Selected quad for the lemma: sin_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
sin_n david_n lord_n nathan_n 4,238 5 12.7447 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

There are 21 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

our own justification out of the deep with David yea out of the Whales belly with Jonah and in darkness with Job to see light 2 To see things invisible to make things absent present yea God absent present and to set him continually at the right hand Moses feared not the wrath of the King because he saw him that was invisible Heb. 11.17 Elisha being in Dothan feared nothing when his servant cryed out because his eyes were open to see the Angels as fiery Chariots protecting him 3 Faith is never so working as in perillous times because then there is most need most use of it then it sets it self a work and mingles it self with the promises of God by which it quickens and puts life unto a man when he is half dead as Psal 119.49 Remember thy promise wherein thou hast caused me to trust it is my comfort in trouble for thy promise hath quickned me Now it bestirres it self to make Gods faithfulness and truth his shield and buckler Notable is that example of the three Children Dan. 3.16 17. who were in present danger of their lives and cast into an hot Furnace In this danger now their faith bestirres it to provide for their safety not by any yeelding or blanching or buckling to the unjust command but by furnishing their mouthes with a resolute answer Be it known unto thee O King that wee will not worship this Image and by preparing their hearts through their confidence in God who was able to deliver them rather to yeeld themselves to the fire and raging flames than to any part of that commandement And were faith and Gods fear working in the heart it would destroy false fears and infidelity which Satan prevaileth in mightily causing men to seek help by unlawful means if the lawful bee never so little set out of sight Command these stones to be made bread Here is an inference upon the former words If thou be the Son of God upon a true ground Satan raiseth a dangerous consequence Christ was the Son of God true Must he therefore needs make stones bread Satan inferteth mischievous conclusions upon true premises Doct. It is an ordinary temptation of the Devil to inferre mischievous conclusions upon true premises God had no respect to Cains Sacrifice as to Abels Whereas now Cain should have offered of the best as Abel did and have brought faith with his offering by which Abel offered a better Sacrifice Heb. 11.4 Satan inferres upon it Therefore kill thy brother Saul received no answer of God that was true but that therefore he should goe to the Witch of Endor was Satans inference both against the Law of God and Sauls own law God is a merciful God a true premise and the scope of all the Scripture but that Jonah should therefore fly to Tarshish and not goe to preach the destruction of Ninivie was a Satanical inference A man must pity himself and doe what he can to repel evil from him and avoyd danger but that Christ should therefore not goe up to Jerusalem to suffer was a dangerous consequence of Satan in Peters mouth whom therefore Christ calleth Satan Reasons 1 Satan is cunning and seeketh by mingling good and evil truth and falshood to justifie that which is false and to draw it on with the truth If hee should never speak truth he could never deceive half so much therefore hee speaks many truthes to give credit to his lyes and the same hee hath taught all his agents Do we think that a false teacher or heretick could doe any great hurt if he should not lay his leaven in a lump of truth would not every man at first reject him if he should bring never a true doctrin but therefore that his heresie may spread like a gangrene he comes with a fair pretence of many truthes which cannot be denied Doe wee think that the Church of Rome should have so prevailed in the world or that Antichristian state should have been endured or could any Papist bee suffered in ours or any well-ordered Country if they did not colour all their abominations and false religion with some general truths if they should not in word and shew hold and recite the Articles of faith and principles of our religion concerning God in unity of essence and trinity of persons concerning Christ the Church c. were it possible that any Christian state could bear them while indeed and in truth they reverse the whole foundation of religion and are limbs of Antichrist No their deceit is a mystery and walks in darkness and the mask and vizards of truth with pretence of holiness hath held the Swords of Princes from them which else had long since been sanctified in their overthrow 2 Satan can doe no other who cannot speak truth for truths sake for being a Lyar from the beginning he loves not truth and therefore if hee speak truth it is to corrupt the truth or to stablish some lye Lying is the Devils mother tongue Joh. 8. 1 Sam. 28.17 18. Lying the Devils mother tongue Satan in the habit of Samuel spake many truths as that the Lord had rent the Kingdom from him and given it to David because he had so spoken hee would doe it and because Saul obeyed not the voyce of the Lord nor executed his fierce wrath against the Amalekites and that the Lord would deliver him and the Israelites into the hand of the Philistims the next day c. But all this was to feed Saul in his delusion and hold him in his sin as though he were Samuel as vers 17. the Lord hath done it even as he spake by mine hand and vers 19. to morrow shalt thou be with me c. So in the New Testament we have the Devils confessing Christ to be the Son of God the Holy One the sum of the Gospel and Paul and Silas to be the servants of the high God Act. 16. but both Christ and his servants put them to silence and would not have them to speak the truth because it was to deprave and slander the whole truth as though Christ and his servants had been in league and agreement with the Devils and so their doctrin had been not Divine but Diabolical Thus Satan like a Bargeman looks one way but ●owes another 3 Satan sees how our nature is easily carried away through a general shew of good or truth to take in with it error and falshood hand over head without trial or discerning For though our blessed Saviour would not confound stones and bread yet we easily take stones with bread and Serpents with Fishes The whole Masse-book is but an heap of Idolatrous prayers and Ceremonies but yet because there is some shew of good in it many Scriptures and some tolerable and good prayers with many devotions it is wholly received without trial of millions given over to delusion 4 Satan the Prince of darkness can transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11.14 and
man know a rank Theef were not hee worthy to bee robbed that will open his doors and give him entertainment Oh let not us extenuate our sin or lay the blame on the Devil who cannot hurt us without our own weapons Hee cannot make us swear or curse or drink or kill or break the Sabbath All that hee can do is to stir up our corruption present objects stir up passion to trouble the judgement and perswade or sollicite Hee can suggest hee cannot force And therefore do as David taking all the blame of our sins upon our selves when the Devil stirred him up to number the people and hee came to see his folly hee thought not his sin less because Satan moved him but said I have done very foolishly Alas these silly sheep what have they done Vse 4. Take heed of Satans voice which is ever to cast thy self down every temptation to sin hath this voice in it Cast thy self down and too too many hear and yield to the same Some cast themselves down by casting themselves back from God and his truth forsaking the right way Thus every Apostate hath cast himself down and hath need of that counsel Remember from whence thou art fallen and do thy first works Others cast themselves down by falling into a puddle of base uncleanenesse as covetousnesse drunkenness swearing lying c. unbeseeming the place name and honour of Christians Were it not too too base a dejecting of himself if a Noble man should sort himself to lye in a Barn among beggars or any man to lye in a stye among swine So for a Christian to demean himself like a worldling or Epicure or Atheist is as great a debasement Others cast themselves down into the pit of despair when any sorrow or trouble extraordinary presseth or pincheth them If God cast them down a little they cast themselves down immeasuredly as Cain Judas nay Gods servants think sometimes that God hath forgotten them and will not remember seasonable mercy But do thou in all temptations answer Satan thus No Satan I know thou canst not cast mee down God to whom the honour of it is due be praised for it and I will not cast my self down if God cast mee down I shall rise again who onely can and will turn his humiliation of mee to my exaltation Psal 119.71 From hence So Luke addeth that is from the Battlement which God had straightly injoyned as a means to keep men from falling and to prevent danger Deut. 22.8 When thou buildest a new house thou shalt make a battlement on thy roof that thou lay not blood upon thy house if any man fall thence And this was the manner of the Jews buildings to build their houses not ridged as ours but with a flat roof as most of our Churches bee and battlements about and their roofs thus made served them to many good purposes as Josh 2.6 Rahab brought the spies up to the roof of the house and hid them with the stacks of flax which shee had spread upon the roof Act. 10.9 Peter being in Joppa in Simons house a Tanner went up upon the house to pray Of this kind seemed that house of the Philistims which Sampson at his death pulled down upon the roof of which stood three thousand persons to behold while Sampson was mocked Doct. 3 Satan seeketh especially to draw such to sin who have most means against it As Christ was not set on a pinacle which had no stairs to go down by but where were stairs and hee must notwithstanding them cast himself down head-long So dealt hee with Adam in his innocency who having all perfections his soul and body were capable of yet must he needs reach at the bettering of his estate had Adam known any misery yet his sin had been so much the less if he had been enticed unwarrantably to mend his estate but he did as the Parable speaks set an old patch upon a new garment which was both idle and disgraceful And the means of his sin was as idle as the end for had he not all the Trees of the Garden and fruits of Paradise to eat upon and were not all else means enough to keep him from one forbidden fruit If God had restrained all but one he had not wronged him hee had furnished him with all strength against temptation if he would have used it he had no manner of discontent in his estate yet if he had been overcome in that supposal to have enlarged without God his own allowance his sin had not been in that degree and so out of measure sinful as the having of all these means made it Who must deny our Saviour Christ but one of his Disciples who must betray him but another both of them abounding with means to the contrary having been advanced by Christ into the high Offices of Apostleship to be next attendants of Christ who heard his Doctrin saw his Miracles and were eye-witnesses of the integrity of his life yea both specially warned by Christ of those particular sins and Peter had professed to dye rather than doe it 1 The malice of Satan is such as he is not content that men sin Reasons unless he can bring them to aggravate their sin and doe it as sinfully as may bee and therefore he is industrious to get men to sin against the means For this addeth weight to the sin and provoketh Gods anger much more than another sin Examples we have in Exod. 32.31 when Israel had made a Call Oh saith Moses this people have sinned a great sin It was a great 1 In the kind Idolatry 2 In the manner being against such means it was not many days before that that Moses had received the Ten Commandements which themselves heard delivered in such Thunder Lightning and terrible Voyce as made them profess what ever the Lord should command them by Moses they would doe and besides the Ten Commandements thus uttered and delivered Exod. 20. in the two and twentieth verse a special addition was annexed Yee shall make you no gods of silver or gold c. They had immediately before received an extraordinary food by Manna which then they enjoyed Moses was in the Mount with God to receive more Laws for their good Aaron was with them to advise them But against all these and many more means they worship a Calf and so highly provoke God as after a great slaughter of men three thousand in number 2 Sam 12. ● Moses hardly obtained pardon for the residue Davids sin was so much the more heinous in that hee had many Wives of his own as Nathan in the parable sheweth and maketh himself to confess A rich man had many Sheep and Oxen and the poor man had but one Lamb which ate his morsels with him and slept in his bosom which was Bathsheba in Uriahs bosom and the rich man refused to dress any of his own Sheep and slew and dressed the poor mans Sheep David himself hearing it
