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A41499 Pleroma to Pneumatikon, or, A being filled with the Spirit wherein is proved that it is a duty incumbent on all men (especially believers) that they be filled with the spirit of God ... : as also the divinity, or Godhead of the Holy Ghost asserted ... : the necessity of the ministry of the Gospel (called the ministry of the Spirit) discussed ... : all heretofore delivered in several sermons from Ephes. 5. 18 / by ... Mr. John Goodwin ... ; and published after his death ... Goodwin, John, 1594?-1665.; Venning, Ralph, 1621?-1674. 1670 (1670) Wing G1190; ESTC R1174 629,135 596

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nature as to be tempted of the Devil to combate with his greatest and most potent Enemy Masters are not wont to be led or acted by their Servants especially such Masters who are prudent and wise into undertakings of a difficult nature 4. and lastly If we look throughout the Scriptures we shall not find any Angel that ever appeared unto men in any other form likeness or shape of any other Creature but only of a man whereas we read of appearances of God himself in the forms of several other Creatures besides men He appears in a cloud of fire upon mount Sinal Exo. 24.16 17. So again in a cloud to the seventy Elders Num. 11.25 As for the Angel which is said to have appeared unto Moses in a flame of fire out of the midst of the bush Exod. 3.2 and so Acts 7.30 It is evident from the fourth verse of that Chapter Exod. 3. and so from Mat. 22.31 32. that it was not a created Angel but he that is elsewhere called the Angel of the Covenant the Angel of the face and presence of God Christ himself who is called an Angel very frequently as Calvin and others the best and soundest of Interpreters teach and prove Evident it is that the Counsel and intent of God the Father in sending down the Holy Ghost from heaven in that bodily shape we heard upon his Son Jesus Christ was for the publick and solemn inauguration of him into his Prophetical Office the Great Office of preaching and publishing the Gospel unto the World This appears from that voice which was heard from Heaven which was an Interpreter of the whole Transaction This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased hear him So then God the Father and God the Holy Ghost did together inaugurate solemnly invest Jesus Christ into his Great Prophetical Office wherein from henceforth he was to minister unto the World and immediately upon this inauguration he began to execute it That which the Father acted in the business was in that audible voice that came from Heaven That which the Holy Ghost did was by that visible appearance and lighting on him like a Dove So that the interposure or action of the one and of the other were much alike the one had little or no preheminence above the other Now it being the proper Interest of God alone and not appertaining to the Creature to raise up and send Prophets one or other certainly it was not proper for any Creature whatsoever to have a hand in the sending that Prophet of Prophets that Prophet of the World Jesus Christ A second place from the New Testament shall be that of our Saviour himself Mat. 28.19 Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Sect. 5 baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Concerning this place I suppose these two things 1. It is spoken of that Baptism which is unto Remission of sins i. e. which was given and appointed by God to secure or seal unto men the forgiveness of their sins upon their repentance whether they have already repented or no. 2. That He into whose name any person is baptized with such a Baptism as this a Baptism of this import must be in a capacity of forgiving sins upon repentance These two things supposed I argue thus If the Holy Ghost be such a Person in whose Name together with the Name of the Father and of the Son it is meet for men to be baptized then is He truly God But such a person He is c. This latter Proposition is unquestionable from the words of the Scripture before us For doubtless the Lord Christ would not have commanded his Apostles to baptize in his Name were he not a Person meet in whose NameBaptism should be administred The other Proposition cannot reasonably be denied neither because He in whose Name it is any waies meet for a person to be baptized for the Remission of sins upon Repentance must in reason be in a full capacity to give such a Remission and this not Ministerially or declaratively only For then Paul might lawfully have baptized in his own name yea every Minister of the Gospel may baptize in their own names for in this sense they are said to remit or forgive sins Joh. 20.23 Mat. 18.18 but Originally and Authoritatively For questionless it is the appropriate Priviledge or Prerogative of God thus to forgive sins it being He against whom all sin is committed and to whom men become debtors by sinning And as there is no reason or equity in it that one man should have power to forgive another man's debt especially that the Inferiour should have power to remit that which is due to the Superiour So is there much less reason to conceive that any meer Creature whatsoever hath power to forgive another Creature what it oweth unto God Upon this account it was that when Christ said to the sick of the Palsie Son thy fins be forgiven thee the Scribes and Pharisees not believing him to be God were startled at it and demanded Why doth this man speak blasphemies who can forgive sins but God alone Mar. 2.7 