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A60543 A patern of free grace, or, The exceeding riches of the free grace and mercy of God in Christ to believing and repenting sinners by the example of that admirable convert, or rather miraculous mirror of Gods wonderful love and mercy in saving the repenting thief on the cross : wherein is excellently handled the doctrine of true repentance, the exceeding sinfulness of sin, with the desperate danger of final impenitency, with the certainty of Salvation to repenting sinners by Christ / by Samuel Smith. Smith, Samuel, 1588-1665. 1658 (1658) Wing S4190; ESTC R25767 152,510 534

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not prosper but hee that confesseth them and forsaketh them shall finde mercy And againe 1 Io. 1.9 If we confesse our sinnes hee is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse And hence is it that we shall finde the seruants of God very frequent in this duty in the times of their humiliation and conuersion vnto God Thus Daniel confesseth his owne sinnes and the sinnes of the people Dan. 5.9 Wee haue sinned saith hee and haue committed iniquity and haue done wickedly yea we haue rebelled and haue departed from thy precepts and from thy iudgements Thus Ezra that Noble and religious Scribe Ezra 9.6 O my God I am ashamed and confounded to lift vp my eyes to thee for our iniquities are increased ouer our heads and our trespasse is gone vp to heauen So Esay the Prophet We haue all beene as an vncleane thing Esay 64.6 and all our righteousnesse is as filthy clouts and we doe all fade like a leafe and our iniquities like the winde haue taken vs away An excellent and admirable example whereof wee haue in the Prophet Dauid who when Nathan the Lords Prophet had conuinced him of his sinnes he presently falls to the confession of them 2. Sam. 12.13 I haue sinned against the Lord c. And in that Penitentiall Psalme of his Psal 51.2 penned of purpose to make knowne vnto the world that his vnfained repentance for the same he is very exact that way throughout the whole Psalme This appeares in those Conuerts wonne vnto the Church by the Ministery of the Baptist Mat. 3.6 They were baptized of Iohn in Iordane confessing their sinnes And of those Conuerts of Ephesus Act. 19.18 it is said that Many that beleeued came and confessed c. The like acknowledgement is made by Paul of his mis-led life whilest he liued in the state of a Pharisee 1. Tim. 1.13 18. I was saith he a blasphemer a persecuter and an oppressour c. And excellent to this purpose is that of the Prodigall sonne Luk. 15.18 a liuely patterne of a true Penitent and a liuely picture of a reclaimed sinner hauing runne riot a long time and by affliction at last brought to know himselfe What is his resolution but this by his confession to make satisfaction to his Father whom hee had offended Vers 21 I will go to my Father and say Father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee c. And as his resolution and purpose was so was his practice And indeed true repentance cannot bee silent when the heart is truly pricked it cannot forbeare it is like a vessell full pent with liquor if it haue not some vent it will breake it is one of the most soueraigne salues for sinne Yea Erroris medicina est confessio as an Ancient well obserues The bands of sinne are loosed when they are confessed Nothing doth more bewray a broken heart within then an open acknowledgement of sinne What led that poore Publicane to that remorsefull supplication mixed with confession God be mercifull to me a sinner Luk. 18.13 A liuely representation of the true contrition that was in his heart that he held himselfe but vile and sinfull in Gods sight And indeed as nothing can be more needfull and necessarie to testifie the inward sorrow of heart for sinne then an heartie acknowledgement of the same so there is nothing more contrary to the corrupt nature of man then in this sort to shame himselfe to giue God the praise And therefore it is a good obseruation of an Ancient Mirentur quicunque volent c. Gregor Let men admire what they please in other men I know saith he through the infirmitie of our nature that the godly finde it an harder thing to confesse sinne after it is committed then to represse it before Surely it is no small euidence of grace in the heart when a man is thrust forward readily to confesse his faults to God and vnto man as the case may require by whose aduice and prayers he may receiue comfort The reasons follow First Reas 1 acknowledgement of sin is necessarie vnto God because all sinne is done against God sinne reacheth euer vnto God himselfe whose righteous Law is violated and broken otherwise sinne could not be sinne This is acknowledged by Dauid when he saith Against thee onely haue I sinned Psal 51.4 The sinne of Dauid was the shedding of the innocent bloud of Vriah and the defiling of his wife But yet the violating and breaking of Gods most righteous Law wherein God became to be offended was it that went nearest the heart of Dauid Now if all sinne be against God it is requisite that we should make confession of the same to him Secondly without confession we haue no promise of remission of our sinnes for thus runnes the promise If we confesse our sinnes 1. Ioh. 1.9 he is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse Now as wee expect that the Lord should shew vs mercy in the pardon of our sinnes it is requisite that wee should performe those conditions which are required on our part namely to come vnto him in an humble acknowledgement of the same Thirdly acknowledgement of sinne is necessarie vnto God because it is hee onely that hath power to forgiue sinnes This truth is confessed by the Scribes and Pharisees whose iudgements howsoeuer they were corrupt in many things yet were sound in this Mar. 2.7 Who can forgiue sinnes say they but God onely Now reason would that we make confession of our sinnes onely to him that hath power to forgiue sinnes But this is onely in God therefore to him must we go to make confession of the same Fourthly confession of sinnes is necessarie in regard it is an excellent thing to glorifie God As wee haue dishonoured him by sinne by an heartie confession of the same we honour him againe for herein wee acknowledge his principall attributes namely his omniscience omnipresence power iustice mercy c. And this is the reason that Iosuah vrgeth vnto Acan Ios 7.19 My sonne I pray thee giue glory to God and confesse thy fault Where he ioynes these two together Gods glory and the confession of our faults For sinne indeed doth not serue more to the dishonour of God then doth an heartie confession of the same serue to his honour And this is the reason why Gods seruants hauing sinned haue beene content to shame themselues by confessing the same knowing indeed it would bring so much glorie to God Fifthly the conscionable performance of this duty is an excellent meanes to keepe the heart vpright with God for future times and so a notable preseruatiue against sinne For that man that hath once done his penance before God in that kinde freely penitently and heartily it will be a corasiue vnto his heart all the dayes of his life after and
due reward of our deeds q. d. Thou art greatly deceiued to thinke that because wee three do suffer punishment alike that therefore our deserts are all alike no This man hath done nothing amisse or worthy of this death for he suffereth as an innocent But we for our parts suffer righteously and by reason of our euill deeds that we haue done receiue but our deserts Behold we here againe another admirable fruit of his repentance and conuersion vnto God that he can and doth so readily and willingly subscribe vnto his deserued punishment without any manner of grudging or repining And herein also will teach all men vnto the end of the world That Gods children Doct. when once they come truly and thorowly to bee conuinced of sinne Godly submit themselues ●o Gods seuerest corrections without repining submit themselues to Gods seuerest corrections without grudging or repining This Penitent Thiefe herein may be a liuely patterne and example of the true disposition that is in euery true conuert That when they shall once come truly to see sinne they can with all readinesse submit themselues vnto Gods seuerest corrections without repining acknowledging that therein the Lord is most iust and righteous thus this Penitent here howsoeuer saith he our punishment be sharpe and shamefull bitter and cruell yet our mouthes are stopped and we haue nothing to plead for our selues For we receiue the due reward of our deeds He acknowledgeth the Lord to be iust and righteous in laying of that punishment vpon them This disposition we finde to haue been in Iob who being laid in the dust and brought full low by reason of Gods hand This is recorded to his euerlasting praise Iob 1.22 In all this did not Iob sinne nor charge God foolishly That is he did not any way question Gods iustice in dealing so seuerely with him I do not deny but that some weaknes did breake out from him that way as it doth many times in the best of Gods seruants but this was at that time when the burthen of his sorrowes did oppresse him but hee afterwards corrects his errour Iob 39.37 Once haue I spoken saith he but I will answer no more This we may see in Hezekiah who when the Prophet Isaiah had denounced the Lords iudgement against him Isa 39.8 namely that all those goodly treasures that he in the pride of his heart had shewed vnto the Embassadours of the King of Babylon should be carried away into Babylon doth hee repine and murmure against the Prophet for this tidings Doth he any way go about to excuse his fact that it was but that Courtlike entertainment fit for an Embassadour of so great a Prince or the like Surely no but hee buckels handsomely to the iudgement threatned being conscious vnto his owne sinne and saith The word of the Lord is good that thou hast spoken Excellent to this purpose is that of the Prophet Dauid when Nathan the Lords Prophet had denounced those seuerall iudgements against him and his house that the Infant conceined in adultery should die that his owne wiues should be defiled that the sword should neuer depart from his house How doth Dauid behaue himselfe in the middest of all these iudgements threatened doth hee complaine that the Lord dealt hardly with him No. But falls to the confession of his fault taking all vpon himselfe accusing himselfe and excusing the Lord Psal 51.4 Against thee onely haue I sinned and done this euill in thy sight And the reason hereof is added That thou mightest be iust when thou speakest and true when thou iudgest q. d. I dare not say that thou hast in the least respect dealt hardly with mee insomuch as I haue deserued that all these iudgements should light vpon mee Euen so at other times when hee tasted of Gods rod. Neuer childe was more submissiue to the corrections of a Father then Dauid was Memorable is that speech of his Psal 119.75 I know O Lord that thy iudgements are good and that thou of very faithfulnesse hast caused mee to be troubled To this accordeth the example of old Eli when Samuel told him 1 Sam. 3.18 That the Lord would do a thing in Israel that whosoeuer should heare thereof his eares should tingle Meaning indeed the iudgement the Lord would bring vpon him and his house how doth he behaue himselfe vnder this heauie denunciation threatned It is the Lord saith hee let him do as it pleaseth him By which answer of his we may collect how sensible he was of his own sin in his indulgent behauiour towards his sons takes the same as a iust punishment from heauen vpon the same Of this spirit no doubt sauours that of the Prodigal Luk. 15. I will go to my Father and I will say vnto him Father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee I am no more worthy to be called thy sonne Reade wee ouer the prayers of Gods Church and people at such times as Gods wrath hath broken out vpon them and his iudgements haue layne heauie vpon them Haue they not still acknowledged the Lord to bee most iust Thus Ezra in the behalfe of the people Ezra 9.10 Now our God what shall we say for wee haue forsake● thy commandements Neh. 9.33 Thus Nehemiah Surely thou art iust in all that is come vpō vs. Dan. 9.7 Thus Daniel O Lord righteousnes belongs vnto thee but vnto vs shame Yea Micah personating the whole Church and people of God in times of great affliction and sore aduersity Mich. 7.9 I wil beare with patience the wrath of the Lord because I haue sinned against him By which examples and diuers more of that kinde recorded in Gods Booke we may see the propertie of a true conuert and of an heart truly humbled forsinne it can willingly and readily take all vpon it selfe and still acquite the Lord of iniustice or hard dealing when his iudgements lie most heauie vpon them Whereas on the contrary if wee looke vpon the behauiour of wicked men when the Lord most iustly hath ouertaken them in their wickednesse wee shall heare them grudging repining and complaining as if the Lord were not iust in punishing them so seuerely Gen. 4.13 My punishment saith Cain is greater then I can beare Saul can plead for himselfe 1. Sam. 15.20 as if his punishment were not iust And so the Prophet Malachy brings in the wicked pleading against God Mal. 1.6 Wherein haue we despised thy Name or wherein haue we beene stout against him As if the Prophet had taken his ayme amisse and done them great wrong to charge them on that wise O the wickednesse that is in an impenitent heart The point is cleare and plaine the reasons briefely are First Reas 1 his word and spirit hath informed the iudgements of his seruants teaching them how to conceiue of the Lords distribution of his iudgements that are executed vpon them that the Lord therein cannot but
he wilt thou slay with the sword and rippe vp the mothers with childe and dash their children against the stones We may see this in Pharaoh Exod. 2. Mat. 2. in Herod in Haman who regarded none neither age nor sexe besides the wofull experience of the truth hereof the godly daily finde in the world Neither is this a thing to be wondred at Reas 1 for consider by what spirit such are led not by the Spirit of God which is the spirit of peace and of loue But by the spirit of Sathan 1. Pet. 5.8 who is full of malice and hunteth still after bloud going about continually seeking whom he may deuoure who is compared in the Scripture to a Lion Reu. 12. Dragon and old Serpent and a Murtherer from the beginning Now it is Sathan himselfe that worketh in the wicked he bloweth the coles and wicked men are but his Instruments to serue his turne As also in respect of the Godly themselues Reas 2 because they run not with the wicked into the same excesse of riot Esay 59.15 Whosoeuer refraineth from euill maketh himselfe a prey The very piety and holinesse of life that is to be seene in the Godly is matter for the malice of wicked men to worke vpon this bred the quarrel betwixt Cain and his Brother 1 Ioh. 3.12 Abel was more righteous then himself this stirred vp Cain agaist him Seing then that there is such an implacable hatred in the wicked against the Righteous Vse 1 Never let vs wonder then at the Churches misery nor the godlys afflictions for haue they not many and mighty enimies that plot and conspire against them Was not this foretold in the first age of the world Gen. 3.15 I will put emnitie betweene thee and the woman and betweene thy seede and her seede And was not this againe confirmed by Christ himselfe now in the last age of the world Mat. 10.34 I came not to send peace but the Sword I am come to set a man at variance against his Father and the Daughter against the Mother c. Neuer then let vs wonder at it but rather magnifie the goodnesse of our God that is pleased thus to limit and bound the malice of the wicked without whose speciall prouidence we could not liue amongst them And indeed it should teach vs to be wise as Serpents Vse 2 considering that wee liue amongst and haue to doe with such subtil and malitious enemies Vpon this very ground our Sauiour warneth thus Behold I send you foorth as Lambs amongst Wolues Mat. 10.16 bee ye therefore wise as Serpents and innocent as Doues Wisdom and Simplicitie is required of all Gods people We are to walke warily euery where and looke well vnto our selues that we be not made a prey vnto them And because our enemies are deepe in Councell Vse 3 prudent in their enterprises wary in their proceedings politique in preuenting and suddaine in the execution of their designes It shall be our wisdom to fly still vnto God and by earnest prayer desire him to deliuer vs from wicked and vnreasonable men 2 Thes 3.2 All our hope and confidence must be in him 2 Sam. 24.13.14 and let vs pray with David that the Lord would rather take vs into his owne hand to correct vs and not suffer vs to fall into the hands of men for with him there is mercy Ps 103.14 Hee remembreth whereof we be made he considereth that wee are but dust And indeed in this hath the Lord heard and answered his people that howsoeuer for our sins we haue tasted of the Lords Rod by Famine Pestilence strange diseases vnseasonable weather c. Yet the Lord hath not made vs a prey to malitious and wicked men whose very mercies are cruel and whose insatiable thirst is for the blood of the Saints which if the Lord should doe at any time which wee may iustly feare by reason of our sins wee shall then be brought to see a manifest difference betwixt the chastisments of a mercifull God and louing Father and the bloody cruelties of mercilesse men Hitherto of the malice of the Iewes For the second Christ an Innocent suffereth here as a Nocent and dyeth with two grand Malefactors and that a shamefull ignominious and reprochfull Death Note we hence That it may be the portion of faithfull men Doct. 2 Godly men many times suffer as malefactors yea the best Christians to suffer as Malefactors heere is Christ Numbred with Transgressors crucified with two Theeues 1 Reg. 22.27 Ier. 32.2 Gen. 39. 