before he knew it to be his own case could say As sure as the Lord lives he shall dye that hath done this and Nathan said Thou art the man c. And this sin so provoked the Lord that the sword never departed from his house and his repentance could not cut off that part of the sentence but his own son Absalom must defile his Fathers Wives in the sight of all Israel Hence it was also that our Lord answering Pilate aggravated the sin of Judas Joh. 19.11 He that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sin hee knew he delivered an innocent to death he was warned he was a friend and familiar his sin was a great sin and so great as God took him in hand and laid the burden of it presently upon his soul and hee found no ease but in hanging himself 2 Satan knows these sins more trouble and wound the Conscience than other because this circumstance lays the sin directly upon our selves and takes away excuses God was not wanting to prevent such a man cannot say he could not remedy it no good means was wanting to him only hee was wanting to himself and the means And thus the Lord reasoneth with his people to bring them to the sight of their own corruption Isa 5.4 What could I doe more to my vineyard which I have not done 3 Satan knows that to sin against means is a compound sin and like to a complicated disease hardly cured for besides the sin to which a man is drawn there is 1 A neglect of a mans own good 2 There is a base estimation of Gods great kindness in offering the means of our good and consequently God himself is despised in the means yea there is an unthankful rejecting of grace offered And what is further to bee done but to leave such a one as remediless 4 Well knows Satan that God hath denounced and executed greater plagues upon these sins than other where means were not present He punished Adultery in the Law with death not simple fornication because one had means to avoyd the sin the other wanted it So for Theft Prov. 6.30 If a Thief steal to satisfie his soul because he is hungry men despise him not a restitution may be made he must not dye comparing the sin with adultery in which no restitution must bee made they must dye the death Capernaum which was lifted up to heaven in respect of the means of Salvation neglecting those stairs cast her self lower into hell than 7 yrus and Sidon which never had the like things done in them Nay God whose nature is to bee merciful in this case takes pleasure and delights himself in severity Prov. 1.22 Yee have despised all my counsel and set my correction at nought therefore will I laugh in your destruction This doctrin is of great use through the whole life Vse 1. If where more means be to hinder sin there sin is aggravated how heavie be the sins of our age who in the means are lifted up above all the ages of one thousand five hundred years before us How may the Lord complain of us as Hos 8.10 I have written to them the great things of my Law but they have counted it a vain thing The means that we have doe set our sins in a farre higher degree than were the sins of our fathers Theirs were in the night ours in the day theirs were ignorances in comparison ours are presumptions of knowledge and set purpose theirs were errors and sins ours are rebellions and obstinacy they could scarce doe any other we will not their ignorance invincible ours affected And as our means be greater so our judgement and account shall be straighter for to whom God gives more of them hee requires more Luke 12.48 Vse 2. Content we not our selves that we have stairs or means as many who say they come to Church hear the Word receive the Sacrament have some measure of knowledge and be able to speak of religion seeing the presence of the means brings Satan more fiercely upon thee and threatneth thy greater danger if thou growest not in soundness of Christianity by them Consider whether the Scripture be not true saying 1 Not the hearers of the Word but the doers thereof shall be justified 2 Knowers of their Masters will and not doers of it shall be beaten with more stripes 3 Many seem to be partakers of grace who are perverters of it and turn it into wantonness who are of old rolled or billed unto condemnation 4 Many in the day of Judgement shall say and alleadge for themselves Wee have eat and drunk in thy presence and thou hast taught in our streets to whom the judge shall say I tell you I know not whence you are depart from mee yee workers of iniquity The Jewes had the Ministery of John of Christ and his Disciples the Gospel of the Kingdom preached which was as Jacobs Ladder to rise up by the stairs and staves of it unto heaven but for all this because they walked not worthy of these means Christ tells them plainly to their faces that Publicans and Harlots should goe into Heaven before them And the same shall be said of every formal Christian contenting himself with an outward shew of goodness and not answerable to the means he hath without any inward or constant change by them Vse 3. Let us beware of Satans wyle neither to neglect means nor yet to sin against them I In spiritual things the means of salvation are stairs to Heaven 1 If thou beest not a member of the Church and abidest in the ship thou canst not be saved Acts 27.31 2 If being over-run with the disease of sin thou waitest not at the Pool wherein and when the Spirit moveth and stirreth the waters thou canst not be cured Joh. 5.4 Refuse the Word and Sacraments thou perishest 3 If God have shewed thee oh man what is good and what he requireth of thee surely to doe justly to love mercy to humble thy self and walk with thy God if thou cast thy self off these stairs into injustice unmercifulness pride and profaneness by this fall thou doest break the neck of thy soul So when the Lord affords many gracious means within a man and without without the exhortations and precepts of his Word and the warnings of his correcting hand then 1 Suffer the word of exhortation gladly let the word rule thee sin not against the word by which thou art to be judged 2 Let the rod open the ear that was sealed and correction bee thy instruction it is a note of blessedness to bee chastened and taught in Gods Law The Lord is glad to adde this means to let in the former and if men still fall back more and more the Lord casts such persons off So when he inwardly useth either checks of Conscience or else the motions of his Spirit sin not against them for 1 The voyce of thy Conscience must thou hear one day therefore suffer it not to goe on
Isa 40.26 Lift up your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things This use David maketh Psal 8. When I see the heavens the earth and the works of thy hands then said I Lord what is man that thou art so mindful of him and concludes the Psalm thus How excellent is thy name through all the World And why 1 The invisible things of God his Power and Divinity and Eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall wee either not look on them or so look upon them as they to make us inexcusable shall wee onely injoy the natural use and no spiritual or Divine use from them 2 Consider that God for this purpose hath made the Countenance of man not as the Beasts groveling on the Earth but erected unto Heaven and he hath made the eye of man not as the Beasts but as Anntomists observe hath given it one muscle which they want whereby hee can turn his eye directly upwards with admirable quickness that it should not so fix it self upon any thing below as the Covetous eye doth but by occasion of things below turn it self upward to their Creator Yea hee hath compassed our eyes with brows and lids and fences from dust and earth that though wee look sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them 3 Let us labour to use our senses in beholding Gods works as they in Joh. 2.23 that saw the works of Christ of whom it is said Many beleeved in the name of Christ seeing the works that he did So let the works which wee see God hath done bee at least inducements to beleeve him so much the more Fourthly God made our senses in respect of our brethren both to benefit them and our selves by them 1 Our eyes to behold their misery to pity them to releeve them Turn not thine eyes from thine own flesh Herein the unmerciful Priest and Levite were condemned by the pitiful Samaritan Our ears to hear the cry of the poor Prov. 21.13 Hee that turns his ear from the cry of the poor himself shallery and not bee heard Numbers never make this use of their ears but God hath a deaf ear for them 2 Our eyes to see the good example of our brethren to imitate them to glorify God for them Our ears to hear their Godly Counsels Admonitions Reproofs and so bee bettered by them 3 Our eyes to see and consider their danger to pull them out of their infirmities the fire and to cast out the more of their eyes Our ears to hear what is fit to bee spoken of them to defend their good names if they bee traduced For God hath given us two ears not rashly to receive every information but to reserve one for the party lest hee be condemned unheard unconvinced Fiftly and Lastly God made our senses in respect of ourselves not only to bee faithful keepers of the body but diligent factors and agents for our own souls as 1 That our eyes should ever bee looking homewards and to the end of our way as quick and expedite travellors and not fix themselves upon everything wee see here below This is done by heavenly conversation 2 Our ears should bee bored to the perpetual service and obedience of our God as our Lord himself was Psal 40.7 Thou hast bored mine ear alluding to that Ceremony in the Law Exod. 21.6 If a servant would not part from his Master his ear must bee bored and nailed to the Post of the house and thus hee became a perpetual Servant hee was nailed and fixed to that house and service So wee must yeeld an obedient ear as Solomon calls it unto the Counsels Will and Commandement of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ 3 Our eyes were made to bee Conduits of tears for our own sin and misery and for the sin and wretchednesse of other men Psalm 139.136 Davids eyes gushed out rivers of tears because men keep not the word how wept hee then for his own sins that wept so for others Good Lot his righteous soul was vexed in hearing and seeing the unclean conversation of the Sodomites Thus should our senses bee so far from conceiving pleasure in sinful obects as these must bee the continual grief of our souls And can wee indeed look upon our selves and not see something which is a brand of our sin or can wee behold any Creature and not see some express Prints and marks of our sin and vanity upon it Surely this one meditation would be effectual to keep us from casting our eyes upon unlawful objects and so from making our selves a prey to the Devil Vse 2. This serves to reprove such as fail in this watch of the senses for who doth not yet some far more dangerously Such as have in their houses Popish Pictures and Images which are alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the door to the Devil a sign of a man willing to bee seduced Experience shews that when a man is in love with such Images hee easily falls out with Gods Image in himself and Gods Children 2 Such as delight in lascivious Pictures and filthy portraytours of naked men or women in whole or such parts as may stir the corruption of the heart which should bee beaten down by all means Wee need bring no Oyle to this flame Yet the Devil hath gotten such pictures in request in this wanton age wherein every thing is almost proportional 3 Such are far from this watch of their senses as so attire and disguise themselves or lay open their nakedness to insnare the senses of others Let them not say they think no hurt in it unless they can bee sure that no other think hurt by it 4 Such as like the Images have ears and hear not eyes and see not care not to hear the Word or read it never taste Gods goodness in it neither doth the breath of heavenly life ever pass through their noses 5 Such as frequent wicked company and delight in the ungracious actions and speeches that they hear and see or can digest them without reproof or dislike manifested The Devil hath a thorow-fare among such companies who are conspired against God and goodness Add unto these such as read or have in their houses Lascivious and wanton books teachers of lewdness Adde also Stage-Players and their beholders that cast open all gates and walls to the Devil 6 The Covetous eye whereof Solomon saith Ecc. 4.4 his eye is not satisfied with Riches neither doth hee say For whom do I thus labour In that Satan would draw Christ to the love of the World and thereby makes no doubt but to insnare and cast him down wee learn that Doctr. 