And the Lord Christ to justifie himself against the horrid imputation of blasphemy doth not contradict their sense in making it blaspemy for any but God to undertake to forgive sins Nor yet pleads that he had a special Warrant or Commission from God to forgive sins where he pleased but only vindicates his Godhead saying to him that was sick with Authority in his own Name Arise take up thy bed and walk and demanding of those who charged him with blasphemy Whether it is easier to say to the sick of the Palsie Thy sins are fergiven thee or to say Arise take up thy bed and walk Meaning that they could not but well enough understand and conceive that he that could say the latter with authority and effect could be no less than God and consequently might say the former without contracting the sin of blasphemy Besides it is altogether irrational to conceive that He that charged the Jews not to plow with an Oxe and an Ass together nor to wear a Garment made of Linnen and Wollen should couple the Name of an infinite and incomprehensible God and the name of a mear finite Creature together to make one and the same Name in or into which the Creatures are to be baptized For it is not here said Names but Name Baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost which likewise implies that all the three here mentioned have but one and the same Name i.e. one and the same power and authority amongst them A third place from the New Testament Sect. 6 which clearly evinceth the Holy Ghost to be God is extant Joh. 3.5 Jesus answered verily verily I say unto you Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God The worke of Regeneration
Disciples did is because they did not see him neither know him Though he be near unto them yea though he be in their hearts by his word yet they not minding nor contemplating this word of his nor regarding his motions in their souls but suffering the eyes of their minds to be fixed upon this present world and the sins and vanities thereof do not see him though he be near unto them and ready to do great things for them had they a mind to imploy him But their thoughts and mind being otherwise engaged and entangled they do by this means and during the Regency of such principles render themseles upon the matter in an utter incapacity of receiving the Spirit because they favour so much of the Spirit of this world and render themselves such a kind of sinners and such an unworthy generation that the Spirit of God can have no will or lust can take no pleasure or content to manifest himself unto them This is the second consideration by which you may perceive that unless men shall take a course to be filled with the Spirit of God they will lay themselves open and obnoxious to be filled with some unclean spirit or other If it be here objected Sect. 7 and said Is not the Spirit of God a gracious and free-working Spirit Objection And will he not doth he not for his own name sake as the Scriptures often speak put forth his might and strength to aide and assist men and women against Sathan and his evil practices towards them when and where he pleaseth without any motive or inducement from them by way of compliance with him or any goodness of behaviour in one kind or other towards him How then can we say that it doth depend upon any compliance of the creature Man with him or any kind of behaviour of his towards him I answer Answer most true it is That the Spirit of God is a most gracious and free-working Spirit exerting and putting forth himself rising up in his might and heavenly vigour where when and in whom he pleaseth Nor doth he receive Laws Terms or Directions from men for any of his motions or actions in the world but from himself his own grace and wisdom only Secondly I answer further That though the Spirit of God be most gracious and free in all his operations and workings Yet as the Apostle Peter speaking of the Promise of the Lord Christ concerning his coming saith The Lord is not slack concerning his Promise as some men count stackness 2 Pet. 3.9 Even so say I of the Spirit of Christ That he is neither gracious nor free-working as some men count gracious and free-working he is neither the one nor the other in any way of contrariety unto himself I mean either to his own holiness or his love of holiness in men nor yet to his wisdom or the interest of his glory but only in a direct and clear consistency with these Some mens imagination or notion concerning the gracious and free working disposition of the Spirit of God is 1. That there have been and are some men to whom he never hath nor ever will vouchsafe his gracious presence to the least degree and meerly out of his freedom hath willed never to have to do with them little or much not because of any peculiar strain of wickedness in them but meerly and only as I even now said from his own will and pleasure 2. On the other hand they conceive That God vouchsafeth such a presence unto some others so powerful and effectual that they are not able to resist the motions influences and workings of it but are necessitated thereby to repent believe and work righteousness 3. And lastly Others notion of this grace and working of the Spirit is such as if no course or strain of sin and wickedness whatsoever in men though still persisted in no impenitency no neglect or contempt whether precedent or present of the Gospel and of the great Salvation offered therein were or are any way considerable as to the obstructing or hindering the Spirit of God from vouchsafing even the richest highest and