2 Tim. 1.16 So is Micha sent to the prison Ieremy to the Dungeon Daniel to the den Ioseph punished as an Adulterer Paul imprisoned for preaching the Gospel and the Baptist beheaded Mar. 6.27 yea the better the Christian the more obnoxious and liable to wrongs it must needs be so First Reas 1 in regard of that implacable rage and malice that the wicked beare against the Godly For it was through the enuie of the people that Christ was put to death Mat. 27.18 for they had no iust accusation against Christ How often doth Christ cleare his innocency what euill haue I done and which of you can reproue me of sin Secondly Reas 2 in the Iudgement of the men of the world the godly are esteemed naught measuring others by themselues Thus dealt they with Christ We haue found this man a pestilent Fellow Luk 23.2 and an enemy to Caesar But the maine ground hereof is this Reas 3 because the life and conversation of the Godly is not after the manner of the world and their wise their sober and holy life seemes to vpbraid and condemne the euill practises of the world Vse 1 Which serues first to condemne that Tenet of the Church of Rome who wil allow no Church but such a Church as is florishing and visible and measure the truth of it by the florishing light and reputation of Ecclesiasticall order as if Christ hath changed his cognisance the Crosse and the taking vp of the Crosse to the Imperious lifting vp of the Scepter or the Crosiar now more dreadfull then the Scepter Secondly Vse 2 let this admonish vs to bee wary how wee censure others seeing the most innocent haue suffered neither by mens ends heere are wee to iudge of mens estates heereafter Many say of the Godly in time of afflictiō as the Iewes did of Christ He trusted in God let him deliuer him Let vs see what his religion and forwardnesse will now auaile him But thus dealeth the Lord many times with the best Christian whilest a wicked man is suffered to run on to destruction Thirdly Vse 3 if thou be a Christian and beest falsly accused euen of most heinous crimes or spitefully intreated with scofs and reproaches esteemed a malefactor yea and suffer for the same this may not be grieuous vnto vs in asmuch as the same befell our Lord Iesus Christ himselfe in a worse
ayre hindering and restraining them but the nearer they come to their place the earth the swifter they moue So sinne moues slowly at the first by reason it is restrained by feare or shame but the nearer it brings the sinner to the graue or to hell the swifter it moues and the more hardly restrained it comes with such a violent swinge it is hardly staid as heere in this man who was most wicked when hee was nearest his end This truth may further be cleared by diuers examples in the booke of God not only in the wicked but also in the godly themselues who haue made a fearefull progresse in sin when once they began to fall from God thus was it with Eua when Sathan had once preuailed with her Gen. 3. to lend an care vnto his charmes First she saw the fruite and set open her eyes the casements of her soule by the which the deuill wound himselfe into her heart Secondly she desired Thirdly tooke of it Fourthly she eate thereof Still the further the worse Thus was it with Cain Pharaoh Saul Iudas c. If we examine their sinnes and fallings away from God wee shall sinde that all was not vpon a suddaine neither did Sathan set vpon them with his noysom temptations all at the first But brought them on by degrees according to that of the Prophet Ier. 9.3 they bend their tongs like their bow to lyes but they are not valiant for the truth vpon the earth for they proceed from euill to euill and they know not me saith the Lord. Againe the Lord complaining of his people that they made not the right vse of their afflictions saith Why should ye bee stricken any more Esay 1.5 ye will revolt more and more Yea this is true not only in the wicked but euen in the godly themselues as wee may see in Ionas the Lords Prophet Ionas 1. In Dauid who fell from one sin to another and the last the worst Mot. 26.70 Of Peter that from a bare deniall of Christ fell to curse and to sweare that hee knew not Christ Besides I dare say that he is but a titular Christian that finds not this truth in some degree or other by wofull experience in himselfe And this thing so comes to passe First Reas 1 in regard of Sathan who doth commonly so fortifie what hold soeuer hee winneth to himselfe that whensoeuer he findeth the heart of a sinner swept and garnished Luk 11. by euill thoughts and sinfull imaginations fit to entertaine Sathan Sathan will then bring with him seauen spirits worse then himselfe and these will enter in and dwell there and so the later end of that man will be worse then the first Secondly in regard of sin it selfe the which will fret daily mo●e and more as the Apostle saith as doth a Canker 2 Pet. 2.17 which we see infecteth one member after another vntill at last it hath won the whole body our Sauiour compareth it to a peece of leven which is of a diffusing nature that will sower the whole lump so is it with sin when it shall once be entertained it is like a shamelesse Guest it will grow impudent and will not easily be shaken off Thirdly in regard of the sinner himselfe who hauing often made shipwrack of faith and of a good conscience the mouth of conscience at last comes to bee stopped that the sinner runs on in sin without controlement It is the mercy of God vnto his people that whensoeuer they sin against him they may haue a monitor within them that will giue them no peace in sin That sin becomes not sweete in their mouths as Iob speaketh of the wicked But when a man shall relish sin and goe on in a licencious course without check of conscience or any controlement such a one is not far from distruction And last of all in regard of God himselfe who being often and still and againe prouoked through the contempt of grace offered and through obstinacy willfulnesse in sinning is prouoked at last to cast off the sinner and to striue no more with him This was the iudgment the Lord threatned against the sinful world in the days of Noah My spirit shal no more strine with mans spirit Gen 6. Of all the iudgmēts the most fearfulest whē the Lord shal cast of a sinner his care lay the raines in the neck like a father whose son hath run riot lōg by no means wil be reclaimed This is a sure fore-runner of distruction O then happy and thrice happy is he that sinneth least next he that returneth home soonest but most wofull is the ●state of him that comes once to be hardned in sinne that with Ieroboam hath sold himselfe to worke wickednesse in the sight of the Lord. Seeing then that wee see thus the cursed nature of sinne Vse 1 and the miserable condition of the wicked that when they begin once to fall away from God they haue no stay of themselues but proceed from euill to worse and from one degree of sinne vnto another vntill at last there be no remedie Oh how may this awaken euery wicked and vngodly man and woman to consider that when a man beginneth once to leaue God God leaueth him and when God once forsaketh a man the deuill takes possession of the heart of such a one This appeares in Cain Pharaoh Saul Iudas c. if we should trace these mens fallings off from God step by steppe wee shall see from what small beginnings sinne tooke root in them and being so entertained increased in them daily more and more God more and more forsaking them their corruptions daily more and more increasing and at last breaking out into open rebellion against God and open desperation against their owne souls Oh the misery of a sinner thus forsaken of God! Oh the misery of that soule that once comes to bee remorslesse in sinne Poore soules these are in misery and see it not are vnder Gods wrath and regard it not Lay before these their misery in regard of sinne beseech them with teares exhort them by the tender mercies of God threaten against them the iudgements of the Law offer vnto them the promises of the Gospell intreat them by the death of Christ and the warmest bloud that issued from his blessed side All these things wil no way affect them nor any whit moue them but as Iob speaketh of the Leuintha● His heart is harder then the neather milstone that is the state of those whom God hath once left to hardnesse of heart and giuen vp to reprobatc sense whose heart doth not quake and tremble to consider these things Secondly the consideration hereof should admonish euery man and euery woman and euery mothers childe amongst vs to take heed of sinne and to dread it as we would dread a Serpent or a Cockatrice and that in regard of the deceitfulnesse of sinne which if it haue any entertainment it will waite on
come When wee shall labour to bee instruments to inlarge that kingdome of the Lord Iesus and bring others from sinne to God otherwise indeed wee doe but mocke God like as if a husbandman should pray Giue vs this day our daily bread and neuer set his hand to the plough nor cast his seede into the ground Againe what a blessed thing is it to helpe to couer sinne yea a multitude of sinnes which those shall doe that are any wayes a meanes to bring others to the sight of their sinnes and to repentance for the same for alas such is the policy of Sathan and such is the corruption of euery mans heart by nature that they seeke by all meanes possible to couer their sinnes But how euen as Adam his nakednesse with fig-leaues that can neuer shelter them from Gods wrath So euery man seeketh something or other to couer his sinnes but the best way to haue sinne couered is first to vncouer them Ier. 31.18 After I was conuerted I smote vpon my thigh saith Ephraim Psal 51.3 so Dauid My sins are euer before mee and what followed Against thee onely haue I sinned Happy man Nathan that did so vncouer sinne that GOD might couer them Thirdly euery Christian must make conscience of this duty to stop others in a course of sinne in regard of himselfe lest hee bring vpon his owne head the sinnes of other men Now euery man hath enough to answer for of his owne though hee become not guiltie of other mens sinnes But how may a man be charged with the sins of others Quest This is done three wayes in Heart Word Deede First in heart Answ How many wayes a man becomes guilty of the sins of other men and that three wayes First when though hee neither commit the euill himselfe nor approue of the same being committed by others yet if hee mourne not in his heart for the same sinne In heart to see how God is dishonoured and how greatly the soule of the offender is indangered hee becomes guiltie of this sinne This was the fault of the Corinthians for the which Paul reproues them who when they saw the incestuous person who had sinned so fouly they sorrowed not nor grieued as they ought for that sinne Psal 119.136 A contrary example we haue in Dauid My eyes gush out with water because men keepe not thy law and of righteous Lot whose righteous soule was grieued at the abhominations of the filthy Sodomites Secondly when though a man neither doth or saith any euill himselfe yet secretly in his heart approueth of the cuill of another This was Pauls sinne before his conuersion hee cast no stone at Stephen himselfe yet he consented vnto his death as himselfe confessed Acts 7.58 Acts 22.20 and held the cloathes of them that did stone him and in this regard was guiltie of his death Thirdly by conniuence silence or indulgence when a man shall suffer sinne and the sinner to passe without reproofe And thus was Eli faultie in not punishing his sonnes for which sinne the Lord punished him And thus offendeth the Minister in not reprouing the sinnes of those ouer whom the Lord hath set him and so likewise the Magistrate in not punishing offenders vnder him Yea Eze. 3.17 and this is the sinne of all such as can with patience heare the Lord dishonoured his Name blasphemed his Sabbaths prophaned and all manner of impiety committed Act. 18.15 16. without any reproofe at all like vnto Gallio will not trouble themselues about such things whereas the Lord doth require this at the hands of euery Christian that haue themselues obtained mercy by admonition exhortation reprehension and by all other helps and meanes to shew mercy to others to stoppe them in the course of sinne Secondly In word a man may be guiltie of the sinnes of other men in word and that three wayes First 2 Sam. 11.15 Mar. 6.29 by counselling another to euill and thus became Dauid a murtherer by the letter he sent vnto Ioab in the matter of Vrich and thus the mother of the Damsell became guiltie of the Baptists death by councelling her daughter to require his head Secondly by defending of sin or iustifying the euill of another and thus are many Lawyers partakers of the euill of their clients who for lucre sake Luk. 11.40 will speake good of euill and iustifie the wicked for a reward in which regard it were well with them they were as lame of their tongues as Mephibosheth of his legs Esay 5.20 Thirdly by applauding another in euill and soothing them vp in their sinnes against whom there is a curse gone out from God Eze. 13.18 Woe vnto them that sow pillowes vnder mens arme-holes And lastly a man becomes guilty of other mens sinnes In Deed. in Deed and that two wayes First when albeit they be not the immediate instrument in sin yet haue a part and share in the euill done and thus all receiuers of such goods as they know or suspect to be stolne are partakers with theeues in their sinne and so by the law are iudged Secondly Psal 50.21 when a man shall familiarly conuerse with such as are knowne to bee notoriously wicked such receiue no small incouragement to goe on in their sinfull course when notwithstanding all their abhominations they are not reiected of others But the Lord saith vnto the Prophet Obiect 1 Ezek. 3.17 Sonne of man I haue made thee a watchman and thou shalt warne the people from me It seemes there that it is peculiar vnto the office of the Minister to admonish and reproue others And we know it is the exhortation of the Apostle Let euery man abide in the same calling wherein he was called Heb. 13.17 And againe They watch for your soules as they that must giue account vnto God What then haue priuate men to do with reprouing others for sinne To teach and preach publikely in the Church is the peculiar office of the Minister Resp and those whom the Lord hath fitted for that worke but this doth no whit hinder priuate exhortation and admonition of priuate men as God shall offer occasion yea this libertie they haue to speake euen to their Minister himselfe in priuate as Paul speaketh vnto the Golossians Say ye to Archippus take heed to thy Ministery to fulfill it But is euery man to be rebuked at all times that deserueth rebuke Quest No Rebuke not a scorner Answ saith Solomon or a drunkard when the wine is in his head 1. Sam. 25. Abigal would not tell Nabal of his drunkennesse then euery time is not sit a man must obserue the fittest time and watch his opportunity Now this impenitent Thiefe was a dying this was a fit time for his fellow to reproue him and for him to receiue a rebuke or else neuer There is a time for all things Eccl. 2. saith Solomon and a word spoken in due time is like an
