place Secondly by reading we may in short time if we be studious and diligent be thorowly instructed in the whole body of Diuinity and in all the seuerall parts thereof which by preaching we cannot come to know but in long time though our Pastour take the best and most direct course of ioyning Catechizing with Preaching nor in our whole liues in any great perfection if this be neglected seeing in a Sermon some few of innumerable poynts are vsually deliuered and they rather pressed vpon the affection for vse and practice then sufficiently cleared to the vnderstanding Thirdly because by reading we may helpe our vnderstanding by reuiewing ouer and ouer againe that which at first we conceiued not and by the same meanes also may recall to our remembrance the things which after once or twice reading wee haue forgotten the which helpes hearing affoordeth not especially when wee most stand in need of them Finally because we may at our owne pleasure fit our reading for our owne occasions and furnishing vs in the knowledge of those poynts wherein we are most defectiue for the resoluing of our particular questions and doubts and for the informing our iudgements in all poynts whereof for the present and vpon euery occasion wee haue speciall vse whereas the Preacher speaking generally for the good of the whole Congregation and not being acquainted with our defects in knowledge seldome or neuer speaketh of all those poynts wherein we need instruction and often of such as we know already In all which respects it is hard to finde a Christian thorowly grounded in all poynts contained in the body of Diuinity though hee be neuer so diligent in hearing the Word preached and may haue some competency of knowledge necessary to saluation and some good measure of faith and other sauing graces if he vtterly neglect this duty of reading §. Sect. 3 That reading bringeth with it many other benefits Againe as reading singularly inlighteneth the mind so also it affoordeth many other helpes of a godly life for it is a speciall meanes to relieue the memory and to mooue the will inclining it powerfully vnto good and withdrawing it from euill though not in that degree of efficacy as the Word preached It worketh vpon the hart for the mollifying softening it and vpon all the affections for the purging and sanctifying of them inflaming our loue towards God and all good things and our hatred against all that is euill it kindleth our zeale when it groweth luke-warme and stirreth vp our deuotion when it is cold and sluggish It much increaseth all Gods graces in vs as faith affiance repentance patience peace of conscience and the rest by imparting vnto them that spirituall food whereby they are nourished It amendeth our liues and maketh vs as the Apostle speaketh perfect vnto euery good worke It specially inableth 2. Tim. 3. 13 17. vs to the fruitfull hearing of the Word of God when as we can with the Bereans search the Scriptures whether the things we heare be so or no and try Act. 17. 11. the spirits of those wee heare whether they be of God or no by examining their doctrines according to the touch-stone of this Truth besides that it maketh vs well acquainted with the Scriptures both for matter and history so that when they are cited they are familiar vnto vs. Whereas without this benefit of reading we cannot tell whether the testimonies quoted be in the Canonicall Scriptures or no or if we take this vpon our Teachers word yet we cannot tell where they are nor easily turne to them vpon the sudden It teacheth vs to manage the Sword of the Spirit whereby we are enabled to defend our selues and repell the tentations of our spirituall enemies as we see in the Eph. 6. 17. Math. 4. 3. 4 c. example of our Sauiour Christ Finally if we vse this exercise carefully and conscionably to profit by it we shall be assured of euerlasting blessednesse For blessed is he that readeth and they that heare the Words Apoc. 1. 3. of Gods Booke and keepe the things which are written therein Blessed is Psal 1. 1 2. the man who delighteth in the Law of the Lord and meditateth therein day and night All which being duly considered should be effectuall motiues to make those diligent in reading who are able to performe it and greatly to humble those who are not in the sight and sense of this great defect and either to labour that yet they may attaine vnto this skill if they be capable and haue meanes or else to supply their wants by resorting often vnto others that they may reade vnto them the euidences of their saluation and heauenly inheritance which themselues for want of skill are not able to peruse CAP. XXXII The last ordinary meanes of a godly life is the choyce of our company shunning the society of the wicked and consorting our selues with the godly and Religious §. Sect. 1 That we must carefully auoid the society of wicked and prophane persons THe last ordinary meanes of a godly life is that we make good choyce of our company vnto which two things are required first that we shun and auoid the society of the prophane and wicked the other is that we consort our selues with the godly and religious By the former we are not to vnderstand that we must forbeare the society of all who are not as forward and zealous in their profession and practice as our selues or who bewray in their course and conuersation many infirmities and imperfections as though those were to be esteemed wicked and prophane who haue made but small progresse in their sanctification if any sparkes of grace and goodnesse appeare in them though as it were raked vp vnder the ashes of many and great corruptions for then we should breake the bruised reede and quench the Matth. 12. 20. smoking flaxe and by our censorious neglect vtterly discourage them in their
a godly life both in this world and the World to come Which impediment if we would remoue we must often enter into consideration of these things and into a serious examination of our estate according to those directions which I haue before giuen when I intreated of the meanes whereby we may be inabled to leade a godly life §. Sect. 4 Of impediments arising from corrupted and erroneous iudgement The iudgement also corrupted with errour and ignorance is a notable impediment to hinder vs from the sincere practice of all Christian duties of a godly life For heereby men be foole themselues with idle conceits that haue no ground or warrant in Gods Word and thereby rest contented with their present estate and neuer labour to attaine vnto a better For so are they blinded with naturall ignorance that they cannot discerne their blindnesse but thinke themselues as sharpe sighted as any other So poore are they and destitute of the riches of Gods sauing graces that they haue no sense of their pouerty but please themselues with shaddowes in stead of substance like men replenished with winde in stead of wholesome nourishment and those who mistake the swelling of their dropsie humours for sound and good flesh So dead they are in sinne that they haue no feeling of their deadnesse and though they be neuer so much cut and lanched with the sword of the Spirit and keene Razour of the Word they haue no sense of it nor euer complaine more then dead men of their wounds and gashes Finally lying in their sinnes as in their proper element though they be neuer so heauy and intolerable yet like a fish vnder the water they doe not at all feele the waight of them As we see in the example of the proud Pharises who thought themselues sharpe sighted and righteous when as they were in Christs estimate starke blind Ioh. 9. 40. and wicked aboue all men euen Publicanes and sinners of the Iewes who thought themselues free-men and the children of Abraham when as they Ioh. 8. 33. were the sonnes and slaues of sinne and Satan and of the luke-warme Loadiceans who falsly imagined that they were rich and increased with Apoc. 3. 17 18. goods and had need of nothing when as they were wretched and miserable poore blind and naked The which false and erroneous iudgement is a principall impediment vnto a godly life vnto which as one saith of wisedome many might haue attained if they had not falsly supposed that they had already attained vnto it For who laboureth to better his estate that thinketh it is good enough already or to attaine vnto more wealth that contenteth himselfe with his portion as thinking it abundantly sufficient who goeth to the Physician that assureth himselfe that hee is in perfect health or to the Lawyer for counsell that maketh no doubt of the validity of his euidences or to the Diuine for instruction who supposeth that he knoweth already as much as he can teach him And who laboureth to better his spirituall estate who thinketh it already so good that it needeth no amendment Which dangerous impediment if wee would remooue let vs not measure our selues by the false ell of carnall reason and an erroneous iudgement nor compare our selues with our selues or with other men whom we thinke worse then we but let vs examine our wayes and workes by the perfect rule of Gods Word and try thereby how infinitely wee come short of that exact obedience which his Law requireth Let vs thereby labour to come to a true sense of our owne misery and to haue our blinde eyes so opened and inlightened that we may discerne the manifold wants and imperfections of our best actions and so labour after more perfection Finally let vs know it for certaine as an vndoubted truth that we haue not yet set forward one foot in the wayes of Christianity and true godlinesse when we thinke that we haue gone farre