fullest measure of himself and his gracious presence unto them Now that Neither the grace of God nor the freedom of the Spirit in working is to be estimated measured or computed by any such notions or principles as these hath been already sufficiently evinced and proved and might here be done again would it not occasion too long a digression That graciousness and freedom of working which the Scripture any where yea and sound reason it self asserts unto the Spirit of God consists and shews it self in these particulars First All men without exception having sinned in Adam and thereby justly deprived themselves of all friendly converse and communion with God yea and justly incurred his high displeasure hatred and indignation There was nothing of any engaging or inviting much less of any obliging import in man to move or encline the God of Heaven to have any thing more to do with him in any way of love favour mercy goodness or the like to the daies of Eternity So that God having been pleased notwithanding this low and despicable condition of his Creature man to comport with him again upon terms of grace and reconciliation and to offer himself unto him namely to be re-enjoyed upon terms and these very possible to be performed by him and to put him into a capacity of blessedness and glory his former provocations notwithstanding must needs be matter of pure and meer grace and consequently of free grace so far as it was matter of grace at all If any shall say The misery and sad extremity of the Creature man Sect. 8 in the condition wherein he had now plunged himself Objection might be some moving cause unto God or upon God to look back again in mercy towards him And so in this respect there might be somewhat in man inviting him unto that merciful compliance with him which now he hath vouchsafed and consequently his grace in this vouchsafement is not so absolutely and purely free To this I answer Answers That no man as I suppose ever oppoed misery unto grace or freeness of grace in him that sheweth mercy or relieveth It is not repugnant to the greatest freeness of grace that can be imagined that a man should be induced to vouchsafe help shew mercy and relieve a person that is in misery yea upon the occasion thereof or that his misery should be an inducement thereunto 2. That compliance which God vouchsafed unto his Creature man considered as now misrable is not properly matter of grace or an act of grace but of mercy so that though the mercy of God out of which he hath vouchsafed means of relief unto man may be said to have been invited or wrought upon by his misery and in this respect not so absolutely free Yet this hinders not but that the grace of God properly so called out of which he hath been
a regular capacity to attain them that is to endeavour to make themselves such by a Christian worthiness of life and conversation and deporting of themselves in every kind both towards God and Man as best becometh them These high and choice preferments in Heaven must be for whom they are prepared It is not saith Christ being solicited by the Mother for the Sons it is not mine to give but saith our Translation it shall be given unto them for whom it is prepared of my Father Now these words it shall be given unto them are not in the original neither were they spoken by Christ The words of the Text are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that is It is not mine to give but unto those or except it be unto those or but only unto those the restrictive Particle only being frequently to be understood as I have shewed by several instances upon another occasion for whom it hath been prepared Therefore his meaning doubtless is this not to deny that they were his to give but that they were not his to give to any other but only unto those that is to that kind of person or to such for whom they were prepared designed or appointed by the Father By the way this Particle or Pronoun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated for whom doth not point at any particular person or persons by name as if for example there were any two persons amongst the universality of mankind for whom in a personal consideration or because they were such and such individual persons places were prepared or intended by God for them but the said Particle is to be taken adjectively as it is in several other places and not meerly nominally or pronominally that is not as signifying naked or meer subjects but subjects so and so qualified or disposed So you have it in other places of Scripture besides this as in 2 Tim. 1.12 For I know whom I have believed that is what manner of one what manner of God how great how faithful and how full of power he is in whom I have believed So that the Pronoune whom here doth not meerly signifie the Person or Essence of God but God with his Attributes as endued with those excellencies and perfections which make him a God meet to be trusted in and relied upon And so our Saviour himself Joh. 3.18 speaking unto the rest of his Disciples of Judas and his treachery I know saith he whom I have chosen meaning not how many or what persons by name but what manner or what kind of persons they are how affected how inclined or disposed whom I have made choice of to be my Disciples I know the frame of their heatts and of their spirits I know the rest of you are true and faithful and will not betray me I know likewise concerning one of you that he is unfaithful and will prove a Traytor unto me And so Rom. 9.15 God saith to Moses I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion that is on what kind of persons I please or on persons qualified to mine own mind and liking and not on such whom men shall obtrude upon me as persons more meet and worthy in their eye on whom I should have mercy that is whom I should justifie and save The meaning is not although it be frequently so carried and understood that God will shew mercy on whom that is on what persons or individuals of mankind personally and by name considered as he pleaseth but by those on whom he so peremptorily and resolvedly asserteth and declareth that he will have mercy and that he will not be altered in his purpose concerning them he meaneth the whole Species of Believers whoever or how many soever they shall be these being persons qualified to his mind on that behalf I mean judged meet by him to have the mercy here spoken of shewed on them and the only persons thus qualified For by the mercy here specified is not meant the mercy of Conversion repentance regeneration believing or the like but the mercy of justification or acceptance with God For this justification was the subject of the Apostles discourse where he insisteth on the words before us not any of the other And God may well express his justifying of men or his pardoning their sins by shewing mercy unto them because whilst they lie under the guilt of sin they are in a state of greatest misery But the sense of this Text of Scripture we have diligently inquired after in our exposition on Rom. 9. Pag. 150 151 c. to the end of pag. 160. where I trust you may amply satisfie your selves about it The said Particle who or whom you may find used again and this twice together in the same Concrete or adjective sense as I call it a little after viz. ver 18. Therefore hath he mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardeneth that is he hardeneth what manner of persons or what kind of sinners or wicked men he pleaseth Again in these words of the Jews unto Christ Joh. 8.25 Whom makest thou thy self to be Their meaning was What manner of person how great how holy how far above all other men wouldest thou make us to believe thee to be To forbear more instances at present when David demands Lord who shall abide in thy Tabernacle c Psal 15.1 his meaning is what kind of persons how qualified or what lives and conversations must they be as appears by the sequel of the Psalm and the description of the men here But this only by the way and occasionally for the clearing the place cited Mat. 2.20 That which we have at present to shew is That it is not at every mans nor indeed at any mans liberty or pleasure whether he will live or act so or at such a rate of righteousness and holiness whilst he liveth in the World as simply to be saved and no more but the whole World of mankind joyntly and severally stand charged by him that is the great King thereof as with matter of duty to design the greatest and most desirable glory in the Kingdom of Heaven the first-born of that glory which is competent to the Children of men they stand bound to project mansions for themselves as near to the mansion of the Lord Christ as may be where they may have the richest Communication of the Great God unto them which he judgeth meet to make of himself unto men they ought to strive respectively for the wearing of the richest and weightiest Crown of glory that is prepared and laid up in heaven for those whose hearts will serve them with an holy and heavenly ambition to aspire unto it Now Sect. 14 that it is a duty lying upon all men to strive after that which the Scripture calleth perfection and consequently to exercise themselves in such things which are proper to invest them with such a capacity as
is unsound because it is ambiguous and so is apt to abuse mens Judgments and deceive them and not to instruct them For however there is a sense wherein it is good and will hold yet there is another sense which lieth more obnoxious to mens apprehensions which is not true For he may be God the word God taken Personally on whom though men have not believed viz. Explicitely yet they may be Disciples and Believers Though it be true also on the other hand that he that believeth not in God Essentially taken cannot be a Disciple or a Believer He that believeth not that there is one God cannot be a Disciple or true Believer as the case may be But he that believes not the distinct manner of the subsistence of this one God viz. that he subsists in three which we call Persons Or that doth not believe especially explicitely and by name and under relation of any of all the three such an one may notwithstanding be a Disciple and Believer in the Scripture sense I would be loath to pronounce the hard Sentence of non-Disciple or non-Believer against all those that professedly deny the Godhead of Christ or of the Holy Ghost though there are many that are not at all tender in doing it because though explicitely and in terms they deny him yet believing there is one God and this one God being Father Son and Holy Ghost they do implicitely virtually and constructively own and acknowledge them As he that carries a Box sealed up about him wherein he thinketh there is but one Jewel he knoweth of no more yet in case there be three more he carrieth them all by carrying the Box or Case wherein they are contained In like manner he that believeth one God doth virtually believe in the Three Persons though I would not by this extenuate the greatness of the sin and dangerousness of the error of those who in words profess against the Godhead of the Holy Ghost