make him to dread those sins that bring such a taile of sorrow with them in the end Sixthly by our acknowledgement of sinne we cleare the Lords iustice and iustisie his Maiestie in punishing vs for the same Thus Dauid is led vnto this duty to make an hearty confession of his sinnes Psal 51.4 That thou saith he maist be iustified in thy sayings and true when thou iudgest Nehe. 1.7 Dan. 9.5 Ezra 9.6 This is cleare likewise in those excellent prayers of Nehemiah Daniel Ezra c. And last of all by recounting duely our sinnes and making due acknowledgement of the same our hearts are the better fitted for prayer and for all holy duties publicke and priuate this makes vs earnest and affectionate in the suites we put vp to God for neuer is a poore sinner more earnest in his requests for mercy then when hee is most sensible of his owne miserie and in the sence thereof hath beene led to an heartie acknowledgement of the same This makes men importunate suters Dan. 9.19 Ezra 9.6 Nehe. 1.11 Mat. 15. such as will haue no nay as it appeares in Daniel Ezra Dauid the Cananitish woman and the like This serues first of all to reproue diuers abuses about the performance of this duty of confession of sinnes Vse 1 amongst which the corruption crept into the Church of Rome is not the least vrging that their Auricular confession of sinnes in the eares of the Priest and that vpon paine of damnation Radford his Directory pag. 114. for these are their own words Euery one vnder the paine of damnation is bound to confesse to a lawfull Priest his sinne A doctrine that hath not one Scripture in all the booke of God vrging the necessitie of such a confession Nay contrarily to many a one many a time did our Sauiour giue absolution of sinne where there was no particular confession thereof made vnto him as that man in the Gospell that was sicke of the palsie vpon Christs sight of his faith he pronounced thus Mat. 9.2 Sonne thy sinnes be forgiuen thee And so to penitent Mary testifying her repentance for sinne by her abundant teares Ioh. 7. our Sauiour pronounced Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee But this is a subtile net which our Aduersaries like cunning Fishers of men haue framed to catch mens goods to inrich themselues to discouer mens secrets euen in the Councels of Princes and for the Priest to know where to haue one for his turne But doth not Saint Iames say Obiect Iam. 5.18 Confesse your faults one to another This is the Scripture I confesse that is principally vrged by our Aduersaries Answ to warrant their doctrine of Auricular confession But by this Scripture the Priest is bound as straightly to shriue himselfe to the penitent as the penitent to the Priest for S. Iames requires it as a mutuall duty Indeed that there is a lawfull and commendable duty to bee performed amongst Christians in confessing of their faults one to another was neuer denyed by vs it is that wee often call vpon and prouoke men vnto But yet in these two cases especially First Cases of priuate confession in priuate and personall iniuries and wrongs done one to another it is requisite that wee should come and confesse our faults one to another and to seeke forgiuenesse and to labour a reconciliation Secondly in case of trouble of conscience to the end wee may not sink vnder the burthen thereof or any way giue aduantage vnto Sathan to haue the greater power ouer vs it is an excellent thing to disburthen our soules by confession of our particular sinnes vnto some godly Minister or some faithfull Christian that is knowne to be a man of wisedome and conscience able to minister comfort in these cases it is a most commendable dutie But we hold it not as a matter of absolute necessitie to confesse vnto men as the Church of Rome doth neither do we tye this duty to the Priests eare but hold that it may bee performed also to a faithfull Christian albeit but a priuate man who is able to minister a word of comfort and to beare anothers burthen in loue Secondly this shewes how farre such men are from true repentance that are strangers vnto this dutie of Confession Faine they would haue God to pardon their sinnes but they yet neuer framed any Inditement against themselues faine they would escape the iudgement of God but they cannot endure to iudge themselues And of these there are foure sorts First such as are ignorant of their owne estates and of their owne miserie by reason of sinne these men rest with this generall acknowledgement of sinne We are all sinners And God forgiue vs there is none without sinne But yet they neuer came truly to see any one sinne how sinne hath made them guilty of Gods wrath and vengeance and without repentance makes them liable vnto euerlasting damnation this knowledge of sinne whilest they are ignorant of there can bee no true ioy nor heartie acknowledgement of sinne and so no hope of pardon It is the knowledge of the Word we know that brings men to the sight of their sinnes to an hearty acknowledgement of the same to God and teacheth them how to pray for the pardon of the same which whilest men remaine ignorant of it is impossible to performe these duties aright Secondly such as hide their sinnes and conceale them yea if they be told of them will outface them like Gehezi 2 Reg. 5.25 Acts 5.3 who being questioned of his Master Thy Seruant went no whither saith he and this was the behauiour of Ananias and Saphira who rather then they would glorifie God by confessing their fault sinned yet more and more by lying vnto the holy Ghost We haue too many of such amongst vs that vnlesse you bee able to testifie vpon proofe will hardly be brought to confesse any thing wherein the policy of Sathan doth notably appeare to take away shame where it should be in the committing of sinne and to put it where it should not be in the confession of the same Whereas a true confessor will bee his owne greatest enemie racking his sinne to the vtmost pin that God may haue the glory and the sinner his deserued shame Thirdly those that Pharisaically stand vpon their owne righteousnesse and haue got a whorish forehead to defend their sins this is that corruption wee haue drawne from our first Parents How did Adam post off the matter to his Wife when the Lord expostulated the matter with him Gen. 3.12.13 The woman saith he whom thou gauest me she gaue me of the fruit and I did eate And the woman she laid the blame vpon the Serpent and thus sinne is poasted off from one to another Thus is it now no sinne can be so vile but men are ready to plead for it and therein hold a buckler ouer Sathans head for feare he should receiue a blow Drunkennesse say they is
bee iust Hee rewardeth euery man according to his works Psal 62.12 saith the Psalmist God doth not proceed against any in iudgement vpon malice or vpon suspition but vpon iust ground before whom all things are open and naked And hence is it that the Lord pleads this his integritie and iustice against the people of Israel Are not my wayes equall Eze. 18.2 and are not your wayes vnequall Secondly the conscience of their owne sinne causeth them to iustifie the Lord and to accuse themselues Psal 39.9 I was dumbe saith Dauid and opened not my mouth because thou didst it And againe My soule keepeth silence vnto God The godly cannot but know that they are their sinnes that haue prouoked God to anger and prouoked him to displcasure Lam. 3.39 Man suffereth for his sinne And the consideration hereof doth humble them and cause them to beare with patience the Lords corrections Seeing then in this Penitent Thiefe acknowledging that his punishment to be so iust Vse 1 we haue beene taught the propertie of a true Conuert namely to submit to Gods seuerest corrections without grudging or repining Hereby then we may take good triall of the integritie of our owne hearts and of the truth of our owne repentance Hath the hand of God beene vpon vs at any time in any kinde whether on our bodies by long and tedious sicknesse or any other misery on our goods names estates of what kinde soeuer how haue we behaued our selues and beene affected vnder the same Corrupt nature in this case will be ready to stand vpon tearmes of iustification as if wee were hardly dealt withall But a sanctified spirit and gratious heart can willingly stoope vnto God Isa 39.8 and say with Hezekiah The word of the Lord is good which thou hast spoken Neh. 9.33 And with good Nehemiah Lord thou art iust in all that is come vpon vs. If in times of affliction and aduersitie wee haue behaued our selues in this sort This is a good testimonie vnto our owne hearts of the true humiliation and conuersion of the same vnto God But if on the contrary part vpon triall had we finde that we were neuer yet so sensible of our sinnes nor apprehensiue of our misery to know and acknowledge that we haue deserued at Gods hand his sharpest plagues and seuerest corrections so that in the middest of them all wee could say Lam. 3.39 It is the Lords mercy we are not consumed We can haue no sound comfort in our soules that the true worke of grace conuersion is wrought in vs. Secondly this may teach vs in all our afflictions to labour with our selues to see that sinne is the cause thereof and to learne to profit thereby to amendment of life for such men are farre enough from repentance and true conuersion which goe on sleepily in a course of life and are not humbled when the Lord correcteth And last of all wee are taught here euen in our sharpest afflictions still to iustifie God and to acknowledge that he is euer iust in his iudgements before whom the most holy that are cannot be innocent But this man hath done nothing amisse Text. In these words wee haue the third proofe that manifesteth the truth of this Penitents conuersion Iustifieth Christs innocency and that is his iustifying of Christs innocency This man hath done nothing amisse 5 Argument A● innocer 〈◊〉 tia Christi And this is that fift and last Argument that hee vseth to his fellow to disswade him from reproaching of Christ and so to stop him in his course of sin and this is taken from Christs innocency Q.d. Wretched man that thou art thinkest thou that because this man suffereth the like punishment with thee and me that therefore his cause was alike no Wee are iustly punished The most righteous God hath now iustly ouertaken vs in our sinfull and wretched course of life and now wee reape but the iust reward of our owne workes But this man what euill hath he done he suffereth as an innocent he hath done nothing worthy this cursed death And herein as before we see the admirable fruit of his faith and repentance that now at this time when all mocked Christ Pilate condemneth him Iudas betrayeth him the Disciples forsake him and Peter denyeth him that now at this time he should stick thus to Christ and acknowledge his Deity in the lowest degree of his humiliation this was the fruit of an admirable faith indeed whose example may commend vnto all men a most necessary duty That euery faithfull Christian should bee ready at all times to speake for Christ Doct A true Christian must at all times speake for Christ to stand vp in the defence of the truth and not to suffer his name to bee blasphemed nor his word or truth to be dishonoured And surely the circumstance of time makes much for the commendations of the faith of this man that now that Christ was so vilified contemned despised put to this cruell shamefull ignominious and reproachfull death that in this so low a degree of his humiliation he should acknowledge his God-head and stand vp in the defence thereof This must needs be an admirable fruit of a singular faith This made much for the commendations of the Church of Pergamus that shee held fast Christs Name and denyed not the faith Reu. 2.12.13 Euen where Sathan had his throne So when religion is euery where despised then to loue it with Dauid is a blessing of blessings with Noah to bee vpright and of good conuersation when all flesh had corrupted their wayes Gen. 6. this was praise-worthy with God when idolatry and all manner of superstition and prophanenesse doth abound is maintained graced countenanced then to keepe vp the pure worship of God with Eliah where there could not be found that had not bowed the knee to Baal this must needs shew admirable fortitude Thus must all Gods people doe confesse and professe Christ not onely in prosperous times and in times of prosperity whilest religion is graced and countenanced by authoritie but euen at such times also when it seemeth to be most dangerous It is an easie matter to professe the Gospell in prosperous times whilest wee haue winde and tide with vs but then is the truth of our profession manifested in times of aduersitie The field proueth the Souldier the Marriners skill is best seene in a tempest so is the truth of a Christian profession in the times of the hottest persecution Mat. 24. And hence is it that our Sauiour doth acquaint his Disciples aforehand of those troubles that should happen vnto them to the end they should not giue backe but confesse him to the end And how resolute the Apostles were this way we may see afterwards who being conuented before the Councell and commanded to Preach no more in the name of Iesus answered thus Whether it bee right in the sight of God Acts 4.18.19 to
the same after this life sauoureth of an opinion that it is either a thing most easie or a thing indifferent to be saued For the things of this life wee see the excessiue care the wonderfull labour and paines that men take early and late by Sea and by Land putting their bodies many times to that labour they would not willingly put their beast vnto and all for fleeting and transitorie things that will not that cannot profit in the euill day which caused the Prophet to complaine thus Wherefore do ye lay out your siluer Isa 55.2 and not for bread and your strength and not being satisfied Who can sufficiently bewaile this madnes and cry downe this follie The cares of this life like Pharaohs leane kine Gen. 41.10 hath deuoured the care of heauen Such men can neuer lift vp their mindes vnto heauen that account the earth and earthly things their chiefest Treasure giue them enough of this world and let him that will take the world to come None are farther out of the way nor destitute of true wisedome then those men are What are they better then fooles that preferre a peece of rotten wood that shineth in the night before the finest gold of Ophyr Oh let vs take heed lest while wee condemne this as madnesse and folly in other men we proue not our selues the greatest fooles Secondly this may serue to admonish euery one in the feare of God that with this godly Penitent wee make sure worke for a better life There is nothing concerneth a Christian more then this to get good assurance vnto his owne soule that he shall bee saued at last Wee dwell here in houses of clay and our eyes on euery side of vs do behold the vncertaintie of all earthly things Why then should our thoughts be so taken vp for these fraile bodies of ours which are but slaues to death so as in the meane time we neglect our pretious soules which haue an euerlasting being why should we exalt the body so high that must lye so low and moulder to dust and ashes die and rot in the graue and make no reckoning of our soules that liue for euer wherein we may be truly blessed indeed O did wee know the consequence of this one thing and how much it concerneth vs to seeke the eternall wellfare of our soules as Christ said to the Samaritanish woman Ioh. 4.10 If thou knewest the gifts of God we would come vnto the Ministers of God with that question of the trembling Iewes and perplexed Iaylor Sirs Act. 16.30 what must we do to be saued What comfort can a man take in any thing that wants comfort in this This is that one thing that is so necessary this is that good part that shall not be taken from vs. But it will bee said Obiect Wherefore take you so much paines to perswade to bee saued who is there so vile sinfull or wicked that would not be saued Num. 23.10 Did not Balaam desire to die the death of the righteous And doth not our Sauiour tell vs of many that shall