2 The love of the World easily maketh a man a prey and spoil to the Devil Satan well knew that if hee could get Christ to fall down to the World hee would easily fall down to him Where by the World I
the Lord sometimes for a time leaveth his own Children into the hand of Satan so as he may tempt them and prevail over them to the committing of fearful sins as we see in David and Peter which sins often blind and harden them and damp their conscience that for a time they see no displeasure of God but lye secure and impenitent as David well-nigh a year But all this desertion of God was to a certain measure at length the cloud was gone the mist dispersed the light returned Satan resisted and forced to fly away And this is the ground of that prayer of David and the Saints Lord forsake me not over-long not fearing that the Lord would quite take away his grace from him as the violent Lutherans teach but that hee should not with-draw his second grace over-farre or over-much Which prayer is grounded on a promise of God by vertue whereof wee may conclude that the battel of Beleevers is not for the over-throw but the exercise of their faith Vse 2. This should stir up the Christian to cheerful resistance which is the condition of Satans flight Obj. Alas he is a spirit I am flesh which is great advantage He is a legion I am but one man he can oppress me with number He is a principality as strong as a roaring Lion I am a weak Worm Hee is subtile as a Serpent I am foolish and unwise Hee is cruel and fierce how can I have any heart to resist him Answ 1. There is in every Christian a Spirit stronger than hee Joh. 4.4 2 There be more with us than with him 2 Chron. 32.7 fear him not Satan potens omnipotens Christus Callidus serpent sapiens Christus sapientia 3 He is mighty but what can a strong man being disarmed doe 4 He is subtile but in our Lord are treasures of wisdom and he is made wisdome to us of God 1 Cor. 1.30 5 Hee is cruel but what hurt can a Lion doe being in Chains or a Grate Secondly in thy resistance strive lawfully How Two ways 1 By good means 2 In a good manner First the means of resisting the Devil must not be such as are of the Devils own devising as Crosses Reliques Holy-water Exorcisms nor seeking to Witches and Sorcerers which is to cast out the Devil by Beelzebub but by means appointed by our Captain who was best acquainted with this warre as 1 The Word of God the holy Scriptures by which Christ made the Devil fly and so must we 1 Joh. 2.14 I write unto you young men because yee are strong and the word of God abideth in you and yee have overcome the Devil which plainly sheweth that not by Spells and Charms of Scripture but by the abiding of it in the heart to rule and order the life Satan is overcome Satan is subtile but the word giveth wisdome to the simple which overcomes his subtilty 2 Faith in Gods promises 1 Pet. 5.9 whom resist stedfast in the faith Christ here sets himself stedfastly in the word of his Father and so conquers the Devil The victory that overcomes the world is by faith to lean on the promises of God Faith keeps in sight Christ our victorious Captain and sets the crown of life in our eye which is laid up for them that are faithful to the death 3 Prayer joyned with fasting and watching Christ entring this combate armed himself with fasting watching and prayer for many days together David when Goliah drew near took a stone out of his scrip and smote him in the fore-head that he fell down This stone that overthrows the hellish Goliah is prayer While Moses hands are lifted up all the Armies of the Amalekites fly before Israel And St. James in his Epistle tells us that if wee would resist the Devil we must draw near God chap. 4. vers 8. and never doe wee draw nearer God than in effectual and fervent prayer Let the Disciples use any means without this the Devil will not fly whereof if they ask the reason Christ tells them the Devil is not cast out but by fasting and prayer 4 The practice of true godliness and resolution against all unrighteousness Righteousness is called a brest-plate Ephes 6.14 which is not only that imputed righteousness of Christ but that inherent righteousness of our selves which is the study and endeavour in a godly life and the Apostle James among other directions in resisting the Devil chap. 4. vers 8. giveth this for one Cleanse your hearts yee sinners and purge your hearts yee wavering minded and the reason is good seeing by every sin and lust being nourished Satan is let in and the yeelding to any corruption is to give him so much ground in stead of beating him out of our borders He that is in a fight abstaineth from whatsoever would hinder him 1 Cor. 9. and therefore from sin which presseth down and hangeth fast on Let us meditate on that Law Deut. 23.9 When thou goest out against thine enemies to fight abstain from every evil thing For this weakens us and turns God against us and drives his good Angels from us 5 Gods Spirit Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might our own strength will easily be turned against us our own counsels cannot but cast us down God resisteth the proud and assisteth the humble As therefore Moses said to Israel at the red sea being naked and weak not knowing what to doe so may we in this case Stand still fear not behold the salvation of the Lord Grieve not the Spirit nor quench his motions who is the Spirit of power of wisdome of fortitude and counsel of strength and direction and goe forth in the boldness of that Spirit as Jer. 20.11 The Lord is with me like a mighty gyant therefore mine enemies shall be overthrown and shall not prevail but shall be mightily confounded Secondly the good manner of resisting the Devil that hee may fly is this 1 Resist the first temptation and break the Serpents head dash the heads of Babylons brood against the stones Wise men will not let the enemy come near the walls or the gates much less into the Market-place It is a great advantage to give the foyl at the first on-set Give no place to the Devil give sin no room in thy heart or if Satan inwardly suggest any there close it up let it dye and never come out as a man that hath a Serpent in a vessel stops it up and there it dyes 2 Resist the least evil motion contemn not the least temptation for Satan can tell how by one grain of poyson to kill the soul and by one dead fly to corrupt a whole box of oyntment The weakest man yea or woman is strong enough to kill a sleepy Sisera The weakest temptation is too strong for a careless and secure adversary Eve should have resisted Satan in an apple and Lots wife in a look No sin is so light and venial that is not worth resistance
they doe whence have they being so simple and illiterate persons their skill but from the Devil or Diabolical tradition And who made the Devil thy Physician who if he should minister nothing but Natural things thou mightest not accept them from him 3 This remedy is worse and more desperate than the disease because Gods curse followeth it who in his Law hath commanded that whosoever goe a whoring after such should be stoned with stones and if any turn after such he will set his face against them to cut them off Levit. 20.6 And according to this threatning he hath executed visible Judgements against it even against Kings themselves who think themselves most free to doe their pleasure as 1 Chronicles 10.13 14. Saul dyed for his transgression that hee committed against the Lord even against the word of the Lord which hee kept not and in that he sought and asked counsel of a familiar spirit therefore the Lord slew him and turned the Kingdome to David Asa never came oft his bed for this sin 2 King 1.16 and more not only Kings but whole Nations were cast out before his people for this sin and not only they but even his own people were cast among the Nations when they followed these waies of theirs Isa 2.6 Better w●●t therefore to dye of a disease in the hand than be recovered by the hand of ●●e Devil 4 Mark how the Devil hath circumvented such a party 1 He hath robbed him of his faith in God because he maketh haste 2 Of his fealty and subjection to God because he either denieth Gods government or the equity of it 3 He hath got in him what he desired to win from Christ but could not namely to take up another means of safety than God had appointed 4 He having thus set up himself for such a mans God hee maketh him commit execrable Idolatry in ascribing to the Devil himself that which is proper to God and Jesus Christ First a power of healing which the Devil hath not further than God permitteth him to the just blinding of the sinner Secondly a faith and perswasion in that power that it shall be available to him which is nothing else but a secret confederacy and league with the Devil without which nothing can be done This the Lord implyeth in the bounding of his Laws as Lev. 19.31 Ye shall not seek c. for I am your Lord as if he had said you ought to depend upon me and not upon the enemy of Mankind Levit. 