and so of Christ though implicitely and by way of consequence they acknowledge it The ancient Jews such I mean who were Abraham's Seed were true Disciples and Believers yet did not they at least all of them explicitely believe Christ to have been or that he was the Son of God but the Proposition we are now upon is not indeed worthy the labour already bestowed upon the examination of it Vanitate suâ translucet A man may see through it Secondly That which is the Basis and main Foundation of the whole discourse of the Argument is an absolute mistake and misapprehension For the meaning of the words spoken by those who are called Disciples Acts 19.2 We have not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost is not that they had never heard of the name or simple being of the Holy Ghost we shall manifest the contrary hereunto presently but that they had not as yet heard whether the Holy Ghost was in actu secundo as the School-men speak i.e. whether he was abroad again in the World as formerly he was in the daies of their Fore-fathers and Prophets This to be the true and plain meaning of the words appeareth by several considerations First The Verb Substantive here used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which properly signifies the simple and absolute being or existence of a thing is oft used in the Scriptures for the being of a thing in Act Exercise or Manifestation in this sense it is used more than once by our Saviour himself The Evangelist John useth it concerning the Holy Ghost himself Joh. 7.39 This he spake of the Spirit which they that believe on him should receive for the Holy Ghost was not yet the word given inserted in our English Translation is not in the Original the Holy Ghost was not yet because that Jesus was not yet glorified was not yet i.e. was not yet abroad in the World amongst Believers in the discovery of himself by those miraculous and extraordinary gifts which afterwards he conferred upon many so when these Disciples the Argument speaketh of said that they had not so much as heard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whether the Holy Ghost be The meaning is that they had not heard whether he had been yet given or no viz. upon a new account the ancient account upon which as they conceived He was formerly given being expired and out of date long since Our English Translators might as well have inserted the word given in this place as in that of John mentioned and then the Clause would have run thus We have not so much as heard whether the Holy Ghost be given We have heretofore given you many instances from the Scriptures of such an Adjective sense of the Verb Substantive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that is now contended for viz. From Mat. 5.45 Rom. 7.13 c. This sense in the second place is confirmed against that given or supposed by our Adversaries in the Argument before us from hence because these Disciples had certainly heard of the being of the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit For first Being Jews which appears by their having been baptized by John's or some of his Disciples Baptism in those daies not having been carried out amongst the Gentiles and after it was come abroad unto other Gentiles they in Asia where Ephesus stood were for a time denied it Acts 16.6 being Jews I say they could not but have heard of the being of the Holy Ghost or of the Spirit of God mention hereof being so plainly and frequently made in the Scriptures I need not I suppose to cite places for this but whether they were Jews or Gentiles having been baptized with the Baptism of John it cannot be imagined but that they had heard of the being of the Holy Ghost For John when he baptized men with water admonished them to believe on him Mat. 3.11 that should come after him who he told them should baptize them with the Holy Ghost and with fire And there is little question to be made but that John's Disciples taught the same Doctrine in this Point with their Master Again thirdly That sense of the words which we have given makes the answer of the Disciples every whit as congruous and pertinent to Paul's question put to them if not more than that sense which the Argument supposeth Paul said unto them or demanded of them have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed They answer him according to the sense we plead We have not so much as heard whether there be any receiving of him or no or whether any other Believers have received him And fourthly and lastly for this there is this reason why these Disciples being Jews as we argued might probably say or mean than they had not so much as heard whether the Holy Ghost were now abroad in the World or no because from the time of Antiochus who miserably afflicted and wasted their Church and State the Jews were wont greatly to mourn and lament as if together with their last