say Lord Lord open vnto vs Mat. 7.21 I answer it is most true Resp none so desperately wretched and sinfull but would willingly go to heauen escape Gods wrath and be saued at last But these light wishes and desires may be in the wicked as well as in the godly in those that shall perish euerlastingly as well as in those that shall be saued at last And therefore it will bee requisite to obserue the difference betwixt the wishes of the wicked and the desires of the godly in this weightie point of saluation First The difference betwixt the godly and the wicked in their desiring saluation this proceeds not from the like ground in these two sorts of men In all Gods children that shall be saued in the end this desire of theirs springs from a true sence and feeling of their owne wretchednes and misery through sinne that he is the child of wrath and firebrand of hell by nature lies vnder Gods wrath and is in danger of eternall destruction The thoughts of this his present miserie and fearefull condition by nature sets him on worke to seeke deliuery And in reason it must be so for vnto a condemned person that lookes euery houre to bee executed the Princes pardon must needs bee most acceptable yea he would preferre that aboue all the world besides So is it with a poore sinner once throughly conuicted in his conscience for sinne he can prize the fauour of God in Iesus Christ in the pardon of the same more then all the world besides Whereas the Person that is full despiseth the honey combe Pro. 27.7 And this is the estate of naturall men they are not sensible of their owne spirituall miserie by reason of sinne but are Frozen vpon the dregs Zeph. 1.12 Deut. 29.19 Reu. 3.17 blesse themselues in their owne hearts and know not that they are miserable and poore and blinde and naked And hence is it that the desires of such men are cold and sleight in comparison of the other that are sensible of their misery by reason of sinne Secondly the desire of Gods people of life and saluation as it proceeds from a good ground and therefore earnest So it is euer ioyned with the vse of the means that God hath appointed for the attaining of eternall saluation such as are the Ministery of the Word the reuerend vse of the Sacrament prayer c. Whereas of the wicked that of Solomon is most true Pro 13.4 The sluggard lusteth but his soule hath naught And againe The desire of the slothfull stayeth him for his hands refuse to worke Thirdly howsoeuer a wicked man may desire heauen eternall life and saluation yet there is euer something that he preferreth before this The young man in the Gospell that came to Christ saying Good Master what shall I do to inherite eternall life shewed that hee wished well to heauen and the saluation of his soule But being required by Christ to sell all that hee had and to giue to the poore and to follow Christ Mat. 19. the Text saith He went away sorrowfull Which shewed plainly that hee loued his wealth better Whereas the desire of the godly is such as that they preferre eternall life and the saluation of their soules aboue all things in the world besides So Dauid Many say who shall shew vs any good But Lord grant mee thy countenance thy fauour and grace Where Dauid opposeth his desire against the desire of worldlings and sheweth that howsoeuer worldly men desire chiefely worldly things hee for his part did chiefly desire Gods countenance fauour and grace in the pardon of his sinnes aboue all the world besides And indeed vnto such doth the promise of eternall life belong and appertaine for so saith the Lord Ier. 29.13 Ye shall seeke me and finde me because ye shall seeke me with your whole heart Fourthly
shall bee perfected Secondly this is the time in this life of a Christians warfare where wee are to combate with sinne Sathan and the world Now as it was said Let not him that putteth on his Armour reioyce but him that putteth it off for this battell endeth not vntill death come when then we shal be out of the Gun-shot of Sathans temptations and set free from all the enemies of our peace Besides the Lord will haue the graces in the hearts of his seruants first exercised and made manifest to the praise of his owne Name and that in this life before he crowne them with glory hereafter Seeing then that the happinesse of a Christian is not to be looked for here Vse 1 but hereafter in the kingdome of heauen This may teach vs in the first place to vse the world as if we vsed it not and not to pitch our Tabernacle here but rather to resolue that heauen is our portion and our inheritance Heb. 11.13 and therefore as Strangers and Pilgrims we should seek and prouide for an abiding City Secondly seeing our chiefest happinesse and comfort is not to be looked for here nor in any sublunary thing vnder the Sunne but reserued for vs in Gods kingdome This should teach vs to lift vp our hearts thither Col. 3.2 and to set our affections on heauenly things and not on things below nothing can more dishonour a Christian then this to make the world his chiefest study and care whereas the Lord hath reserued vs for a more durable and lasting inheritance When thou commest into thy kingdome Text. This Penitent Thiefe albeit truely humbled for his sinnes and obtayning mercy at Christs hands in the pardon of them as we shall see hereafter yet is not freed from his remporall punishment but suffereth with Christ And herein will teach vs That release from temporall afflictions doth not alwayes follow true repentance Doct. 2 Release from temporall afflictions doth not al wayes follow true repentāce but many are punished temporally that are not condemned eternally Wee may see this in that manner of the Lords dealing with Adam and Eue after they had sinned God made with them a couenant that The Seed of the woman should bruse the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 which was a cleare promise and prophecie of Christ by whom he was againe to bee restored into fauour Yet notwithstanding Cursed bee the earth for thy sake And In sorrow shalt thou bring forth c. This we may see in Moses Deu 34.5.10 an excellent seruant of God and so often stiled in Scripture a man highly in Gods fauour to whom God spake face to face a Ruler and Sauiour vnto his people Israel Yet for his sinne the Lord would not suffer him to go into the land of Canaan I do not doubt of the saluation of Miriam the sister of Moses that repined against Moses because she was no Prophetesse or at least in that authoritie as Moses himselfe was yet God stroke her with the Leprosie Though the Lord pardoned the sinne of Dauid vpon his true repentance 2. Sam. 12.10.11 yet the sword is sent against his house and his owne wiues are defiled We may see this in the Israelites in their iourneying towards the Land of Canaan for whose sinne of murmuring against Moses and Aaron Psal 90. the Lord brought heauie iudgements vpon them vntill they were almost wasted and consumed And thus dealt the Lord with the Church of Corinth for their want of their godly preparation in comming to the Lords Table the Apostle tels them 1 Cor. 11.30 For this cause some are sicke and some are weake and some are fallen asleepe And it must needs be thus First Reas 1 the Lord though he do pardon the sinnes of his children doth oftentimes chastice them afterwards for the same that hereby he may preuent the like sinnes in time to come and by the bitternesse of affliction may moue them to hate those sinnes which otherwise vnto their corrupt nature would haue beene sweet and pleasant And this no doubt was one reason wherefore the Lord layed his corrections so sharply vpon Dauid Hezekiah Manasses c. that they might for future times keepe the better watch ouer their owne hearts and ouer their owne wayes since sinne brings with it more bitternesse at last then sweetnesse at first and herein preuents more heauie iudgements which otherwise they would draw vpon themselues Secondly as in respect of the godly themselues when they sin against God God will visit their iniquities with the rod and their sinnes with scourges so also in respect of others the Lord will make them exemplarie vnto others to terrifie them from sinning against him How many in the world haue receiued incouragement to commit sinne by Dauids example Noah Peter c. and yet the Lord did sharply and seuerely correct them How much more would they bee incouraged by their examples if the Lord had any whit spared them therein The consideration whereof Vse 1 should make vs carefull by all meanes possible to auoid sinne that brings with it such miserie here if not for feare of eternall torments which I confesse all the godly are freed from through the Lord Iesus Christ yet at least for feare of temporall afflictions and chastisements for sinne which the Lord many times doth bring vpon his seruants in this life sinning against him which haue in them more bitternesse at last then pleasure at first Secondly this may teach vs to take heed how we censure others when Gods hand is vpon them for so may Gods Church and the dearest of his seruants seeme manie times to bee most miserable Who euer had such a load of sorrowes and afflictions layed vpon them as Christ himselfe had Doth not Hezekiah complaine that the Lord brused his bones like a Lion Esay 53. And Iob likewise that the Lord set him as a marke to shoot at and that the venome of the arrowes of the Almightie had drunke vp his spirits And so likewise for the Church of God how many patheticall complaints doth it put vp in times of miserie as in the whole booke of the Lamentation and elsewhere of whom it is said Thou feedest them with the bread of teares Psal 80.5 and giuest them teares to drinke in great measure And againe in what a miserable condition was the Church in when the Prophet complaineth of it thus Psal 29.2 The dead bodies of thy servants haue they giuen to bee meat vnto the fowls of the heauen and the flesh of thy Saints vnto the beasts of the earth Their bloud haue they shed like water c. and yet notwithstanding precious in Gods account Hitherto of the Penitent his request vnto Christ Christs answer followeth VERSE 43. And Iesus said vnto him Text. Verily I say vnto thee To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise HItherto of the Penitents Petition Now followeth Christs answer Verily I say vnto thee c.
saluation is meere presumption and no true assurance Thou shalt be with me Text. The next thing wee are to obserue To whom is the person to whom the promise is mad and that is the Penitent that had confessed a good confession and had giuen so good testimony of his faith in Christ acknowledging his deitie at this time when all the world despised him and resting on him alone for life and saluation to him is the promise made Thou shalt be with me Whence we may note first of all Doct. 1 The prayers of the godly very effectuall with God The wonderfull force of the prayers of the godly how powerfull and effectuall the same are with God Such as lay a good foundation in humiliation for sin and haue laboured by true repentance their reconciliation with the Almightie these are they that preuaile most of all with God in prayer See we this in the example of this poore Penitent who hauing giuen good testimonie of his true repentance and conuersion vnto God how powerfull is he in prayer what a gratious answer doth the Lord giue vnto him Verily thou shalt bee with me The best way to haue our wills satisfied and our requests granted is to be godly for to such is the promise made God is neare to all that call vpon him Psal 145.18.19 yea to all that call vpon him in truth Hee will fulfill the desires of those that feare him he also will heare their cry and will helpe them We may see this in the Lords mercifull dealing with the people of Israel who being sore oppressed by the Canaanites who tooke of them prisoners they humbled themselues and besought the Lord and the Text saith Num. 21.3 The Lord heard the voyce of Israel Yea the Lord to testifie that his readie disposition to heare and to grant the prayers of his seruants declareth by his Prophet saying Before they call I will answer Isa 65.24 and whilest they speake I will heare Thus Dauid Psal 120.1 I called vpon the Lord in trouble and he heard me The faithfull being suters vnto God are alwayes sure of good successe yea many times aboue that they aske or thinke as wee shall see hereafter in this Penitent that the Angell telleth Cornelius a godly man Act. 10.4 that his praiers were heard Yea the more Gods people can get their hearts to be broken and humbled in the sence of their sinnes the more powerfull and effectuall are their prayers with God A broken and contrite heart Psal 51.17 O God thou wilt not despise This Dauid found by comfortable experience in himselfe that when in the pride of his heart hee had numbred the people for whose sinne the Lord sent that grieuous plague vpon them When hee humbled himselfe before the Lord confessed his sinne 1. Chron. 21.17.27 It is I that haue sinned But what haue these sheepe done How suddenly vpon this did the Lord command the Angell to put vp his sword When Israel was in great affliction and distresse still They cried vnto the Lord in their troubles and the Text saith Psal 107.10 He deliuered them out of their distresse How powerfull were the prayers of Moses against the Amalekites Exod. 17. that Israel preuailed all the while the hands of Moses were held vp and he besought the Lord in the behalfe of the people Yea Ioash doth acknowledge that the prayers of Elisha 2. King 13.14 an holy Prophet of God stood his kingdome in more stead then all the chariots and horsemen of Israel could do Neither is this to be wondred at that the prayers of the faithfull are of this force with God to preuaile with him For First Reas 1 God giueth vnto his chosen ones the Spirit of supplication and prayer Zach. 12. Which doth so enable the faithfull vnto this duty that they will haue no nay or receiue no repulse at Gods hand according to that of the Apostle 1. Ioh. 5.14.15 This is the assurance we haue in God that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs. And if we know that he heareth vs whatsoeuer we aske we know that we shall haue the petitions we desire of him Secondly to comfort the hearts of his seruants and to minister vnto them a comfortable expectation to be heard in praier he is pleased to passe his promise out of his owne mouth and to assure vs by his owne word that we shall obtaine our desires saying Aske and ye shall haue seeke Mat. 7.7 and ye shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you For euery one that asketh receiueth c. This is indeed the very ground-worke and foundation of the Christian prayer namely Gods promise which is as true and vnchangeable as himselfe is without which wee could neuer so confidently come vnto him But many of the godly haue praied much and often vnto God Obiect and yet the Lord seemeth not to heare nor to answer God doth not forget his seruants answ though for a time he defer to answer God made Abraham a promise of a sonne by Sarah this Abraham expected ten twentie yea almost thirtie yeares who would haue thought all this while that God had forgot his promise but yet we know at last in a seasonable time God remembred the couenant and promise that he made with Abraham and Sarah had a sonne The Lord promised the posteritie of Abraham the Land of Canaan yet in what a miserable bondage were they in in Egypt vnder Pharaoh and that for the space of foure hundred and thirtie yeares who would not haue thought that surely God had not remembred his promise to Abraham yet at last the Lord brought them out with a mightie hand and stretched out arme But what might be the reason of the Lords dealing with his people after this manner Quest Doubtlesse God delayeth to answer the requests of his seruants till a more seasonable time Ans like a skilfull Physitian whom when his Patient being sicke of a burning Feauer shall aske wine will not giue it him knowing indeed that that is no time to drink wine The Lord in whose hands are times and seasons chuseth euer a fit time to answer the requests of his seruants Secondly the Lord will haue many times the case of his seruants desperate and they themselues past all hope of deliuerie in respect of any humane helpe to the end his owne power loue goodnesse and mercy should bee acknowledged in sending vnto them vnexpected deliuerance How could the Iews but acknowledge Gods goodnesse towards them in the time of Hester when they were all appointed vnto death when besides all hope the Lord sent them deliuerance How could Israel but acknowledge his mightie power and stretched out arme when they came out of the land of Egypt when the Sea was before them the Egyptians behinde them the mountaines on each hand of them and they left voide of all humane helpe and meanes