20.6 Yee shall not goe a whoring but be holy as if he had said have nothing to doe with such an impure spirit if you would bee an holy people Why God permitteth a power of curing to them of whom we may not seek cure Quest But if God would not have them to help why doth hee give them such power of curing of fore-telling things to come and revealing hidden things Ans 1. The power of curing is from Satan God justly permitting him to the further deluding of unbeleevers 2 Neither doth the Wizzard fore-tell things to come but the Devil by them such things as he by the quickness of his spiritual nature seeth present in the causes or which God permitteth himself to be the worker of and casie it is for him to discover the Thief which himself tempted to steal 3 The Lord permitteth all this not that we should trust him or use him but to try whether we will depart from our God the case here is the same with that of the false Prophet who must not bee beleeved when hee fore-telleth things that come to pass Why then may some say doth God suffer them to fore-tell such things The text answereth The Lord thy God tempteth thee whether thou wilt cleave unto him or no Deut. 13.3 Let all such persons as have sought to them consider betime how they have broken Covenant with God betaken themselves to Satans help broken prison to their greater punishment and made stones bread let these bewayl the sin and renounce it never was Saul in so fearful a case as when he run unto the Witch by his own confession God was departed from him Let no man lessen this sin or dare to defend such limbs of the Devil under titles of good wise or cunning persons seeing these cursed blessers draw Towns and Countries after them into their own damnation Let none think it a slight matter to counsel others to this sin and remember that by the Law of God they ought to dye that seek to thrust people from their God and drive them to the Devil a farre greater sin is this than that which the Lord maketh capital Fourthly here we have also strong consolation The comfort of the Church is that Christ is stronger than all that Christ is stronger than the Devil 1 Joh. 4.4 stronger is he that is in us than he that is in the world look how strong the Father is so strong is the Son Joh. 10.29 and therefore his strength is as farre above Satans as the Creators is above the Creatures Hence we are sure none can take us out of his hands not the World Be of good comfort I have overcome the world not the Devil The Prince of this world is cast out not sin not death both which are cast into the Lake not temptation nor persecution for by Christ we are more than conquerours All these may molest us but cannot hurt us they may make warre upon us but we may pluck up our hearts seeing we fight against conquered enemies and are through his strength that hath loved us sure of victory before wee strike a blow Let not us forget the consolation in that although our enemies may nible at our heels yet the seed of the Woman hath broken their heads for us Vers 39. And we are witnesses of all things which he did in the Land of Judea and in Jerusalem whom they slew hanging him on a tree THe Apostle having witnessed of such facts of Christ as testified him the great Prophet of his Church affirmeth in these words of himself and the rest of the Apostles that they were witnesses not only of the things formerly u●●●ed but of all things else not only which Christ did in Judea and Jerusalem but also which hee suffered among them and so descendeth to lay down his Priestly Office in this verse and his Kingly Office in the next That the Apostles were such witnesses of all things which Christ did and suffered in Judea and Jerusalem will appear to him that considereth that it was one of Christs first actions in his Offices after his Baptism to call his Disciples who presently left all and followed him to the end that they might be oculate witnesses of his mighty works of his life of his death and resurrection and that they may be ear-witnesses of all the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth to which purpose he took them after a sort into his Family that by their
challenge though a subordinate power properly to forgive sins and do not content t emselves with the ministerial publishing in the name and authority of God alone and pronouncing forgivenesse to all repentant sinners become open blasphemers against God and not without an high wickednesse set themselves in the room of God 2 I say in the description that the Lord doth account the sins of his Elect as no sins and that for the merit of Christ both which appear in the former resembla●ce which compareth sins to debts wherein God is compar●d to a Creditor man to a debtor the Law to the bill or bond which bindeth man to G●d 1 to obedience 2 in default of that to punishment so as her● is nothing but either satisfaction or to go to prison Now wee being banq●●rupts by our fall and of such broken estate as wee are not able to pay on● farthing neither of the principal n●r the for●eiture the m●rcy of our ●reditor steppe●h in who himself procureth us a surety both able and w●lling to discharge our whole debt and the forfeit as well as the principal that ●s Jesus Christ who by his obedience active and passive hath made a ●●d ●●scharge and sufficient sa●isfaction for the sins of all the beleev●rs in the wo●ld the which being accepted of his Father in full p●ym●●t are f●●ther imputeth not to us our si●s but covereth them cast ●h them all 〈◊〉 his back Isa 38 17. and into the bott●me of the sea M● 7.9 as th●●gs which he will never remember more Th●s they ●ecome as though they had never been and wee accounted as innocent as if wee had never fallen from our first state of innocenc● From th●s wee learn how to co●ceive that place and the li●e where it is said that the blood of J●●us Christ cleans●th us from all sin 1 Joh. 1. wherein not th●●●ti●n of remissi●n wh ch is proper to the Deity is as●ribed to the bl●od of C●rist but onely the cause of remission is signified f●r which God the Fat●er remitteth sins and that is the blood of Christ in●luding his wh●le obedien e and the merit of it which is a just price and pac ficati●n of his Father Eph. 1.7 In whom wee have redemption through his blood even he remission o● sins 3 I a●de that the Lord doth acquit Beleevers from the guilt and puni hment of all their sins for as where the debt is once paid As the Lord so g●veth properly 〈◊〉 o● pe f ●ctly ●●th 〈…〉 punishment the wh●le obligation is void and there remaineth no more satisfa tion to bee made so where the L●●d forgiv th a debt once hee thenceforth acq●itteth the debt●● and is far from requiring any new satisfaction This will not sta●● w● th● justice of God to exact the satisfaction of one debt twice 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 surety another tim● in our selves It will not stan● with the gl●ry of God wi h wh●m is plentiful redemption It will not stand with the hon●ur of 〈◊〉 to work out with all his obedience but an ●all red●mption wh ch w●uld argue but a hal● satisfaction Ch istus comm●● 〈◊〉 no●i● 〈…〉 culp m 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ●g●st S●●m de temp 141 It will not stand with the price of his blood nor wo thiness of his death not fully to satisfy the whole ●ust ce of his Fat●er I wil not stand with the faith of our prayer for remission of sins 〈◊〉 whole debt be not f●rgiven but some satisfaction remaineth f●r us to perf rm to beleeve remission of sins were no faith but a vain opinion and fancy ● r with our peace wi●h God if his wrath bee not yet fully satisfied Nay it will not stand with right reason for is it reason that hee that oweth n thing to a man should be forced to make a satisfaction where nothing is due but where the debt is remitted nothing is due nothing is ●wing the deb●or is freed and th● whole obligation cancelled Who seeth not therefore by all this what a w cked and detestable devise it is of the School-m●n and defended by all the Papists ●t this day to affirm C●ncil 〈◊〉 d n● ss 4 Can. 4. that only the fault of mortal sins is rem●tted by Christ but not the p●nishment or satisfaction the which being as they say by the grace of God changed from eternal to temp●rary rem●in●th to bee born either here in this life or in purgatory till Gods justice be fully satisfied and the uttermost farthing be paid Vpon this string hang their indulgences pardons masses pilgrimages and the whole body of their trumpery devised to make a prey of the World a great part of which being the cunningest theeves in all the world they have by such craftie and fraudulent conveyances gotten into their hands And lest they should want all colour they alledge the example of David 2 Sam. 12.13 Davids sin and punishment both for●iven notwi hstanding the child must dye Whose sin the Lord put away and yet the child born to him must surely dye and again though the sins of the godly bee pardoned yet death which is the punishment of original sin remaineth I answer 1 That Davids sin and punishment were both remitted for so said the Prophet Thou shalt not dye 2 Wee must distinguish between punishment of sin whereby Gods justice is satisfied and chastening of sin with a fatherly rod. The former are alwaies remitted with the sin not alwaies the latter by the former the Lord revengeth the si●s of men by the latter hee correcteth The former can onely bee born away ●y Christ the latter cannot bee born off by any masses or indulgences but are wholesomely dispensed and disposed by God to his dearest children for their good Of this latter kind was the death of Davids child not properly for his sin but that in the deed doing hee had caused the enemies of God to blaspheme Of this kinde was the sentence against Moses and Aaron whose sin of not glorifying God at the waters of strife Numb 20.12 was pardoned and yet they must not enter into the land of promise they were corrected with rodds of men not punished in proper speech both that others with themselves might bee more careful not to offend in the like kind as also that being deprived of the earthly Canaan they might more studiously seek for the heavenly Bellarm. lib. 4. de p●nit cap. 2. The like is to bee said of the Corinths of whom Bellarmine saith that they were reconciled to God and yet diverse of them were stricken with death for unworthy receiving of the Sacrament As for the example of the Israeli es Numb 14.20 whose sin of murmuring God is said to forgive at Moses prayer yet they must all for this sin dye in the wilderness Note well this answer The answer is that Moses did not pray that God would absolutely and for ever pardon their sin nor that the Lord would abstain from all
amendment of life for the remission of sins Mark 1.4 never hope for remission unlesse thou hungrest after this grac● of Repentance for the Lord will not bee merciful to that man that blesseth himself in his sins Deut. 29.19 but if the wicked return from his sins he shall live and not dye Ezek. 18.21 2 The second Companion is Gladness and cheerfulness of heart yea an unspeakable joy that the Lord hath done so great things for his soul and made him so happy as to bring him from such extremitie of misery to partake in the Wisdome Righteousness Holiness and Redemption of Christ for can a man have a gift bestowed upon him of more price and use than all the Kingdomes of the world and never find his heart made glad in it or is it possible that he that findeth the pearl can go away without joy The Eunuch being converted went away rejoycing and if every beleever must rejoyce in another mans conversion much more must hee in his own 3 The Third is Love and Thankfulness to God which are enforced by this excellent grace Luke 7.47 The poor woman that stood weeping behind Christ loved much because much was forgiven her Psal 116.1 I love the Lord because hee hath heard my voice and wherein the Lord had thus gratiously dealt with him the whole Psalm teacheth especially v. 8. Because thou hast delivered my soul from death mine eyes from tears my feet from falling Now if David for a temporal deliverance from Saul in the Wildernesse did thus provoke his heart to the love of God how should the consideration of our spiritual deliverance from Sin Death and all hellish powers blow up these Heavenly sparkles in us And what can so liberal a love beget in a good heart but much thankfulness for apprehension of much mercy how David in the sence of mercy reaching to the pardon of his sins melteth into the praises of God see Psal 103.1 2 3. c. And the Apostle Paul considering what a weight of corruption did still oppress him whereof hee expected to bee fully eased concludeth his comfort with thanks unto God in Jesus Christ Rom. 7 2● And remembring what a bloody persecutor and an extream waster of the Church hee had been formerly 1 Tim. 1.12 yea what an Enemy unto God what a blasphemer of his Name hee breaketh with vehemence into the praises of God for his happy change But I thank him who hath counted mee faithful and put mee in his service vers 14. and the grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant towards me 4 The fourth is a sound and sincere heart hating and striving against all sin even secret and small as well as open and greater David in Psal 32.1 pronouncing him a blessed man whose iniquity is covered and whose sin is pardoned true but it might bee asked how shall I know such a blessed man or my self to have attained that blessedness The Prophet giveth us this note to know him by in the next words and in whose spirit is no guile namely