enough already for true grace is in continuall growth and he that hath attained vnto any measure of it in truth seeing his wants and imperfections striueth and laboureth after more perfection wherein he who hath made the greatest progresse is most earnest in proceeding like him that runneth a race who maketh best speed when he approcheth neerest vnto the goale or like the naturall motion which is slow at the beginning but the longer it continueth the swifter it groweth as we see in the descent and fall of a stone which mooueth fastest when it draweth neere vnto the center And this we see in the example of the Pharises and the Apostle Paul For they hauing an opinion of their owne perfection rested in their owne righteousnesse as sufficient for saluation and neuer desired to be made partakers of the righteousnesse of Christ for their iustification whereas by Christs testimony it cleerely appeareth that they had not so much as made an entrance into the way of life and were much farther off from the Kingdome of God then Publicanes and sinners But contrariwise the Apostle hauing out-stripped almost all others when he came neerest the goale of perfection made his greatest speed forgetting those things which were behind and Phil. 3. 13 14. reaching foorth to those which were before and pressing towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ §. Sect. 5 Of impediments arising from speciall errours in iudgement The speciall and particular errours in iudgement which hinder men from resoluing to leade a godly life are innumerable and therefore I will content my selfe to set downe heere some few of them and but slightly to touch them because the bare naming of them in respect of their inualidity and weakenesse is a sufficient confutation First then out of an erroneous iudgement concerning God they falsly conceiue that hee is so mercifull that either he will saue all men or at least them who performe some kinde of seruice vnto him though they bee not like others strict in their courses but giue liberty to the satisfying of their sensuall lusts and to leade such a life as best pleaseth them Whereby they make an Idoll of Gods mercy in separating it from his iustice and truth which hath denounced death and condemnation against all that neglect his seruice and liue in their sinnes without repentance So they thinke that God will accept of their good meaning though being ignorant they know not how to serue him as hee hath required notwithstanding that the Lord in innumerable places of holy Scriptures professeth his hatred to superstition and all will-worship That he will accept of vs if wee goe to the Church according to the Princes Lawes like other men and offer vnto God the outward seruice of the body in hearing the Word and praying with the Congregation and receiuing the Sacrament at Easter although all bee done in meere formality and hypocrisie without any zeale and deuotion or desire to serue and please God or to profit by these spirituall
may be reclaimed from going on still in this erroneous and tedious course and that others may not be discouraged by their example from resoluing to lead a godly life let vs know that there is no ioy comparable vnto that which is or ought to be in Christians that desire to serue and please God in their holy conuersation For if as Bernard hath Oblatus siquidem Isaac sanctificatus est non mactatus Non Isaac sed aries morietur non peribit tibi laetitia sed contumacia c. Bernard sermo de verbis Petri Ecce nos reliquimus omnia excellently obserued wee can be content with Abraham in faith and obedience towards God to offer and sacrifice our Isaac First our laughter and ioy it shall onely be sanctified but not slaughtred and killed Thy Isaac shall not die nor thy mirth perish but the Ram only that is the peruersnesse and prophanenesse of thy pleasure and ioy which endeth alwayes in griefe and anxiety Isaac thy ioy shall not die as thou supposest but shall surely liue onely it shall be lifted aloft vpon the Altar and vpon the wood that thy ioy may be holy and heauenly sublime and lofty not in the flesh and things beneath but in spirituall things in the crosse of Christ those high and holy priuiledges which we haue through him For howsoeuer Christians in their first conuersion and humiliation chiefely act the part of sorrow heauines in the sight and sense of their manifold and haynous sinnes and shead teares of bitter griefe looking vpon him whom they haue pierced yet being Zach. 12. 10. Rom. 5. 1 3. iustified by faith hauing peace with God in assurance of his mercy and remission of their sins they triumph with ioy euen in their afflictions and tribulations and though they sow in teares yet they reape in ioy though they haue a dropping and sorrowfull seed-time yet their haruest which yeeldeth vnto them a fruitfull crop of sauing graces which yet are but the first fruits of their succeeding ioy and heauenly happines is full of mirth gladnes So that with Dauid they reioyce Psal 4. 