profit me he will deliuer his soule from going into the pit and his life shall see the light Yea this is the thing that Salomon prayeth for in that excellent prayer of his at the dedication of the Temple If they turne vnto thee with all their hearts 1 Reg. 8 47 in the land to the which they be carried captiues and returne and prey vnto thee saying We haue sinned wee haue transgressed and done wickedly then heare thou their prayer in heauen c. Consider the example of Manasses 2 Chro. 33.12.13 how desperately wretched and sinfull soeuer hee had beene yet in his captiuity returning vnto the Lord with all his heart found mercy with him Luk. 17 48 Act. 16.26 Of Peter that denyed his Master of Paul that persecuted the Church of Dauid that committed Adultery and Murther of Salomon that fell to idolatry of Mary Magdalene out of whom were cast seuen deuils of the Iewes that crucified the Lord of life Act. 2.37 of the Iaylour c. All which repenting of their sinnes and returning from their iniquities had their sinnes pardoned and were themselues receiued into fauour neither is this a thing to be wondred at for First Reas 1 consider that it is a thing agreeable to Gods iustice that he should be gratious and mercifull to those that truely repent for so saith the Apostle If wee confesse our sinnes he is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse Vpon this ground the holy Apostle tearmes that which God will bestow at the day of account vpon the elect a Crowne of righteousnesse and that which shall be conferred vpon them by that righteous Iudge not because the workes of the faithfull are meritorious as the glosse of the Papists is vpon that place but because of the Lords mercifull promise made vnto euery true beleeuer in Christ and hauing made himself a debtor by promise saith an Antient it is agreeable to iustice that he should performe the same Secondly to haue sinne pardoned is a speciall priuiledge of the Church and the members of it onely Esa 33.24 Thy people that dwell there shall haue their iniquities forgiuen Yea it is part of that promise God hath made to those that are within the couenant The dayes come saith the Lord that I will make a new couenant for I will forgiue their iniquitie and remember their sinnes no more A third reason may bee taken from the nature of true repentance which doth as fully blot out sinne out of Gods account as if the same had neuer beene committed for whereas sinne is a debt forigue vs our debts Repentance is a cancelling of that band and a discharging of that debt Seing then that the sinnes of the penitent cannot hinder their saluation Vse 1 this Doctrine may bee a Noahs Doue a messenger of glad tydings vnto the godly and that which may yeeld singular comfort to euery penitent sinner Is thy heart truely humbled in the sence of thy sinnes is it thy chiefest griefe and sorrow that thou hast offended so good and so gratious a God and Father in Iesus Christ doth thy spirit droope and groane vnder the burthen of thy transgressions so as thou abhorrest thy selfe with Iob Iob 42.6 and repentest in dust and ashes Thou canst passe the sentence of condemnation against thy selfe acknowledging that if the Lord should doe thee iustice he might iustly condemne thee for euer Consider then for thy comfort this being thy case God cannot with-hold from thee comfort it cannot stand with the rule of iustice to deny thee mercy Nay more thou mayst in a holy boldnesse challenge God of his word and promise which it cannot stand with his honour and iustice not to performe God should not be iust in his promises if he should not pardon the sinnes of the penitent O how may this comfort the hearts of such as mourne in Sion that hang downe their heads as being ashamed to lift vp the same to heauen that goe mourning all the day long let such comfortably apply this doctrine vnto themselues Thou desirest nothing more in all the world then Gods fauour his countenance grace and it is thy greatest griefe that thou inioyest it not Remember to thy comfort Christ will not quench the smoaking flaxe Mat 12.20 nor breake asunder the bruised reede he can as well deny himselfe and cease to be God as to deny mercy to those that truely see their sins are humbled for them and sue vnto him for the pardon of the same And for thy further comfort herein consider that thy sins whatsoeuer they haue beene haue beene but the sinnes of a poore weake and fraile man and the mercy thou shalt haue in the pardon of them is the mercy of a God euen of a God of mercy betwixt which there is no comparison But doth not God without repentance grant remission of sins Quest how then is remission of sinnes saluation and eternall life his free gift I answer that remission of sins Answ and eternall life is his free gift First because howsoeuer they are not giuen without repentance and faith yet they are not giuen for these things sake Secondly euen these gifts and graces truely to repent and to beleeuc are not of our selues neither are they common to all but they come from God prouing saith the Apostle if at any time God will giue them repentance vnto life 1 Tim. Thirdly repentance and faith are requisite not to shew for what but rather to shew to whom remission of sinnes and eternall life doth belong and appertaine and serue to qualifie Gods people for the promises of life and saluation Secondly Vse 2 seeing that repentance for sinne doth thus qualifie a man for remission of sinnes and so for life and saluation it shall then bee our wisedome to labour for repentance aboue all things in the world to lay hold vpon the opportunitie of grace offered and speedily to returne not to deferre the same from day to day lest our hearts come to bee hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sin take wee heed that wee doe not abuse his patience and forbearance or take occasion of libertie to turne this grace of his into wantonnesse Rom. 2.4 Rom. 6.1.2 Shall we sinne saith the Apostle because grace should abound God forbid Nay rather let vs know that they that wait vpon lying vanities Ion. 2.8 forsake their owne mercy The longer that any remaine in the mire of sinne the faster they sticke therein Reu. 3. God will not at all times offer the like mercy neither will he euer stand and knocke at the dore of our hearts let vs then lay hold vpon the opportunitie offered lest our repentance at last come too late Thirdly Vse 3 seeing wee haue such a mercifull God louing Father that is so ready to shew mercy and to receiue vt into fauour vpon our true repentance Let vs labour to bee like vnto God
and shew that wee are children of such a Father by our long sufferance towards our brethren that iniure vs. There is no one thing that doth more manifestly declare the image of God to be renewed within vs then this propensenesse and ready disposition to forgiue the iniuries of our brethren How carnestly doth the Apostle perswade vnto this duty when he saith Put on therefore as the elect of God holy and beloued bowels of mercy kindenesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long-suffering forbearing one another c. And to this end Christ propoundeth that parable in the Gospell of the King taking account of his seruants and therein shewes the mercifull dealing of him that had ten thousand talents forgiuen him yet would take his fellow by the throate for tenne talents and therein will teach vs that if we would haue pardon at Gods hand for the greater wee must forgiue the lesser whereas such as wil not forgiue the iniuries of others this shewes that they are stamped with the very image of Sathan who was malitious and a murtherer from the beginning and indeed there shall be iudgement mercilesse to him that sheweth not mercy Shalt be with me Text. Here wee haue the promise it selfe Promise it selfe which is to be with Christ in his glorious kingdome That in as much as by faith he was able to discerne Christs Deity in this base and low degree of his humiliation and by a liuely faith did rest on him alone for life and saluation Christ will not suffer his faith to faile nor himselfe to bee disappointed of the end thereof but grants him his hearts desire Verily thou shalt be with me The Instruction is That they that in miserie seeke vnto God Doct. i. They that in misery wait vpon God shall not misse of comfort in the end and rest on him shall bee sure of comfort in the end There is no labour lost in seeking and seruing of him but howsoeuer their present miseries are great yet as Mordecai said to Hester Deliuerance will come Let thy heart be in the feare of the Lord continually saith Solomon for surely there is an end Pro. 23.17 and thy hope shall not bee cut off Psal 37.37 So Dauid Marke the vpright man and behold the iust the latter end of that man shall bee peace Pro. 11.7 Whereas the hope of the wicked shall perish And as Iob saith Iob 17.8 What hope hath the hypocrite when God shall take away his soule Meaning indeed hee hath no hope And againe There is no peace to the wicked Isa 48.21 saith my God So that the condition of Gods people euen in their deepest aduersities and miseries is farre better then the condition of the wicked in their chiefest prosperitie For the one is sure that the end of his life will end his misery and finish his sorrow and enter his possession of euerlasting felicitie Whereas the candle of the wicked at last shall be put out and their fleeting pleasures which they haue had for a time heere shall bring at last an eternall weight of torment as our Sauiour saith Woe to you that laugh Luk. 6. for you shall waile and weepe Would we haue some examples for the further clearing of this truth How many miseries did the Israelites go vnder and that for the space of foure hundred and thirtie yeares yet at last the Lord gaue them rest in the promised Canaan How long was Dauid persecuted before he came to the kingdome and after yet at last the Lord gaue him rest Againe how sore were his inward feares and terrours by reason of sinne yet at the last filled with comfort How dealt the Lord with Iob both in respect of his outward man and temporall estate of a great Prince the Lord brought him to the dunghill And for his soule doth hee not often complaine that God Had set him as a But to shoote at And that the Arrowes of the Almighty had drunke vp his spirits yet at last dyed peaceably And there is reason for it First Reas 1 the Lords owne promise Call vpon mee in the time of thy trouble Psal 50.15 and I will heare thee and deliuer thee Which promise of his the Lord hath euer made good from time to time putting an end at last vnto the miseries of his seruants and giuing them rest and in this regard there is nothing in all the world more sure and certaine then the good successe of the hope of Christians it neuer misseth of that it aymeth at for their hope which is the Anchor of the soule hath faith for the ground of it Rom. 5.5 whereupon it fasteneth it selfe And further Gods truth and faithfulnesse to assure them of the truth thereof Secondly it is God that inclineth the heart to seeke him and causeth the soule so to hunger and thirst after him All which are cleare demonstrations that the Lord hath a purpose to giue them comfort at last Vpon this verie ground Dauid concludeth the helpe and deliuerance of Gods people in distresse Psal 10.17 Lord saith he thou hearest the desire of the poore thou preparest their heart and thine eare inclineth thereunto Thirdly God delaying to helpe his seruants by and by in time of miserie and distresse doth prouoke them to pray so much the more earnestly and frequently vnto him drawing away the heart from the world and causing the soule to haue the more secret communion with the Almightie and so must needs bring comfort in the end Seeing then that those that seeke vnto God Vse 1 and wait vpon him shall haue comfort in the end as we see in this poore Penitent here This may serue then in the first place to stay the godly in the time of their sorest trials not to despaire not to murmure repine and complaine as if their case were desperate For in due time they shall reape if they faint not What though for a time they beare the burthen and the heate of the day when the Euening commeth they shall not misse of their reward and then they shall see and acknowledge with the Apostle Luk. 21.18 That these light and momentany afflictions which are but for a season shall bring with them an eternall recompence of reward In the meane time let vs possesse our soules in patience tarrie the Lords leasure and waite vpon him our labour shall not bee in vaine in the Lord. After all the boysterous stormes in this life wrestlings against sinne Sathan and our owne corruptions and against malitious and wick●d men Deliuerance will come and the godly shall find it most true in the end that they that waite vpon him shall not bee ashamed Secondly it may serue to admonish vs that we take heed that we do not preuent the Lord and forestall that comfortable issue we might haue of our miseries and afflictions either by not seeking of him when miserie is vpon vs or by vnlawfull wayes and means to seeke to come out
it selfe had its originall from the euill of sinne and are indeed in themselues euidences of Gods wrath conceiued for sinne And therefore if we suffer as sinners our sufferings can bring vs no comfort sith they are tokens not of the affection but of the indignation of God towards vs. And surely this may serue to stop the mouthes of our aduersaries of Rome Vse 1 that brag and boast of the sufferings of many of their Popish crew as if they had dyed Martyrs at least and some of them haue they canonized for Saints who suffered indeed as Traytors against their Prince and countrey and deserued rather to be marked out with the blacke coale of Infamy and shame to posterity then once to haue their names mentioned with the least respect of honour And what shall we say to the order of the Franciscans that is amongst them an order that makes profession of voluntary miserie as if herein they did approue themselues to be the true disciples of Christ Alas herein euen Baals Priests and Mahomets Deruices out-bid them they do something like Disciples but yet they come short He that will be my disciple saith Christ let him take vp his crosse and follow me Cyprian obserues that the first Martyrs of the new Testament were children so the cause of our martyrdome and sufferings should carry in it the innocency of children O but Obiect say some of our Romish Catholickes we haue amongst vs that suffer daily for Religion and their conscience euen to the spoyling of their goods losse of their liberties c. and what will you make of these men but holy men and blessed Martyrs O but stay a while Answ for Religion and for conscience doe they suffer If for pure Religion and good conscience this were praise-worthy indeed and such sufferings shall neuer go vnrewarded with God But we must looke well to our owne consciences that they do not misinforme vs and conspire together with Sathan to worke our ruine for Ier. 18. The heart of man is deceitfull aboue all things who can know it And Sathan himselfe is not more dangerous and deceitfull vnto a mans selfe then his owne heart and therefore we must bring our consciences to the word and see that they bee rightly informed there else wee can haue no comfort in our sufferings But these suffer indeed most iustly and that for their rebellions idolatry disobedience to authoritie c. and so as euill doers to whom no promise of true comfort in such sufferings belongs Secondly Vse 2 this may admonish vs to take heed vnto our selues that whatsoeuer trouble or affliction soeuer wee meete withall here that wee looke still to the cause of our suffering that it bee good and not euill as Saint Peter exhorteth 1. Pet. 4.15 Let none of you suffer as a murtherer or as a thiefe or as an euill doer or as a busie body in other mens matters yet if any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed Many a man is smitten with the tongue and lieth vnder shamefull reproach some for their pride some for their crueltie couctousnesse vncleannesse