to hide and foster any sin of which guile hee there directly speaketh 5 The fifth note or Companion is a tender affection to forgive our Brethren private wrongs and injuries even great as well as small hee that hath ten thousand talents forgiven him will not easily take his brother by the throat for two pence The Commandement is to forgive one another Eph. 4.32 even as God for Christs sake forgave us The Example is set down Luke 6.36 Bee merciful as your Heavenly Father is merciful but hee forgiveth all and freely is the first in forgiveness and perfectly hee forgiveth and forgetteth too The form of our petition of mercy is forgive us as wee forgive c. Thou wouldest have God to forgive thee all and forget all and to make thy wrongs against him as though they had never been go then and do so to thy brother otherwise the threatning will meet thee Jam. 2.13 Judgement mercilesse to him that showeth no mercy Use 1. All this Doctrin concerning this article sheweth that there is no other means in the world to be free from si● but by Gods 〈◊〉 remission of it Whence it is that remission of sin is called the covering of sin Psal 32.2 in that the faith of the heart layeth hold on Christ and his righteousnesse who is our Propitiatory covering us and our sins against the two Tables as the Propitiatory covered the Ark in which those Tables we●● without which cover every Sinner is next to the Devil and his Angels the m●st vile and loathsome creature in the eyes of God This use must the rather be thought ●f because neither the Papists not yet the common and carnal Protestant yeeld con●ent unto it Neither Papist nor comm●n Protestant yee●deth to this d●ctrin of free remission of sin The Papist he beleeveth that many si●s are venial and prop●rly no sins am●ng which he reckoneth Concupiscence which indeed is the mo her 〈◊〉 of all and these need no remission Hee h●l●eth also that men redeem●● by Ch●is● and having received the first grace of God a●●●●w 〈◊〉 to m●●it by their works rem ssion of their sin● Are further be thinketh that beca●●e no man knoweth whether hee have w●rks ●n●ugh ● ple●●● Go● n● man can know that his sins are remitted All wh ch wi●h m●ny 〈…〉 to th●● ar● most blasphemous Heresies agai●st th●● 〈…〉 A●ticle of free rem●ssion of sins through belief i● 〈…〉 S●n 〈…〉 w●●h so l●●g as 〈◊〉 us they hold t●em 〈…〉 in the r●m ssion of their sins by Chr st and consequently 〈◊〉 the gr●ce ●f life But the comm●n Protestant also 〈…〉 with simple def●nc●s against his sin ●he A●ams cover and arm● 〈…〉 ●aves which wi●●●●ar●e hold the sewing S●m● w●ll 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 in mens eyes and then all is safe others strive to f ●g● them and having ●●●●ked 〈…〉 their conscience they lye them d w●● se●mely and 〈…〉 of them any more Others ●●ve●●●osse a●d soul sins su●● 〈…〉 of God contempt of his W●rd ●●●●nesse of heart ●atr●d ●f 〈…〉 and all irreligion with an outward civil life and an h●nest conversation as it seemeth to bee not thinking that God seeth many a wi●ked hear● th●●ugh a civil life Lutum l●vi●●●●to ●gn●● extinguunt lign●rum struc O●hers will goe beyond the former in a●kn●wl●dgi●● th●ms●lv●● 〈◊〉 is a d will make some sh●w of ●a●ing up their peace but it is with so●● c●rem ny or bodily exercise they will fast and pra● a●d 〈◊〉 som 〈◊〉 o● some M●ny to good uses when they dye 〈◊〉 as for th● grace of faith which should bee as a soul to quicken these acti●ns they 〈◊〉 know what that meant But h wsoever m●st men are carried 〈…〉 wit such s●●on●●●●usions as these let no man that would not deceive him 〈◊〉 w●lf●lly 〈◊〉 in any such course to meet with sound peace n●thing but the blo●d 〈◊〉 Jesu● his Son that cleanseth from al sin In the garment of
to carry our selves Nunquam minus solus quam cum solus as we may say with Scipio Wee are never less alone than when we are most alone and with our Saviour Joh. 16.32 I am not alone the Father is with me The faithful need never bee alone because they may ever be in conference with God then may they goe close to God and sharpen their prayers and meditate on his Word and VVorks to fit them better for their callings then may they enlarge their hearts to God in confessions and praises and thus he that is led by the Spirit into these solitary places is in safety because as the hills compass Jerusalem so doth the Lord his people while they are in his service thus shall Satan bee most disappointed who while hee hopes to make our solitariness his advantage wee shall by it draw nearer unto God and bee set so much the more out of his reach 4 Directions for solitariness Directions for solitariness 1 VVatch the benefit of time to spend it best in musing upon heavenly things and enjoy the sweet liberty of conversing with God 2 Know that no time must be spent in roving and ranging thoughts but must be redeemed from evil and unprofitableness and therefore choice must bee made of objects presented and as little time as may be spent in worldly and indifferent things and then with as little delight as may be Holy wisedome is ever diminishing the love of earthly things 3 Consider the danger of sin in thy solitariness when fear shame witnesses and counsellers are removed and that there are no open sins which are not secretly first hatched and warped and therefore if we muse on any sin let it be to overcome it and beware of secret allurements 4 Consider the slipperiness and business of the heart which is a wandring thing like a Mill ever grinding ever in motion still setting us on work with more Commandements than ever God did and therefore giving it leave to muse we must the better watch it To be tempted of the Devil This is the fift circumstantial point namely the end of Christs going into the wilderness Here consider two things 1 The Author of the temptation the Devil 2 The end it self to be tempted of him The Devil that is a wicked spirit the Prince and Captain of the rest as we may gather out of Matth. 25.41 A wicked spirit not by creation but by defection Full of wickedness whence Elimas the Sorcerer is called the child of the Devil Act. 13.10 because he was full of deceit and wickedness Full of malice a red Dragon full of poysons seeking nothing but destruction Full of craft an old Serpent more crafty than all the beasts of the field Full of power called the Prince and God of the world and the power of darkness the strong man keeping the hold Principalities powers c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word comes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trajicio calumnior and signifies an accuser calumniator or slanderer having his name from his continual practice For so he is called the accuser of the brethren which accuseth them before God day and night Satan accuseth man 1 To God Rev. 12.10 and no marvel seeing he durst accuse God himself as an envier of mans happy estate and careless of Christs estate here But especially he accuseth 1 Man to God as he did Job that he served God in Hypocrisie and upon affliction would curse him to his face chap 1. vers 9. 2 Man to man 2 To man stirring up strife and contention from one against another and by this means he worketh effectually in the children of disobedience Ephes 2.2 VVhere strife and envying is there wisdome is sensual and devillish Jam. 3.15 An example hereof wee have in Saul who when the evil spirit was entred into him all manner of accusations came against innocent David and were received that he was a Traytor and one that sought Sauls life c. 3 Man to himself 3 To himself when he hath drawn a man to many loathsome sins then he stretcheth them beyond all the measure of mercy aggravates Gods justice extenuates his mercy and all to bring the Sinner to despair Thus he accused Cain Achitophel and Judas whom hee brought to confess their sin but to deny Gods mercy Whence note 1 The miserable estate of wicked men that serve such a Lord and Master as the Devil is Satan● best wages to his most diligent Servants who in stead of standing by them for their diligent service will stand against them to accuse them to God to men to their own Consciences will reckon up all their faults and deprave whatsoever was best intended While he can draw them along in his service hee will lye close like a crafty Fox and Serpent in one corner or other to devour their souls but afterwards will terrifie them and roar like a Lion on them setting in order before them the villanies to which he himself tempted them crying out on them as damned VVretches and making them often cry out so of themselves even in this life and for ever in the life to come And yet alas he is the Prince of this World to whom generally most men yeeld their subjection and homage yea the God of this world to whom men offer themselves and whatever they have or can make in sacrifice yea men sell themselves as slaves and bond-men to be ruled at his will How should this one consideration move men to get out of his power and out of the service of sin and come to Jesus Christ who is meek and merciful one that covereth sins acquitteth and dischargeth one that answereth all accusations and crowneth our weak endeavours which himself worketh in us in such sort as a cup of cold water shall not goe unrewarded 2 Note how expresly Satan hath stamped this quality as his own mark upon his Children who so lively resemble him as that they have his name also given them Tit. 2.3 and 2 Tim. 3.3 and 1 Tim. 3.11 For how quick and nimble are men to goe between man and man with Tales and accusations to cast bones of enmity Sometimes charging men openly or secretly with things utterly untrue and false as Ziba dealt with Mephibosheth 2 Sam. 16.3 sometimes blazing infirmities which love would have covered sometimes aggravating with vehemency of words facts or speeches which charity would give a favourable construction unto as Doeg pleaded against Ahimelec 1 Sam. 22.9 sometimes depraving the truth by adding to mens speeches and this cost Christ his life his enemies adding I will destroy this Temple and make another in three days made with hands or diminishing it by concealing that which might make for a man All which are Satanical practices who being the Father of Lyes would chase all truth out of the world Let all Gods Children labour to express Gods Image 7 Rules or means against false accusation in hating this hateful