will send in my name he will teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you Page 164 Abide in me Ver. 15.4 5. and I in you he that abideth in me and I in him bringeth forth much fruit Page 197 198 But when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father Ver. 15.26 even the Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father he shall testifie of me Page 164 c. He shall receive of mine and shew it unto you Ver. 16.14 Page 216 217 218 And now Father Ver. 17.5 glorifie thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the World was Page 136 c. For I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me Ver. 8. and they have received them and have known surely that I came out from thee and they believed that thou didst send me Page 516 c. And when he had said this Ver. 20.22 23. he breathed on them and saith unto them Receive ye the Holy Ghost Whose soever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them and whose soever sins ye retain they are retained Page 173 c. Men and Brethren Acts 1.16 this Scripture must needs have been fulfilled which the Holy Ghost by the mouth of David spake before concerning Judas Page 176 And when they heard that Acts 4.24 they lift up their voice to God with one accord and said Lord thou art God which hast made Heaven and Earth and the Sea and all that in them is who by the mouth of thy servant David hast said Why did the Heathen rage c. Page 176 Why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the Holy Ghost Acts 5.3 Page 42 177 Why have ye agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord Ver. 9. Page 177 For in him we live Ver. 17.28 and move and have our being Page 86 We have not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost Ver. 19.2 Page 228 Behold I go bound in the Spirit to Jerusalem Ver. 20.22 Page 43. c Because when they knew God they glorified him not as God Rom. 1.21 Page 68 Who against hope believed in hope that he might become the Father of many Nations Rom. 4.18 Page 105 Giving glory to God Ver. 20. Page 105 c. For I know that in me Ver. 7.18 that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing Page 299 But I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind Ver. 23. and bringing me into captivity to the Law of sin which is in my members Page 299 For as many as are led by the Spirit Ver. 8.14 c. Page 295 We have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Ver. 15. Abba Father Page 505 c. The Spirit it self bearing witness with our Spirits that we are the Children of God Ver. 16. Page 504 c. And of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came Ver. 9.5 who is over all God blessed for ever Page 189 If thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus Ver. 10.9 c. Page 48 But fervent in Spirit serving the Lord Ver. 12.11 Page 14 Rulers are not a terror to good works Ver. 13.3 but to evil Page 68 Attending continually upon this very thing Ver. 6. Page 68 For the Spirit of God searcheth the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2.10 Page 171 231 232 233 For what man knoweth the things of a man save the Spirit of a man which is in him 1 Cor. 2.11 Page 171 For though I preach the Gospel I have nothing to glory of 1 Cor. 9.16 for necessity is laid upon me yea woe is unto me if I preach not the Gospel Page 353 354 Wherefore Tongues are for a sign not to them that believe 1 Cor. 14.22 but to them that believe not but Prophesying serveth not for them that believe not but for them that believe Page 406 c. Therefore 1 Cor. 15.38 my Beloved Brethren be ye stedfast unmovable alwaies abounding in the Work of the Lord for asmuch as you know your labour is not in vain in the Lord Page 112 113 Not that we are sufficient of our selves to think any thing as of our selves 2 Cor. 3.5 but our sufficiency is of God Page 242 For whether we be besides our selves it is to God 2 Cor. 5.13 or whether we be sober it is for your cause Page 43 44 Having therefore these Promises 2 Cor. 7.1 let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of Flesh and Spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord Page 133 134 Your Zeal hath provoked very many 2 Cor. 9.2 Page 47 He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly 2 Cor. 9.6 and he that soweth bountifully shall reap bountifully Page 544 For the Weapons of our Warfare are not carnal 2 Cor. 10.4 but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong Holds Page 430 431 There was given to me a thorn in the flesh 2 Cor. 12.7 the Messenger of Sathan Page 492 For the Flesh lusteth against the Spirit Gal. 5.17 c. so that ye cannot do the things that ye would Page 252 269 Bear ye on anothers burdens and so fulfil the Law of Christ Gal. 6.2 Page 50 51 For he that soweth to the Spirit Gal. 6.8 c. Page 290 Which is his body Eph. 1.23 the fulness of him that filleth all in all Page 131 For this cause I bow my knee to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 3.14 15 16. Of whom the whole Family of Heaven and Earth is named That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man Page 58 59 60 That ye might being rooted and grounded in love Ver. 17 18. may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the length and breadth and depth and height c. Page 71 72 73 Let no corrupt Communication proceed out of your mouth Ver. 4.29 30. c. Grieve not the holy Spirit of God Page 12 13 304 305 Knowing whatsoever good thing any man doth Ver. 6.8 the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free Page 112 Many waxed confident by my bonds Phil. 1.14 Page 47 Work out your Salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2.12 13. for it is God that worketh in us to will and to do of his good pleasure Page 158 Who shall change our vile body Phil. 3.21 c. Page 122 123 That in all things he might have the preeminence Col. 1.18 Page 122 Quench not the Spirit 1 Thes 5.19 Page 10 11 12 God who counted me faithful 1 Tim. 1.12 putting me into the Ministry Page 35 36 I obtained mercy 1 Tim. 1.16 that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern Page 33 For the time will come when they will not endure sound Doctrine 2 Tim. 4.3 but will heap up Teachers according to their own lusts