c. and albeit their owne consciences cannot but pleade guilty to these enormities yet they thinke they haue said enough for themselues when they say that good men haue beene abused and reproached yea Christ himselfe say they This I grant to bee most true in Christ and good men they did indeed suffer disgrace and reproach in the world But did they deserue it Surely no. Had they deserued it they could haue had little comfort in their sufferings And know that thou being guilty of those sinnes the which the world doth iustly brand thee withall it is iust with God thou shouldest beare the shame thereof with men either to bring thee to the sight thereof and repentance for the same or else to thy further obduration and hardening in sinne against the day of vengeance It is then but a foolish speech that is so common in the world that when men suffer any indignitie from the hands of others vndeseruedly to say If I had deserned such things it would neuer haue grieued me Surely haddest thou deserued them thou hadst much cause to grieue But Christians must take vp the contrary note I reioyce in this that I deserued it not And last of all Vse 3 this may iustly reproue those who respecting the present sufferings and afflictions of others say Surely he hath his punishment nay his Purgatory here in this life when as alas they suffering for sinne these present miseries are but an earnest and foretaste of the eternall iudgement which is reserued for them hereafter And one of the euill doers that were hanged Text. This impenitent Thiefe howsoeuer he had escaped long in a course of sinne at last comes to shame and to a miserable end And indeed God hath ioyned these two together Sinne and shame and will in this example teach all men vnto the end of the world That Sinne and shame are companions and go not farre asunder Doct. 2 Sinne and shame go together Howsoeuer a sinner for a time may thriue and prosper in a course of sinning yet this is but for a time the Lord at last will ouertake them with his iudgements Howsoeuer a wicked man may prolong his life in wickednesse Eccl. 7.15 yet destruction at length shall ouertake the sinner Sinne and the punishment of sinne are inseparable companions if the one go before the other will follow after The Lord threatned Adam Gen. 2.17 that if he transgressed the commandement he should dye the death As God had a time to threaten he found a time to execute the punishment Gen. 4.7 We may see this in Cain If thou doest well saith the Lord shalt thou not be rewarded If thou dost euill sinne lyeth at thy doore The old world that lay weltering in all manner of abhominations the Lord at last remembred them with a iudgement from aboue Gen. 19.5 The like of Sodome and Gomorha The people in the wildernesse murmured against Moses and Aaron Numb 21.5.6 the Lord therefore sent fietie Serpents and Scorpions amongst them Yea Gods Church and people themselues when they haue sinned against God the Lord hath visited their iniquities with the rod and their sinnes with scourges Dauid numbred the people in the pride of his heart 1. Sam. 24. God meetes with Dauid in the same in weakening the number of them 2. Sam. 12. So are Dauids sinnes of adultery and murther punished with seuerall punishments from the Almightie But why should I spend time in so cleare a truth God hath sent his Iudgements vpon men Angels kingdomes and commonwealths houses and families persons and places all haue tasted of the Lords rodde when once they haue sinned against him And this proceeds First of all Reas 1 from that holinesse that is in God who is indeed holinesse it selfe and therefore cannot but punish sin that is so
23.32 still more and more to his last breath And this is vsually seene in the wicked daily notwithstanding the Lords corrections vpon them they proceed from euill to worse vntill they haue at length filled vp the measure of their iniquities vnto their eternall destruction When the Lord conuicted Cain of his cruell and vnnaturall murther of his owne brother Gen. 4.13 how bare he the Lords reprehension did he resolue into teares of repentance did hee confesse his fault and craue pardon at Gods hand Nothing lesse Nay rather did he not complaine of God that his punishment was ouer seuere My punishment is greater then I can beare We may see this in Pharaoh in those tenne plagues the Lord brought vpon him and his people Exod. 10. they were so farre from humbling him as that they made his heart still more obdurate and hard vnto his owne destruction Euen so the people of Israel the more the Lord afflicted them in the wildernesse the more they murmured The more they were smitten the more they fell away insomuch as the Prophet taketh vp this complaint of them O Lord thou hast smitten them I●● 5.3 but they haue not sorrowed Thou hast consumed them but they haue refused to receiue correction They haue made their faces harder then a rocke they haue refused to returne Euen so the holy Ghost brings in those Antichristian Idolaters in the time of their miserie knawing their tongues for sorrow and blaspheming the God of heauen for their paines and for their sores and repented not of their works to giue God the glory Ier. 6. As siluer that is put into the fire if nothing come out but drosse is found Reprobate siluer So the wicked not refined in the fornace of affliction shew themselues but reprobate men Wheras the godly as we shall see hereafter in the Penitent Thiefe the fire of affliction purgeth their drosse and makes them purer euer after like good Hezekiah and Dauid who being once rightly humbled recounted euer after their foregoing sins to the griefe of their hearts and wounding of their soules And it must needs be thus for First Reas 1 the wicked through their custome and continuance in euill haue quite lost the sense and feeling of sinne in their owne consciences Rom. 1.28.29 as a man that is possessed with a Frenzie is insensible of wounds or stripes or blowes be they neuer so mortall but laugheth and sporteth himselfe in the middest of them all So euen so is it with a sinner possessed with a spirituall Frenzie 1. Tim. 4.2 he hath no seeling at all of his sinnes his conscience is dead and benumined And therefore as the estate of that sicke man is most desperate who is not sensible of his disease So is the case of a sinner that perceiueth not the rod of God when he striketh Secondly to profit aright by afflictions Hos 6.1 to bee humbled by them and to returne vnto God is the worke of grace accompanying the crosse and to bee found only in the godly who are quickned thereby in all holy duties So Dauid Psal 119.71 It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted For it is with affliction as it is with the Word when they fall vpon a gracious heart they are by Gods blessing very fruitfull and profitable but but when they light vpon a hard heart they are by accident very hurtfull and harden the same more and more to destruction As the Sunne shining vpon the waxe doth soften it and vpon the clay doth make it more hard and as by one and the same heate a sweete smell is drawne out of a precious ointment Tantum interest non qualia sed qualis quisque patiatur Aug. and a noysome smell out of any putrid matter So doth the word and affliction produce different effects in the hearts of men it skils not what the affliction be so the matter on which it works be good This shewes the misery of all wicked and vngodly men Vse 1 that liue and lie in sinne without repentance They are like vnto a man that hath lost himselfe in the night time he goeth still further and further from his way or like a cold stomacke that turneth the best food into putrefaction Euen so the most excellent things of God such as are the Word Sacraments and those afflictions which the Lord vseth many times as a means to humble the godly these are all of them abused by the wicked to their destruction Rom. 8.28 For as all things worke together for the best of them that loue God so by the rule of contraries all things worke for the worst of the wicked They corrupt all things they defile all things Oh the misery of a wicked man that whether he enioy weale or woe prosperity or aduersitie are still posting to hel and hastening their owne destruction Secondly seeing that afflictions make the wicked worse wee may by the rule of this Doctrine take triall of our hearts and so consequently of our estates by considering the vse we haue made of our afflictions often hath the hand of God bene vpon vs on some in one kind and on some in another let vs consider how we haue behaued our selues vnder the same Esay 26.9 haue we learned righteousnesse When Gods iudgements haue gone abroad haue they given vs occasion to search and try our wayes and to turne vnto the Lord Lam. 3.40 this is a good signe of a gratious heart but if we finde vpon due examination that the Lords hand hath no whit humbled vs but that we find our hearts as hard as before and we the same when we came out of afflictions we were when we first came into them a fearefull signe of a gracelesse heart Thirdly this giues vs sufficient warrant what to iudge of that man who in time of affliction hath cast off to seeke the Lord hath murmured blasphemed sought to the Physitian and not to God if affliction better them not their case is miserable Rayled on him Text. Thus hee goeth on from one sin to another from euil to worse and his last sin his reuiling and reproaching of Christ worst of all And herein will teach vs That when a wicked man beginneth once to fall away from God Doct. 2 When the wicked begin once to fall away from God they haue no stay of thēselues They haue no stay of themselues but proceed on still from one sin to another neuer resting vntill at length they come to the height of all wickednesse prophanesse We may see this cleare in this present example this wicked and gracelesse man giuing himselfe vp to a sinfull course of life liuing by Theft rapine and much cruelty towards others he rests not there but falls to railing and reproaching the Lord Iesus Christ himselfe And thus indeed the corruption of our nature is like those heavy bodies which being throwne vp moue more slowly at the first the motion of the
let him deliuer him if he will haue him Secondly of the Passengers Mar. 15.29 Ah thou that destroyedst the Temple and buildst it in three dayes saue thy selfe If thou be the Sonne of God come downe from the Crosse Thirdly of this Impenitent Thiefe now crucified with Christ If thou be the Sonne of God saue thy selfe and vs. All which no doubt added greatly to the sufferings of Christ now at this time of his Passion And indeed amongst all other the sinnes of this Impenitent Thiefe this was not the least that he should thus at this time burthen the Lord Iesus with his reproaches which was sorely pressed downe before And for this let the Moabites bee an example vnto vs whom the Lord grieuously plagued for this sinne Moab shall be in derision Ier. 48.26.27 for didst thou not deride Israel as though he had been found amongst theeues The meaning is The Lords people being in aduersitie and sore distresse Moab was so farre from comforting them as that they derided them in their misery And this the Lord complained of by his Prophet against the Shepheards of Israel that they had not strengthened the weake Ezek. 34.2.4 nor healed the sicke nor bound vp the broken And this no doubt added much to Dauids griefe that at the time of his banishment and exile by Absolom his rebellious and most vnnaturall sonne his enemies concluded against him thus There is no helpe for him in his God Psal 3.2 This was the sinne of cruell Pharaoh and his people Exod. 3. exercising all manner of cursed cruelty against the Lords people Whose afflictions when none else would pitie the Lord layed them to heart and sent them deliuerance And this was the great fault of Eliphaz Bildad and Zophar Iobs three friends that beholding Iob this seruant of God so sorely oppressed with misery instead of supporting him vnder that heauy burthen they charged him for an hypocrite and so added vnto his sorrowes And hence is it that Iob reproues them saying Iob 6.14 A man in affliction ought to be comforted of his neighbours And for this very cause the Lord cursed the men of Meroz for that the Lords people being in misery and distresse they came not in to their succour And our Sauiour sheweth how he will charge the wicked at the last day with this very sinne when he wil say vnto them I was hungry Mat. 25.40 and ye fed me not naked and ye cloathed mee not sicke and in prison and ye visited me not All which testimonies as a cloud of witnesses conclude this truth that to adde to the miseries of the afflicted and not to veeld them comfort in time of distresse is a grieuous sinne And there is reason for it For First Reas 1 it makes the burthen of a mans sorrows by this meanes the more heauy For indeed there is nothing more grieuous vnto our natures nor can go nearer the heart of man in time of affliction then for a man to perceiue himselfe to be despised and cast off of others And no doubt it was not the least of those sorrowes that wounded the heart of our blessed Sauiour that hee could say as it was prophesied of him before I am a worme and not a man Psa 22.6.7 a shame of men and the contempt of the people All they that see me haue me in derision c. And thus also complaineth the Church in time of misery Our soule is filled with the reproach of the wealthy and with the despitefulnesse of the proud Secondly it is a grieuous sinne to adde affliction to the afflicted because by this meanes we helpe to strengthen Sathans temptations who seeks by all meanes possible to ouerwhelme the righteous in the gulse of their present sorrowes For Sathan is ready still to take aduantage of these times when the godly are most perplexed and reiected of all to solicite them with dangerous temptations euen to dispaire and no doubt but the Apostle Saint Paul was wel acquainted with Sathans subtilty herein and therefore commands the Corinthians to comfort the incestuous person why so lest he be swallowed vp of too much heauinesse 1 Cor. 2.7 Thirdly wee doe not know what need we ourselues may haue in time to come there is none of Gods seruants cast so low in misery and sorrow but we our selues are liable vnto the same haue deserued the same and why then should we not feare and expect it Now who would not be comforted in time of sorrow Surely it is Gods mercy to his people in times of affliction that they suffer not alone but haue others sympathizing with them who are ready to put vnder their hands by their godly counsels comforts prayers and supplications are ready to help to beare vp the burthen that they sinke not And indeed wee often finde this rule of our Sauiour verified amongst men with what measure weniete to others Mat. 7.3 the very same shall be measured to vs againe If we shew that godly and Christian charity to comfort others in their distresse wee shall not our selues want comfort in our greatest need as wee shall see in the penitent Thiefe hereafter If then in time of our afflictions Vse 1 the Lord hath giuen vs the comforts of our Christian brethren who haue laboured to support vs in loue and haue comforted vs ouer al our sorrowes it may teach vs to magnifie the name of our good God and to esteeme of our afflictions the more light and burden so much the more easie learne to beare them the more patiently seeing the Lord hath layd his hand farre more heauy vpon others as Christ here and most iustly might haue layd his hand as heauy vpon vs. Secondly it may admonish vs that wee labour more and more with our selues with our owne hearts that we get this Christian affection towards our brethren in time of misery that wee may mourne with them that mourne and be like affected one towards another and the rather for that it declares a man to bee a liuely member of that mysticall body whereof the Lord Iesus Christ is the head who is affectionate towards all his members Whereas the want of this affection argueth that wee are dead members and were neuer truely ingrafted into that body And last of all in Christ thus railed vpon and reproached by this wicked man we may see vnto what a neere ebbe the Lord brings his people many times here in this life Doct. 3 God brings his childrē often to a low ebbe in this life namely to be left destitute of all worldly helpe and comfort yet notwithstanding remaine still highly in Gods favour wee may see this in Iob whom the Lord brought full low euen to the dunghill a man notwithstanding highly in Gods favour We may see this in Dauid Ps 3. in the Prophets Apostles yea the Lord Iesus Christ himselfe is made here the obiect of wicked mens malice And