executed his doctrin notwithstanding most heavenly and as his enemies witnessed Never man spake like this man yet was condemned his wonderful miracles obscured yea blasphemed Hee cast out Devils by Beelzebub and shall the servant look to bee better than his Master Lamentable it is to see how our times accuse the first restorers of Religion Luther Calvin Beza Bucer and the rest as the Layers of sedition and rebellion and as lamentable that such as preach the same holy Doctrin as they did should under the titles of Puritans and Schismaticks bee coupled with Papists yea accounted worse And no marvel if the whole profession of Religion bee accused and religious persons made the songs of the abject and scum of the Land because the Devil is an accuser When the Devil laies off his name and nat●re and ceaseth to bee a Devil it will bee otherwise but not till then But let such as would bee wise by Gods wisdome labour to see Satans malice in all this and that if to bee accused bee sufficient who can bee innocent 4 Note Seeing Satan is such an accuser of us in himself and his instruments So many accusers should make us watchful of our selves to God to men and to our own consciences how careful ought wee to bee in our whole conversation to stop Satans mouth and the mouths of wicked men which will bee open against us How ought wee to make right steps to our feet seeing we shall bee sure to hear of the least halting How ought wee to examine the uprightness of our hearts that in those accusations wee may bee bold to go to God and say Lord do thou prove and try mee if there bee any such wickedness in mee Rules to become in-offensive and unreproveable and so stop the mouth of of Satan 1 The matter of thy work must bee good and warranted by the Word 4 Rules to stop the mouths of all accusers then God will justify that which himself sets thee about and thee in it 2 The manner of doing it must bee proportional a good thing must bee done well in good circumstances 3 The end must bee found namely Gods glory and mans good A bad end spoiles the best action 4 In every thing remember that Satans eye is upon thee to accuse thee the eye of thine own conscience to witness for or against thee and Gods eye to judge thee to whom thou must stand or fall as to thine own Lord. To be tempted The word to be tempted is spoken of 1 God 2 Man 3 Satan all tempt I God tempteth 1 When he proveth the graces of his Children so hee proved Abraham Gen. 22.1 and Job chap. 7. vers 18. 2 When he discovereth the sin and corruption which lurketh in them and thus God tempted the Israelites who when their desires in the Wilderness were not satisfied usually broke out into murmuring and impatiency and shewed naughty hearts full of distrustfulness And thus God is said to lead into temptation when being provoked to wrath he with-draweth his grace that so his Children by their falls might see their weakness as David and Peter and that the wicked might in justice bee prepared to judgement as Pharaoh burst into blasphemy Achitophel hanged himself through impatiency and Saul used unlawful means to escape his cross 2 Rules in Gods tempting of man But in these temptations of God observe two rules 1 That the word tempting referred to God is ever taken in good part for hee tempteth only to prove never to seduce and his temptations are always good because they proceed from him that is goodness it self and tend altogether to the good and profit of his children and are the execution of justice on the wicked which is good also 2 That all these temptations are not to confirm Gods knowledge of men who perfectly knows what is in them yea who seeth things that are not as though they were but to bring men being exercised by them to the clearer knowledge of him and themselves Man tempteth God two ways II Man tempteth 1 God two ways 2 Man both himself and others Man tempteth God 1 By presumption and curiosity as when men forsake the ordinary means of their good and presume too much upon Gods help to try whether God will use any other than the appointed means to succour them so it is said vers 7. Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God 2. By distrust when men by unwarrantable means try the power of God whether he can or will help or hurt Exod. 17.2 when the Israelites by murmuring would have water Moses said Why tempt yee the Lord and Psal 78.18 they tempted him in the Wilderness requiring meat for their lust and said Can God prepare a table in the Wilderness Here they tempted him by doubting 1 Of his Promises 2 Of his Presence 3 Of his Power 4 By limiting him to that straight 5 They thought he was bound to them to fulfill their lusts Man tempteth man three ways Man tempteth others 1 VVhen upon just occasion he tryes a mans affections and disposition to this or that so Jonathan tried his Father Saul how he stood affected to David 1 Sam. 19.3 2 VVhen men goe about by captious and subtile questions and with fair shew of words to get matter of reprehension and accusation against others Thus the Pharisees came to Christ tempting him Matth. 16.1 and thus the Herodians came to him to intangle him in his talk 3 VVhen men allure and entice one another to evil as Prov. 1.10.11 Come let us lay wait for bloud and have all one purse so the Harlot said to the young man Come in with me let us take our fill of love till the morning Man tempteth himself two ways Man tempteth himself two ways 1 VVhen his own concupiscence moveth and draweth him aside to sin Jam. 1.4 Every man is tempted when he is drawn aside of his own concupiscence 2 VVhen he wilfully casts himself into danger as Peter when he went into Caiaphas the High Priests Hall among Christs enemies and his here he is moved to deny his Master and Satan prevails against him III Satan tempteth and in his tempting goeth beyond all these Satan tempt●●● two ways 1 VVhen by outward objects he stirreth up inward corruption as David walking on his leds and seeing Bathsheba the Devil wrought lust in him 2 By infusing inwardly evil motions and thoughts without objects and thus stood he up against Israel and caused David to number the people a thing meerly needless as Joab confessed 1 Chron. 21.1 2 3. Now thus God cannot tempt to evil he with-draweth his Spirit by outward occasions he brings to light the sins of men and punisheth one sin with another but moveth no man to evil and much less driveth him to it and least of all infuseth wickedness into any mans heart which to think were high blasphemie So men by tempting may stirre up corruption in others but to infuse
men oppressed with poverty because they say they must live they must live in an unlawful calling wherein they be slaves and drudges to every mans sin such as are Players Jesters Wizards Tumblers such are Scholars who for preferment run into Popish Countries and betake themselves to seminaries and so become Traytors Yea those that have no calling must live too but how by filching stealing or begging as idle and roguish vagrants and those at home whose extream idleness brings poverty upon them as an armed man Or else by gaming cheating and by their wits The whole course of all which is but a prentiship to the devil 2 Others that exercise honest trades but easily help themselves forward by swearing lying facing false weights measures and trickes which they put upon men They never stick for a penny-profit to hazard their souls He is no quick Chapman if hee cannot lye for advantage neither can hee bee trusted unless hee swear hee must swear or hee must not sell hee must sometimes make the best of an ill bargain and with a little colour lay it upon another mans neck for why should hee willingly wrong or undo himself 3 Others a number 1 who by mis-demeanours have brought just reproach upon themselves and seek to salve it by lying facing and shifting and perhaps by worse means This was the case and sin of good David hee had corrupted himself with Bathsheba hee was afraid the adultery would come home to him hee sends for his worthy Captain Uriah to go home to his wife that so it might bee covered but when it could not that way good Uriah must bee slain at Davids appointment and so hee would hide adultery by murther 2 Like unto these are those who having outragiously overshot themselves in notable riots by word or deed and being called to account for it lay all the blame upon drunkennesse a sin indeed of strong burden able to carry away many sins upon it but never was any sin lessened by another but aggravated and the excuse is a confession of a double sin which in all true judgement deserves double punishment 3 Servants or children who having committed a fault hide it by lying and so to avoid an inconvenience run into a mischief 4 Others being sick and diseased are perswaded and resolved to go to Wizards and Witches cunning men and women and so get release by breaking the Prison A pittiful cure when the Devil is the Physician Saul never went to the Witch till God was gone from him And take this for a certain conclusion 1 Whosoever goeth or seeketh to a Witch in losses crosses c. let him boast as much as hee will of his faith it is but a Satanical faith a faith in the devil and not in God by which the Witch workes all that is done 2 The remedy is far worse than the disease severely revenged on Saul 1 Chron. 10.13 and on Asa 2 King 1.16 3 The Devil hath got from them that which hee could not from Christ namely to use another means of release than God appointed Some there bee that are hearers of the Word yet if they see any person extraordinarily visited will give him counsel to seek out to the cunning man Is it because there is never a God in Israel is this a small sin By Gods law they ought to dye that seek to thrust a people from their God and drive them to the Devil Deut. 13.10 But this is a greater sin than that Miserable comforters that wish them to go to Hell for help Vse 2. Let us carefully look to such rules as may keep us from using unwarrantable means and they are four 1 Consider that all means outward and ordinary are but servants Four considerations to fence us from using unwarrantable means to which God hath tyed neither blessing nor providence further than hee pleaseth that our affections should not bee tyed to them nor our eyes fixed on them but on his hand who disposeth means to his own ends It was the sin of the Israelites to limit the Holy One of Israel namely to means that when they saw no means they saw no God whereas a heart loosed from the means and rightly disposed to the Author doth not stint him neither to the measure of affliction nor to the time or means of deliverance Job will not tye God to any measure but commits himself wholly to him saying If hee kill me yet will I trust in him For the time of deliverance the godly commit it to God in whose hand times and seasons are the just man that lives by faith makes not haste Isa 16.28 For the means of deliverance Abraham is secure of it My son God will provide hee saw no means of the Promise if Isaac were offered yet hee laies him on the alter on the wood and receives him from the dead 2 Consider that any good thing is then beautiful when it is compassed by good means Satan ever aimeth at one of these two things Satan ever seeketh to blemish that good which he cannot hinder to hinder every thing that is good or if hee cannot do that then to thrust it on by evil and ungodly means that hee may at least blemish that which hee cannot hinder and if hee cannot overtake us in the matter yet to get beyond us in the manner of doing it Wee must therefore watch in both these that what wee do bee warrantable as to preserve our selves and provide for our families Hee is worse than an Infidel that doth it not but withal know that hee is no better than an Infidel that doth it by evil means or after an unwarrantable manner 3 Consider that there is no necessity if ordinary and lawful means fail to use unlawful When men say I must live and I must maintain my family here remember that must is for a King nay absolute and unlimitted necessity is for the King of Kings It is not absolutely necessary that thou live but so long as God pleaseth yea it is absolutely necessary that thou rather perish and not live then break Gods Commandement If thou perish for want of means thou mayest go to heaven as Lazarus and exchange a miserable life with an happy But if to keep thee from perishing thou loose thy soul this is to leap out of the pan into the coales Thou therefore that must provide for thy self and thine I tell thee thou must do it by a moderate and honest care warrantable by the word and not shift and prole as if all were fish that comes to the net that is all the necessity that God hath laid on thee the other is suggested by Satan 4 Labour to live the life of faith which will exclude such disturstful thoughts and practices For the property of faith is Three excellent properties of faith in want of means 1 To beleeve the promises of God when we see the clean contrary as when we feel our own sins most then most to beleeve