7. more in the bright beames of Gods gracious countenance shining vpon them then worldlings doe or can doe when their corne and wine is increased And though they be in respect of their afflicted estate As sorrowfull yet they are alwaies reioycing as the Apostle speaketh because 2. Cor. 6. 10. they know that all things euen crosses and calamities themselues worke together for their good The which will more manifestly appeare if we a little further consider the testimonies and examples of holy Scripture For the Psalmist telleth vs that the voyce of reioycing and Psal 118. 15. saluation is in the Tabernacles of the righteous And Salomon speaking of Wisdome which consisteth in the sauing knowledge of God and his truth and the practice of it in all holy and religious duties saith that her wayes are wayes of pleasantnesse and all her paths are peace So Dauid saith Pro. 3. 17. of the Church and children of God the liuely members of it That Psal 36. 8. they should be abundantly satisfied with the fatnesse of his house and that he would make them drinke of the riuers of his pleasure Our Sauiour also promiseth vnto the Disciples and in them to all the faithfull that he Iob. 16. 22. would giue them such a permanent ioy as no man should be able to take it from them And finally the Apostle setteth it downe not as a common gift but as a speciall fruit of the Spirit not drooping sorrow and disconsolate heauinesse but ioy and peace And this also appeareth Gal. 5. 22. by the examples of the holy men of God recorded in the Scriptures Thus Dauid saith My soule shall bee ioyfull in the Lord it shall reioyce Psal 35. 9. in his saluation Neither did he onely thus reioyce in the testimonies of Gods fauour and conquest of his enemies but also in his obedience and keeping of Gods Law I haue reioyced in the way of thy Psal 119. 14 16. testimonies as much as in all riches I will delight my selfe in thy Statutes I will not forget thy Word And againe I delight to doe thy will O my God Psal 40. 8. yea thy Law is within mine heart Thus the Apostles reioyced euen in Act. 5. 41. their persecutions because they were thought worthy to suffer for Christs sake and Paul and Silas when as their backes were torne Act. 16. with sore stripes and their feete locked in the Stockes Thus the Apostle found matter enough to glorie in through Iesus Christ in things Rom. 15. 17. pertayning to God And tasted such vnspeakeable ioy in the knowledge of Christ and him crucified that he disclaymeth all other Gal. 6. 14. ioy And else-where he professeth that he had no scant measure of this sweet delight but that he was filled with comfort and was exceeding 2. Cor. 7. 4. ioyfull euen in all his tribulations Neither is this ioy whereof I speake in which the Christian exceedeth all other men sensuall and carnall in the pleasures of sinne and the fruition of earthly vanities not in rioting and reuelling in swilling and drinking dicing and carding vaine dalliance and good fellowship chambring and wantonnesse for such Eccles 2 1 2. pleasure he accounteth vanity and such mirth madnesse and chuseth rather to goe into the house of mourning then into the house of such feasting reioycing because such ioy laughter is but short and momentany like the crackling of thornes vnder a pot and alwaies endeth in Eccles 7. 2 6. sorrow and anxiety It is not in mad mirth and in sinfull and vnlawfull delights for Christian charity reioyceth not in iniquity but reioyceth in the 1. Cor. 13. 6. truth and this ioy is alwayes ioyned with righteousnes and the peace of a Rom. 14. 17. good conscience in which the Kingdome of God consisteth For being subiects of Christs Kingdome such as it is such also is their ioy but his Kingdome is not of this world but spirituall heauenly and therefore their ioy and reioycing is likewise of the same nature And howsoeuer Gods children may and ought to reioyce euen in his temporary blessings as they are testimonies of their heauenly Fathers loue and also in honest sports and recreations of which I haue before spoken wherby they are fitted for higher duties as musicke shooting hunting hawking and such like those cautions before set downe being duely obserued yea howsoeuer in these respects they haue greater more iust cause of ioy and reioycing then any worldling because these are but vsurpers who haue a fearefull account to make of their intrusion whereas the other haue their right restored vnto them by Iesus Christ yet these are not the chiefe ioyes which they rest vpon as being in cōparison dull and heartlesse cold and comfortlesse only they vse them for the