because after a sort it puts the lye vpon God his word and promises and so likewise vpon all those excellent attributes of his such as are his power wisedome truth goodnesse and mercy an heart fraught with infidelity credits none of these 1. Ioh. 5.10 He that beleeueth not God hath made him aliar Then the which what greater disgrace can be put vpon any then to giue him the lye Secondly the sinne of Infidelity is a mother sinne and is the cause of many other euils and enormities in the hearts and liues of men And hence is it that the Apostle ioynes these two together an euill heart Heb. 3.12 and an heart of vnbeleefe as the cause and the effect for as Faith is a mother grace and produceth feare loue obedience c. So where insidelitie beares sway there must needs all manner of impietie raigne and abound This serues first of all to let vs see in what a cursed and miserable estate and condition Vse 1 all wicked and vngodly men are in that are void of faith and full of infidelity Such men can neuer please God in any thing they take in hand For Rom. 14.23 Heb. 11.6 Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne And without faith it is impossible to please God Their hearing of the Word receiuing of the Sacraments prayer and the like holy duties are all abhomination to the Lord when they are not done by a beleeuer To an vnbeleeuing heart neither the power of Christs merits nor the infinitenesse of Gods mercy Word Sacraments can neuer profit but all tend to the destruction and the increase of the condemnation of an vnbeleeuer Secondly seeing that this sinne of Infidelitie aboue all other sins is such a stumbling blocke in out way strikes at God and all his attributes and seemes to put the lye vpon them all makes the Word Sacraments prayer and all other the ordinances of God vnprofitable vnto a man O how should this prouoke euery man euen as he tendereth the saluation of his owne soule to take heed of this sinne O vnhappie If was this vnto this poore man that shut vp heauen gates against him Take we heed of that thought at any time that shall seeme to question the truth of Gods word But rather let vs labour daily more and more to haue our hearts confirmed against all diffidence and distrust of God Saue thy selfe and vs. Text. These words were spoken in an ironicall and taunting manner Scoffingly desi●ing deliuerāce after the manner of the chiefe Priests and people who mocked our Sauiour likewise at this time saying Mar. 15.29 If thou be the King of Israel come downe from the Crosse And againe He saued others Mat. 17.29 himselfe he cannot saue This impenitent thiefe trades in their steps and followes their example and mocketh Christlikewise Whence we may note First Doct. 1 Euill examples dangerous how powerfull examples are with men either to the imitation of that which is good or euil As men meete together vsually they traffique together by their interchange of words and manners whether they be godly or wicked But especially of great men and men in authoritie their examples being euill hurt many As the Chiefe Priests and Elders here they giuing such an euill example in mocking Christ no maruell though the common people do the same likewise We may see this in Herod in this Chapter when he began to offer indignity to our Sauiour the Men of warre yea all his traine were ready to do the same 1. Kin. 22.24 Let Ahab but declare himselfe no friend to Micha the Lords Prophet and Zidkijah the Kings Chaplaine will dare to sinite him on the face So true is that of Solomon Pro. 29.12 If a Prince hearken to lyes all his seruants are wicked We may see this by daily experience that they that associate themselues with those that are vile and sinfull sauour of their manners and are made worse by them Pro. 13.10 He that walketh with the wise shall be the wiser But he that vseth the company of fools shall be the worse Yea Gods people themselues when they haue liued in sinfull places and haue had to do with wicked persons they haue receiued some blurs and blots of their filthinesse and haue not escaped free from their sinne but haue made good that of Solomon He that toucheth pitch shall be defiled We may see this in Ioseph Eccl. 33. who liuing a while in the Court of Pharaoh how quickly had he learned to sweare By the life of Pharaoh And we know that it was in the high Priests Hall and amongst the high Priests seruants that Peter had learned to curse and to sweare And for this cause the Lord giues that straight charge vnto his seruants concerning Babylon Come out of her my people Reu. 18.4 that ye be not partakers of her sinnes and that ye receiue not of her plagues And so likewise when the people of Israel were to come into the Land of Canaan amongst an idolatrous people the Lord chargeth them after this manner Thou shalt make no couenant with them Exod. 23.32 nor with their gods neither shall they dwell in thy land lest they make thee sinne against me And againe Deut. 7.2 Thou shalt make no marriages with them Thou shalt not giue thy daughter to his sonne nor take his sonne to thy daughter And the reason is giuen For they will cause thy sonne to fall away from mee And how true the word of the Lord herein was the euent made it manifest for they neglecting the Lords commandement the Psalmist saith Psa 406.35 Were mingled amongst the heathen and learned their works And hence is it that when the Prophet Dauid would approue himselfe vnto God faithfully to serue him Psal 11.63 he declareth the same by this that he was A companion of all them that feared him and kept his precepts And againe Psal 119.115 Away from me ye wicked I will keepe the commandements of my God Intimating thereby as it may easily be gathered that Dauid could not set himselfe as he should to the performance of any good duty so long as any wicked men were about him So that it is a most cleare truth that the examples of wicked men are very powerfull to draw men into sinne and by being companions of such to bring them to partake of their euill wayes And the Reasons I take to be these First Reas 1 that naturall disposition that is betwixt this nature of ours and sinne there is no two things in nature wherein there is a more neare coniunction as betwixt fire and gunpowder then this sinfull and corrupt nature of ours and sinne Visa movent maxime it is ready to take fire with the least sparke the least occasion or prouocation especially the examples of others are dangerous excitements vnto euill Secondly there is a disposition in wicked men to make others like themselues yea they
count it their master-peece to corrupt all that haue fellowship with them that their owne sinnes may not appeare so exceedingly sinfull vnto others And this our Sauiourobserueth to be that height of wickednesse in the Pharisees that They would compasse sea and land to make one Proselyte Mat. 23.15 and when he was made they would make him twofold more the childe of hell then themselues Thirdly there is a kinde of infectious nature in the words and actions of wicked men which as the Apostle saith Fret like a gangrene And indeed the soules of men are more subiect to the contagion of sinne then their bodies can to any manner of disease This serues then in the first place iustly to blame and condemne such as are carelesse of their company Vse 1 that can be as familiar and merry in the company of Atheists Papists yea be they as prophane as Esau all is one to them as if there were no danger at all to bee corrupted by such and indeed such men need not Sathan to tempt them for they will tempt themselues Which they do whilest without a calling they remaine in the company of wickedmen Such men proclaime to the world that they make no conscience of sinne for did they would they not then make conscience of the occasions of sinne Secondly let this serue to admonish euery man in the feare of God to decline as much as possible they may the company of wicked men Pro. 1.15 My sonne saith Solomon walke not in the way with them refraine thy foot from their path Yea if it lye in our power to remoue them and to banish them our presence Psal 101. So Dauid I will not suffer any euill person to abide in my house He that telleth lyes shall not tarry in my sight Many wise men by such haue beene seduced many strong men by them haue fallen and many who began to walke in the wayes of godlinesse haue by this meanes fallen backe againe when they haue beene daily conuersant with those who haue beene enemies to godlinesse But may we not somtimes Quest and vpon some occasion bee in the company of such Yes Ans these cautions being considered First that we rush not into their company without a calling for it is lawfull to hold commerce with them in the affaires of this life for otherwise wee must out of the world Secondly that we be not silent at sinne but by one meanes or other at the least by a frown in our browes shew our dislike at their wayes Thirdly that we get our hearts to be grieued within vs for their sinnes as Lot was with the Sodomites Whose righteous soule was vexed with their abhominations If thou be Christ Text. saue thy selfe and vs. Secondly we may note further in this Impenitent Thiefe thus scoffingly desiring deliuerance by Christ That it is a note of a wicked and gracelesse man to be giuen to mocking Doct. 2 Propertie of a wicked man to be giuen to mocking and that such a one is come to a wonderfull height of sinne And surely this is such a kinde of sinne that is found for the most part in the most dangerous and desperate wicked men Cain was a mocker Gen. 9.22 Ismael was a mocker notorious wicked men The Athenians mocked Paul Act. 17. What will this babler say The Scribes and Pharisees notorious wicked men these mocked Christ Hayle King of the Iewes Mat. 26.68 The Iewes mocked the Apostle Peter when he had preached the word of life vnto them saying These men are full of new wine Act. ● 12 When the wicked man commeth saith Solomon then commeth reproach Prou. 18.3 Psal 25.15 None scoffed more at Dauid then the Abiects and the Drunkards made songs of him The children of Bethel mocked the Prophet saying 2. King 2.22 Go vp thou bald head This was the complaint of the Prophet Ieremy Ier. 20.7 O Lord saith he I am in derision daily euery one mocketh me And this was the complaint of that holy man Iob Iob 30.1.9.10 speaking of the most notoriously wicked of his time saith that he was their songs their daily talke yea they spared him not to spit him in the face And when the Prophet Dauid comes to speake of that growth in sinne in wicked men as it were the top of all iniquitie and impictie Psal 1.1 hee describeth the wicked thus He sitteth in the seat of the scorner By all which testimonies it may appeare that it is a cleare euidence and demonstration of a notorious wicked man to be giue ouer to this sinne of mocking And it must needs be so For First Reas 1 we see men commonly mocke at Fooles and folly now in what esteeme are the godly with the wicked but as fooles and religion it selfe what is it esteemed but as Foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1.21 to those that are naturall men and therefore it is no maruell though the godly be contemned and reproached and their best performances scorned and derided Secondly this proceeds from the abundance of malice and corruption that is in the hearts of wicked men for so saith Christ O generation of vipers Mat. 12.34 How can ye being euill speake good things for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Cursed language euill speaking mocking and reproachfull speeches is the naturall language of wicked men being led by the spirit of darknesse their words and actions must needs be sinfull and wicked that must tend to vtter darknesse This may teach vs then how to iudge and esteeme of such men as are giuen ouer to this sinne Vse 1 namely as notoriously wicked for when Dauid speakes of the degrees of sinne and sinners by a gradation Psal 1.1 the Seat of the scorner he placeth in the last place as worst of all And yet it is lamentable to how many wee haue amongst vs that glory in the dexteritie of their wit and thinke it their praise that they can breake some wittie iest on others that may cause laughter but such do but glory in their shame Let such be admonished in time to breake off this sinne by repentance for seldome or neuer doth it escape the reuengefull hand of God What became of Cain Ismael the two and fortie youngsters that mocked Elizeus the Prophet What became of this desperate malefactour that mocked Christ Yea let it be obserued and wee shall finde it true that such as haue beene guiltie of this sinne that haue beene mockers of the Word of God of Gods Ministers and of the professors of the Gospell whether some token or other of Gods vengeance hath not ouertaken them euen here in this life wherein the Lord doth vsually shew his indignation against this sinne Secondly it may teach vs carefully to heed our selues as to auoid all sinne so especially this sinne of mocking railing and euill speaking which the Lord in so speciall a manner hath made a marke and a
but good fellowship whordome and vncleanenesse but a tricke of youth couetousnesse and vsury but good husbandry Thus pay they one debt with another Culpa cum defenditur geminatur and by excusing and defending of sinne make themselues more inexcusable and their sinnes vnpardonable And yet we haue a fourth sort of wicked men that out-strip all that went before and they are such who are so farre from confessing their sins as that they brag and boast of their vile abhominations how they layd vp such and such to sleepe at such a time what pranks they plaid elsewhere some for Drunkennesse some for vncleanenesse some for one wickednesse and some for another who glory in their shame and whose damnation doth not sleepe From whence should I fetch the charitie to hope of the conuersion and saluation of such a one Surely if the Lord giue not a great measure of repentance the very blacknesse of darkenesse is reserued for such at the iudgement of the last day And last of all this may serue to exhort vs Vse 3 that wee would euery one in the feare of God seeke to get to our selues this testimony of our vnfained conuersion By making a hearty confession of our sinnes vnto God Not euery one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen saith our Sauiour it is not euery slight confession of sinne that will serue the turne nothing is more common in the world then to heare men say I am a sinner and all men are sinners and the like these are growne words of course this and more then this hath been the confession of Cain Pharaoh Saul Iudas c. and yet were damned if then we would speed better then these did we must learne to confesse better then they did And that we may doe so regard is to be had vnto three particulars First Properties of true confession that our confession of sin proceed from a good ground from a heart that is truely humbled and broken in the sence of sinne For there is nothing can be more acceptable vnto God then the heartie confession of a sinner a confession that comes from a broken heart So Dauid A broken and contrite heart Psal 51.17 O God thou wilt not despise Such was the confession of the Publican God bee mercifull to me a sinner He fetched vp his conuersion from his heart That confession of sinne that comes but from the mouth and not from the heart returneth vnto vs againe emptie without comfort being in Gods esteeme but a maymed sacrifice a lame offering that is not accepted with him and hence it is that all those formall confessions of hypocrites and wicked men that onely in times of aduersitie It must be hearty haue fled to God and confessed their sinnes when the rod of God hath beene vpon them as vpon Pharaoh Saul Iudas c. and that for feare of further punishment and not out of hatred against sinne hath beene in Gods esteeme most abhominable no way mouing the Lord to pittie nor to compassionate his creature in their misery Secondly in the confession of our sins We must confesse our particular sins it is requisite that wee should come to particulars not summing them vp together in a grosse summe but laying them open in the speciall kindes thereof euen as a Patient that is sicke layes open