ground under the milstone of Gods heavie displeasure and Levit. 19.13 Thou shalt not robb thy neighbour the Work-mans hire shall not abide with thee till the morning The reason is in Deut. 24.15 Lest thy Servant cry against thee to the Lord surely it shall be sin unto thee Obj. 2. But thou mayest make the best of thine own commodities by hoysing the prices and diminishing or corrupting the quantity or quality No man can force thee to sell thy own in dear times unlesse thou wilt and much lesse to give it away to the poor and needy then shut up thy heart live to thy self let others shift for themselves as thou doest for one Ans It is written that covetousness is the root of all evil and that it is Idolatry and the Lord hath sworn by a great oath even by his own excellency Amos 8.4 that he will never forget any of their works that swallow up the poor and make the needy of the Land to fail that were weary of the Sabbath because it hindred their setting of Wheat to sale that made the Epha small and the shekel great and falsified their weights and sold corrupt corn that is took all courses for gain Besides the fearful fruits of covetousness in Achan Gehezi Ahab Judas Object 3 But thou lendest thy money too freely ten in the hundred thou maiest take by Law but if by cunning tricks and devices thou canst get twenty in the hundred thou shalt grow rich the sooner Answ It is written Luke 6.35 Lend freely looking for nothing again and Deut. 23.19 Thou shalt not give to usury to thy brother and Exod. 22.25 If thou lend mony to my people thou shalt not bee an Usurer and Levit. 25.36 Thou shalt take no usury nor advantage neither lend him money nor victuals to increase and What shall it profit a man to win the whole world and lose his own soul Object 4. But thou art a poor man and defraudest thy self of profit thou mayest by an oath or a lye or a little cunning and sleight get good gains and why needest thou be so nice Answ It is written Prov. 22.2 The rich and the poor meet together and the Lord is the maker of them both that is in their persons and in their estates and Levit. 19.11 12. Yee shall not swear by my name falsly neither defile the name of the Lord thy God and That the curse entereth into the house of the swearer and thief and Yee shall not steal nor deal falsly nor lye one to another and that all that love abomination and lyes shall bee kept without the gates of the holy City with dogs Rev. 22.15 and that I must not lye for Gods glory much less for my own profit Object 5 But thou maiest revenge thy self upon thy enemy and make him know whom hee hath in hand broach some untruth or other upon him and thou shalt at least disgrace him and if thou le●st him go with this every one will scorn thee Answ It is written Vengeance is mine and I will repay saith the Lord and Thou shalt not bear false witnesse and Matth. 7.12 Whatsoever you would that men should do to you the same do you to them and It is the glory of a man to pass by offences Object 6. But the cause is good the Catholike cause it is but a title of rebellion or treason indeed it is a meritorious work and thou shalt bee Canonized a Romish Martyr if thou shalt kill a King or Queen or Prince that is an Heretick but above all if thou canst by one terrible blow not only kill the King Queen and Prince but also the whole Council all the Lords all the Judges all the Laws all the Law-makers yea and blow up the whole Parliament-house and with that three heretical Kingdomes together Answ Here wee can hold no longer but in such a temptation as is so direct a worship of the Devil with our Lord say Avoid Satan bee packing foul Devil for It is written Rom. 13.1 Let every soul be subject to the higher powers and 1 Pet. 2.14 Submit your selves to all manner ordinance of man and the fearful judgement of Corah Dathan and Abiram with their complices betide such Catholike rebels as dare lift up their hands against the Lords annointed not to cut off his lap but his life which is the life and breath of all his people Use 2. The scripture the hammer of heresies Instance in justification by works The like use hath the Scripture in the right use of it against all errors and heresies as wee may see in these instances 1 If the Papists would teach us justification by workes Answ It is written Rom. 3.20 By the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified and the like in Gal. 3.3 4 5. And Paul had as many merits as any yet he would not bee found in his own righteousnesse Phil. 3.9 and our righteousness is but as filthinesse or filthy clouts and after our best indeavours wee are but unprofitable Servants 2 If they urge us with transubstantiation and real presence Answ It is written that after Christ had given the Sacrament In transubstantiation hee went into the garden and suffered which hee could not if hee had been eaten before and not being glorified and 2 remembrance is of things absent 3 He continues in heaven till his comming to judgement Act. 3.21 4 The Fathers are the same Sacramental bread 1 Cor. 10.3 and yet Christ was not then in the flesh 5 There is no alteration in the sign of Baptism and there is the same use of the sign of the Lords Supper In the seven Sacraments 3 If they object unto us seven Sacraments Wee reply against their five bastard ones as in that of Matrimony for the rest thus 1 It hath no sign instituted by God when he brought Eve to Adam here is matrimony but no sign the ring which they make a sign is not 2 It is not proper to the Church as Sacraments are but common to Jews Turkes and Infidels 3 Every Sacrament belongs to every Member of the Church but matrimony belongs not to their Priests and Votaries 4 All Sacraments serve to confirm faith so doth not matrimony Adam in innocency had no need of saith but hee had need of matrimony In orig nal sin after baptism 4 If they tell us that by Baptism Original sin is quite washed away Wee Answer No true Baptism takes away the guilt but not the being of sin and it is written of David Psal 51.5 that hee confessed hee was still in Original sin see also Rom. 7.7 and Jam. 1.13 In absolute necessity of Baptism 5 If they would thrust upon us the absolute necessity of Baptism Answ It is written that Circumcision being the same in signification and use with Baptism was omitted in the wildernesse forty years and that David doubted not of his uncircumcised childs salvation and that children are holy through their beleeving
reprove and convert sinners yet by ordinary office hee was no Prophet neither did he prophecy But what is this to those mental reservations Are you a Priest Garnet No saith hee meaning not a Priest of Apollo or Jupiter Were not you in England at such a time No not as the Sun in the firmament or as a King in a Kingdome A strange madness that men professing knowledge and zeal should so dally with lies and oaths which tricks of theirs were they justifiable and sound wee should have little use of Magistracy or tribunals especiall where matters are determined by mens oathes hee were a very block that would suffer any thing to bee fastened upon him The murderer might swear hee never slew man namely with the jaw-bone of an Ass as Sampson did The Drunkard might swear hee drunk never a drop if hee can inwardly conceive of water or aqua coelestis or the Poets nectar or what hee can feign The Adultress might swear shee was never toucht if shee can inwardly conceive of any creature as of a Bull or a Swan as the Poets feign of Pas●ph●● and Lada And were it lawful to dally with God and mens Consciences after this manner wee could pay them home in their own kinde for suppose a man were in their Inquision and were asked if the Pope were Supream over all Kings if a man were disposed to equivocate hee might say and swear yea reserving his secret meaning not by right but onely in his own proud and ambitious desire and thus delude them II. In matters of practice you shall have no sinner but he hath a Scripture reached to him to lye safe under in the holding of his sin but robbed and turned out of the right sense The Atheist that cares for no Scripture yet hath one text for himself Eccl. 7.18 Bee not just overmuch nor overwise and so hee hath enough to cast off all care of knowledge and conscience The Image-munget hath a Text to let nothing bee lost hee hath a good use for his Images if they cannot serve to worship they may serve for ornament The Swearer hath a Text in Jeremy Thou shalt swear in truth righteousnesse and judgement therefore hee will swear so long as hee sweareth nothing but that which is true The Sabbath-breaker hath his Text The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath The Murderer and Adulterer think themselves safe seeing they finde David in both these sins and yet commended of God The Drunkard hath his lesson Drink no longer water but a little wine for thy stomack and often infirmities sake The Covetous person knows that hee that provides not for his family is worse than an Infidel which through many mens wickednesse is a ground of much covetousnesse The lazy Protestant hath his Text Wee are saved by grace and justified by the blood of Christ freely what can his works do what need they The idle person hath his Text Care not for to morrow let to morrow care for it self The Usurer hath his plain place Matth. 25.27 That I might have received mine own with Usury The Theef hath the Theef on the Cross repenting at the last The carnal Gospeller cares not what sin he venture on because where sin hath abounded there grace hath abounded much more The careless Libertine is predestinated to life or death do what hee can and do what hee list hee cannot change Gods Decree and so he will do what hee list The obdurate and hardned sinner saith At what time soever a sinner repents God will put all his sins out of his remembrance and therefore hee will not repent till hee bee dying Lastly the unjust person hee hath his rule in the unjust Steward who was commended by Christ who was indeed commended for his providence not for his injustice In all these thou mayest hold this for a good rule It is the Devils divinity to confirm thy self in any sin by whatsoever thou hearest or readest in Gods book all which in Gods meaning is direct and the only preservative against all sin NOw wee are to consider this comfortable Scripture in the holy use of it not as wee have it wrested and mangled by Satan but as wee find it set down by the Holy Ghost Psalm 91.11 For hee shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy waies They shall bear thee in their hands that thou hurt not thy foot against a stone In which words the godly are secured and assured of safety in danger not onely because the Lord himself is become their refuge and protection as in the words going before but in that to his own fatherly care and providence hee hath added a guard of Angels to whose care also hee hath committed the Godly Wherein for explication wee will note these particulars 1 What is the ministery of the Angels namely to bee the godly mans keepers 2 Who sealeth their Commission He hath given them charge 3 The limitation of it In all thy waies 4 The manner They shall bear thee up in their hands 5 The end lest thou dash thy foot against a stone Which is a borrowed speech taken from Mothers or Nurses who lead or carry their tender children in their hands that they stumble and fall not to hurt or endanger themselves The word Angel is a name not of nature for so they bee spirits but of office ministring spirits to God to Jesus Christ and to Gods Elect His Angels that is the good and Elect Angels called his 1 By Creation for they had not being of themselves 2 By more immediate ministery they assist him and stand before his face whereas the wicked Angels are cast down from Heaven from enjoying his presence 3 By grace of perseverance for they fell not from their estate as the wicked Angels did and are now confirmed by Christ that they cannot fall and hence is Christ called the Head of men and Angels in whom all things in heaven and earth consist Coloss 1. v. 17. that is are preserved sustained and governed whether visible or invisible and consequently a mediator of the Angels in respect of special grace of confirmation by which they inseparably adhere to God although in respect of that mediation which is restrained to redemption the Angels have no need of it Charge This charge is not a general Commandement over the Church in general but a special charge over every godly man over thee And the charge is directed to many Angels to keep one man for the word affords us more comfort than that Popish and ungrounded conceit of every mans having his particular Angel Quest Why doth God give this charge to the Angels or why doth he use their Ministery Answ Not for any necessity for hee by his word and beck doth sustain Heaven and Earth and without them can keep his own but out of his good will to us hee declares his love and care of us who hath so abundantly provided for our safety and