vnto the Physitian euery particular of his infirmitie in what place the griefe is in what manner it holdeth him when and how he is troubled and thus haue the seruants of God done in their confession of sin and haue found comfort therein thus Dauid Against thee haue I sinned Psal 51.4 and done this euill in thy sight Dauid did not post off the matter with a generall acknowledgement wee are all sinners and so am I but he confesseth his particular sins and prayeth God to deliuer him from bloud-guiltinesse Verse 14 So likewise in that fact of his in numbring of the people 2 Sam. 24.10 I haue sinned exceedingly in that I haue done So Paul confesseth that hee was a Persecuter a Blasphemer and an Oppressor 1 Tim. 1.13 And no question this was the reason why Peter in that Sermon of his vnto the Iewes pressed so hard vpon this poynt Ye are they which haue crucified the Lord of life Acts 2.23 36. That hereby hee might bring them to the knowledge and acknowledgement of their speciall sins This is it that wounds the heart to the quicke humbles the soule and giues sound testimony that the repentance of such a one is true and vnfained And this is it indeed that puts the difference betweene that formall confession of sins that is to be seene in hypocrites and wicked men who will not sticke at a generall acknowledgement of sin as wee haue heard before whereas the godly Christian and penitent soule is ready to charge himselfe before God with the particulars of his faylings and disobedience before him Thirdly vnto true confession A resolution for the time to come to forsake sinne there must bee ioyned a purpose and resolution in heart for the time to come to leaue and forsake sinne for this is all in all in the matter of confession for otherwise wicked men themselues haue gone very farre in the bare duty of confession No question Cain Pharaoh Saul Iudas for the matter of confession did it very freely yea they could very willingly haue confessed much more against themselues when the iudgements of God were vpon them and their consciences were vpon the racke But this proceeded not out of indignation against sin as displeasing vnto God but out of the sence of their present misery as it may appeare by their relaps into the same sins when Gods hand was remoued That confession of sin was neuer sound Confessio sine emendatione est professio peccati Esay 55.7 that produceth no change nor alteration in the life of the confessor Let the wicked forsake his wayes and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations and returne vnto the Lord c. It is an excellent thing with good Senacherib so to confesse Ezra 10.23 as that wee may make a couenant and league with the Lord neuer to haue to doe againe with those sins wee haue made confession of vnto him This is the condition Samuel makes with the people If yee bee come againe vnto the Lord with all your heart 1 Sam. 7.3 put away saith hee the strange gods from amongst you And this hath beene euer the blessed fruit of sound confession of sin and of true conuersion vnto God in all Gods people Iustly punished Text. for wee receiue the due reward of our deeds How farre this Penitent chargeth himselfe in regard of his sin Cleareth Gods iustice we haue heard before in his heartie confession of the same The next remarkable thing to bee obserued in this Text is his subscribing vnto that their deserued punishment We are iustly punished for wee receiue the
howsoeuer the wicked and the godly desire eternall life alike the childe of God onely is wise to lay hold vpon the opportunity whilest grace is offered seeking that in the first place Mat. 6.33 aboue all earthly and transitory things whereas it is the propertie of wicked and vngodly men to put it off vntill the day of grace be past Luk. 13.25 euen till the Master of the house be risen vp and hath shut to the dore Fiftly there is in the godly and those that shall bee saued in the end a constant seeking of God of eternall life and saluation not by moods and fits but throughout the whole course of their liues All their thoughts words and actions sauor of grace within and tend vnto heauen and the furtherance of their eternall happinesse Whereas with the wicked it is not so with them for if they desire eternall life and saluation it is no constant desire but by fits either when the Word or some affliction or other hath kindled such a good motion for the present within them but by and by like the morning dew it goeth away Hos 6.4 And last of all there is yet this difference betwixt the godly and the wicked in their desires A wicked man desires mercy but not grace the pardon of sinne but not the spirit of corroboration and strength against sinne He rather desireth freedome from misery the effect of sinne then from sinne it selfe the cause of misery wheras the childe of God is as earnest with God for strength against his corruptions for the time to come as the pardon of his sinne past Dauid is as earnest with God to stablish him with his free spirit Psal 51.12 as to wash him from his sinne Well then to conclude this poynt would we haue any comfort in our owne soules that wee are amongst the number of those that hunger and thirst aright after eternall life and saluation that our desires proue not to bee like the vaine wishes of the wicked that shall not profit them in the end O let vs then try our selues and examine our owne hearts by the rule of this doctrine Are we truely sensible of our owne wretchednesse and misery by reason of sin haue we vsed all holy helpes and meanes whereby wee may come to the comfortable assurance therof vnto our ownesoules Haue we learned to prize eternall life and saluation aboue all the world besides haue we made vse of all opportunites that God hath offered vnto vs for the getting of grace into our soules hath this desire of ours beene constant and not by fits onely and haue we as earnestly sought at Gods hand strength against our corruptions as the pardon of our sinnes past These things indeed may minister vnto vs a comfortable assurance that our desire of eternall life and saluation hath beene true hath beene vnfained such as shall not misse of saluation in the end Whereas if on the contrary part we neuer yet truely saw our misery by reason of sinne haue euer sleighted Gods ordinances preferred the world our profit and pleasures before the euerlasting saluation of our soules haue made no account of the season and opportunity of grace offered haue neither constantly desired nor for future times sought strength of God against our corruptions know wee that our desires were neuer true and vnfained but such as may be in wicked men that shall misse of saluation in the end When thou commest into thy kingdome The time when As this Penitent Theefe at this time acknowledgeth Christs Deity that hee was Lord and King and desireth as we haue heard before principally mercy for his soule that it might goe well with it in death or after death So now he comes to the time wherein especially he desired to bee remembred of Christ n. when Christ should come into his kingdome Q.d. O Lord now is the time of thy humiliation wherein thou art pleased to vndergoe the punishment for the sinnes of all the elect and to beare the burthen of thy Fathers wrath and all to free thine from the wrath to come I know this price will be payd and this misery thou now sufferest for sinne will be ouer and thou thy selfe againe restored into thy glorious kingdome there to liue and raigne for euer I beseech thee now heare mee against that time Doct. 1 and remember mee in mercy The happinesse of a Christian not to be looked for here but hereafter when thou commest thither Note we hence That the happinesse of a Christian is not to be looked for here but hereafter The fruit of repentance of righteousnesse and of holinesse is not to bee looked for here but hereafter The Christian hath not his happinesse in present possession but in reuersion In hope and expectation are they kept here liuing by faith as the Heyre being not of ripe yeares is not possest of the inheritance but after death they come then to bee possest of that glorious inheritance layd vp for the Saints This doth this Penitent Theefe acknowledge here in this his request to Christ as if he should say O Lord it is not life for a time which cannot be long that I so much stand vpon since death I haue deserued I am willing to dye but it is this I specially desire aboue al the world besides that when this life shall haue an end I may haue a resting place in thy kingdome If in this life onely wee haue hope in Christ 1 Cor. 15.19 wee are of all men most miserable And this the holy Ghost obserueth as an admirable fruit of the admirable faith of the Primitiue Fathers Heb. 11.13 14. who albeit they receiued not the promises but saw them a farre off were perswaded of them and imbraced them and confessed that they were strangers and Pilgrims on earth declaring plainely that they seeke a Country 1 Ioh. 3.2 Now we are the Sonnes of God saith the Apostle But it doth not appeare what we shall be It is true the Lord giues vs now the first fruits of the spirit the earnest of our inheritance which is peace with God and peace in our owne consciences and ioy in the holy Ghost to comfort the hearts of his seruants and to cheare them vp in their pilgrimage But the full fruition of their happinesse is not to be expected here but in heauen This made the Apostle Paul to say Phil. 3.3.13.14 I forgat that which was behinde and reaching forth vnto those things which are before I presse to●ard the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus as knowing that the happy recompence of reward was not to bee looked for here but hereafter And the reason is First Reas 1 we know but in part and therefore can beleeue but in part can be sanctified but in part and so cannot be capable of the perfection of our happinesse 1 Cor. 13.9 till all our imperfections be done away and our sanctification
doe they else but rob God of his glory and depriue a Christian soule of his chiefest ioy Now I would not be mistaken as though I meant that the comfort and assurance of a Christians saluation were so firme and certaine as that the same were neuer intermixed and ouer-clouded There is no such assurance in this life to bee looked for nay rather Gods people haue felt much feare and doubtings in themselues Hezechias complaines Esa 39. that the Lord had bruised his bones like a Lyon And Dauid is full of complainings Psal 31.22 Psal 77.7 I am cast out of thy sight will the Lord shew no more fauour and hath hee shut vp his louing kindenesse in displeasure And againe Psal 69.3 My eyes faint for wayting so long vpon my God Nay I dare adde this further that hee which neuer doubted of his saluation had neuer true faith to beleeue aright the pardon of his sins and the assurance of his saluation for hadst thou faith thou mightest assure thy selfe that Sathan would winnow thee But what manner of assurance then is this you speake of Quest Not an assurance that is free from doubtings and feares Answ but such an assurance that labours after assurance Assurance that wrestles and combats with doubtings and feares It is the wisedome of God by this meanes to settle and stablish the hearts of his seruants A man that hath newly planted a tree will bee euer and anone shaking of it not purposing to ouerthrow it but to settle it the more and thus the Lord by suffering the faith of his chosen sometimes to be shaken will haue their hearts rooted and grounded in him whilest they learne to deny themselues and to rest in him their strength Secondly seeing it is the pleasure of our good God thus to cheere vp the hearts of his chosen in their Pilgrimage here to fill their hearts with such ioyes and to giue them such secret and sweet raptures in the sence of his fauour in his Sonne whereby with the Spouse they role themselues vpon the beds of roses Can. as she confesseth and that to cause them so much the more cheerefully to serue him This may serue for our instruction to try our hearts and to see whether the worke of grace and of faith be wrought in vs. It is the aduice of the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.5 Proue your selues whether ye be in the faith how shall we doe this but by making particular application vnto our selues of those things wee beleeue In the matters of this life it is cucry mans care to doale vpon certainties for tenures of lands for Conueyances Leases c. Councell is entertained and euery word therein is scanned men will not deale but vpon good grounds But alas for the matter of our chiefe inheritance how simply doe men deale therein they are content to rest vpon a bare hope and thinke that a Lord haue mercy vpon mee will serue the turne What meaneth the Apostle to say Giue all diligence to make your calling and election sure but to shew that a Christians chiefest care must be for this But how may a man come to Quest this assurance of his saluation Wee must get good euidence and assurance of our faith in Christ Answ for so saith the Apostle As many as beleeued in him Ioh. 1.12 to them gaue he this power to be made the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue on his name And againe We are saued by faith No man can haue the spirit of adoption that wants faith to beleeue Now for the obtayning of this grace of sauing faith the ordinary meanes is the preaching of the Word Rom. 10.17 faith commeth by hearing and the Gospell is called the word of faith vpon that then wee are to attend with all care and diligence as we looke to get faith and so consequently the saluation of our owne soules Secondly the Apostle giues this note how to know our adoption and so consequently whether wee be in the state of saluation or not Rom. 8.16 His spirit beareth witnesse to our spirit that we are the sonnes of God Now concerning this testimony of Gods spirit I will not make my selfe so skilfull to define what it is it is better felt then exprest The Prophet cals it The hearing of a voyce behinde vs Esa 38.21 whereby the heart comes to be perswaded of it reconciliation with God But how shall I know that my perswasion is not presumption Quest There be two speciall markes whereby we may distinguish betwixt them Ans First that vndoubtedly is the voyce of Gods spirit when comfort and assurance is felt in the heart after such time as the heart hath first beene humbled and cast downe in the sight and sence of sinne Psal My heart saith Dauid is as waxe it is molten in the middest of my body for in the time of a mans securitie when hee hath little or no apprehension of sinne then for a man to hope well and to conclude of his owne saluation is no strange thing nothing is more vsuall in the world amongst meer naturall men that neuer felt the smart of sinne then to bragge and boast of this assurance of saluation but alas they raise vp this building but vpon a sandy foundation which will neuer stand in the time of try all for it is Gods manner of dealing vsually in this work of mans saluation to lay full low whom hee intendeth to aduance full high by sorrow to bring them vnto ioy by death to bring them vnto life and by their humiliation for sinne to bring them to glory so that when a man hath once truely felt the smart of sinne when a man hath once combated with Gods wrath and the terrors of hell haue possessed his soule here is a good foundation to build the hope of heauen vpon for humiliation is the ground of exaltation and after this to stay a mans selfe vpon the promise of God in Christ is vndoubtedly the voyce of Gods spirit a token of true comfort and a note of true ioy Secondly when comfort ariseth from the comfortable vse of the meanes God himselfe hath appointed such as are the preaching of the Word the reuerent vse of the Sacrament prayer reading of the Scripture meditation c. for the Lord is euer a maintainer of that course which hee himselfe hath sanctified and set apart to the same end so then try thy assurance thus hath it beene layd in godly sorrow for sinne hast thou attended the poasts of the Lords Sanctuary c. This is vndoubtedly the voyce of Gods spirit and not of presumption But if on the contrary part thou neuer yet feltest such griefe of heart for sinne thy conscience did neuer yet torment thee in the sight and sence of sinne neither hast thou euer had any delight in the Lords Sabbaoths nor the duties of holinesse c. O deceiue not thy own soule thy hope of heauen of eternall life and