God having in Justice put them under his power Now although Christ did most powerfully spoyl Satan of his dominion which he had in the souls of men this being the of his power but possessed and disposed by him and ruled at his will and pleasure For First who would think him possessed that can fall down on his knees make a solemn profession and confession of Jesus Christ that he is the Son of God and the most high Mark 5.7 and make loud prayers unto him as acknowledging him to be the Lord of glory and yet all these are the speeches and behaviours of a man possessed not with one or two but with a Legion of Devils Luke 8.28 What doe the Devils honour Christ who fear nothing more than that he should be honoured and hate nothing so much as he No but all this confession and worship was by constraint partly because they knew him a Prince and a Judge whose power they could not resist and partly they flatter him to obtain more gentle entreaty at his hands than they deserved so many a man professeth Christ but you shall observe at least he may himself that many foul spirits breath in him for although hee know Christ as the Devils did yet he obeyeth him not he would fain resist him if he were strong enough to make his part good against him which because he cannot doe he will give him fair words and call him Lord and Master he will pray to him in sickness or distress but it is but to get out of his hands and keep his wonted hold still If the power of Christs word come near him he can begin to accuse Christ and Christian profession of unpeaceableness and tormenting him before the time for what time would please these that Christ should come unto them he can ask Christ and his Ministers what they have to doe with him and Christ shall be blamed because he cannot be at peace for him if he would let him alone all should be well and quiet but the Ministery and Discipline are intollerable let Christ preach and he will preach him too so it be such a Gospel as bringeth no repentance or amendment of life to himself but he may remain where he was even in the Graves already lodged with death When hee cannot doe the greater mischief that he would he would doe the lesser if hee can if he cannot hinder the Ministery he can deprave it wherein as in all the rest he shews himself at the command of that wicked spirit who when he could no longer torment the man would drown the swine Secondly although the Devil might be forced through the power of Christ to acknowledge him the holy one of God so as themselves might continue Devils still yet who would think him guided by any other than a good Spirit of God that should extol the servants of Christ their persons their Ministery their doctrin for would any conceive that the Father of Lyes would praise the truth and yet mark what a large testimony the Devil himself in the Maid gave of Paul and Silas These men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation and this she did many days A t s 16.17 Why did not the Devil know that they were the greatest enemies he had upon earth Yes he did but he must sometimes transform himself into an Angel of Light he must colour all his Lyes with some truth which is undeniable hee can lay all his falshoods upon appearance of truth as his eldest Son Mahomet enlarged the praises of Christ and his Disciples to overthrow Christian religion withall he hath his fetch to make men beleeve there is an agreement between Christ and his Apostles and himself or that they needed his testimony who therefore put him to silence and would receive no commendation from him but for praises returned sharp rebukes Even so many men can praise good men and Ministers before their faces whom they know to bee deadly enemies to their vices not for love of their vertues but lest they should use them and can call them honest men to try if by that they can hinder them from doing the duty of honest men as the Devils called Paul and Silas the Servants of God lest they should shew themselves so by dispossessing them Besides they would seem herein to bee better than they are and therefore will honour the Gospel and bringers with their mouths whereas in their hearts they cannot abide that the doctrin of it should bee in sincerity either published or practised the name of Christianity and of the Gospel pleaseth them well enough so as the power and fruit of it come not neer them But as the Devil had no sooner praised the Servants of God but presently hee changed his coppy and never left persecuting them till hee had cast them into prison got them soundly beaten set fast in the stocks and after sent out of the City even so many who now commend the person and doctrin of the Servants of God presently shewing what spirit guideth them can accuse them to bee mutinous and seditious troublers of their City and State and raise up the whole City and stir up the wrath of the Magistrates against them that so under pretence of the W●rd or Law or Peace or Order the true Ministers of God shall bee wrongfully condemned and cast out Thirdly Who would think that hee could be haunted with a wicked spirit that can see his sin 1 Sam. 24.17 18. confess it with tears and indignation against himself openly justify the righteousness of Gods children and yet in the example of Saul wee see that a soul possessed of Satan may do all this For as it is in bodily possession though the Devils desire is incessantly to hurt and vex the poor creatures yet by Gods over-ruling power hee is forced to give them some respite and though hardly yet sometimes departeth from them and not alwaies but sometimes casts them into the fire and sometimes into the water Luk. 9. So is it in spiritual possession the Lord for the common good bridleth often the rage of the Devil in his instruments that they cannot alwaies exercise it as they would but they have their fits sometimes that is some strong lusts which Satan watcheth and putteth himself into as Judas his Covetousness invited the Devil to enter into him and also sometimes again they have their good moods and seem to bee come to themselves but long stay they not here but in a moment are changed and cast into their fits again Thus in a good mood Saul could confess his wickedness and Davids innocency and lift up his voice and weep and David was now his good Son and who but hee but presently the good spirit went and the evil spirit came upon him and hee became more tyrannous and furious than ever before even so some there are who seem to have remorse of conscience for sin they will confess their
governour accuse him with matter of death falsly witnesse it against him moved the people to ask Barabbas and cry Crucify him they are content that his blood bee upon them and their children as it is at this day and this is that which Pilate in his own defence said unto Christ Joh. 18.35 Am I a Jew Thine own Country-men and High Priests delivered thee unto mee as if hee had said I bear thee no hatred or displeasure I am no Jew who best know what thou hast done being a Jew also but thine own nation deeply accuse thee unto mee Whence may be noted sundry instructions First That the lower degrees of murther such as are envy hatred Lowest degrees of Murther condemned and uncharitable proceedings are esteemed murther it self before God for the Jews slew Christ in that they delivered him of envy to the Romans to bee slain The Law of God which condemneth the least injury against the person of our Neighbour doth it in these words Thou shalt not kill The Apostle John speaketh of a mental murther He that hateth his brother is a man-slayer 1 Joh. 3.15 hee hath secretly in his heart slain him already And yet how openly do men testify the malice of their hearts so far as they dare by cursed reviling and murthering speeches that they may shew themselves Murtherers with witness but alas little know they what they do for if the least and lowest degrees of provoking and rancorous speeches as to call the brother fool deserve to be punished with Hell fire Matth. 5.22 what deserve those venemous and spightful speeches which numbers without all conscience accustome their Tongues unto let such consider that the Apostle rangeth Raylers in the rank with Adulterers Buggerers and such beastly persons as shal● never enter into the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6.20 Others there are even a generation of rough Ishmaels men of a word and a blow whose fists are against every man who instead of seeking peace and pursuing it devise how to quarrel and contend they care not with whom and this is counted courage and man-hood but is indeed a satanical practice and an high degree of Murther which for the most part endeth in the highest to the destruction of others with themselves Secondly Note that it is no less sin to sin by instruments As great a sin to sin by others as by our selves than by our own hands the Jews were as deep if not deeper in this sin as the Romans Calaphas the High Priest was as far in it as Pilate that read the sentence the one gave wicked Counsel the other followed it the receiver partaketh as deep in the sin and punishment as the Theef himself Ahab murthered not Naboth but because hee consented to Jezabel giveth her his ring and concealeth her wicked intent therefore the Lord asketh him if hee had killed and gotten possession 1 King 21.9 as for Jezabel there was another reckoning for her behind David slew not Vriah with his own hands but writing to Joab to put him in the forlorn hope and recoyle back from him that hee might bee smitten by the enemy and dye therefore the Lord asked him wherefore hast thou killed Vriah with the sword 2 Sam. 11.15 12.9 Communication in sin ●undry waies This teacheth us to take heed of setting sinners a work or any way of casting in our lot with them either by 1 Commanding 2 Counselling 3 Countenancing 4 Provoking 5 Flattering 6 Silence 7 Winking at as Ely 8 Defending any sin or sinner for accessories are before God as principals which is the rather to bee considered of because men willingly deceive themselves in this behalf Many Masters will not work themselves upon the Sabbath day but their servants must for them in whom they sin as heinously as if they set their own hands to work for they ought by Gods Law to see that their servants nay their beasts rest on the Sabbath as well as themselves Many Parents may hence also see their great sin who themselves perhaps will not Swear Lye Drink to drunkenness but all these and worse they do in their children over whom they watch not whom they correct not not use good means to reclaim them Many men will not themselves revile or persecute Gods children but can well enough bear it in others without much offence to themselves or defence of the other even when they have a calling often to do it Paul so soon as hee was converted accused himself for keeping the garments of those that stoned Stephen And the truth of grace would make them listen to the Counsel which Pilates wife gave her Husband have nothing to do with that just m●● have no hand no tongue no ear no foot to stir against Christ in his members if thou doest not mean one day dearly to buy it Horrible ingratitude of the Jews noted Thirdly Note The extream wickedness and unthankfulnesse of the Jews whose sin is here aggravated in that they persecute to the death a just and innocent man one that was sent unto them by God that came unto them as unto his own among whom hee had performed all his great works had given sight to their blind healed their sick dis-possessed their Devils raised their dead and all this most freely and cheerfully and yet such was their ingratitude that when hee came to his own his own received him not this chief corner-stone was refused of the builders this chief shepheard was smitten even in the house of his friends Adde hereunto that they persecute such a worthy and the Lord of all with such indignity and despight as they not onely reckoned him among sinners but preferred a Murtherer before the just and holy one of God and wherefore what had the righteous man done which of them could accuse him of sin or might not hee have taken his enemies book up●● his shoulder and have bound it as a crown unto him Job 31.35 yes verily The Apostle hath told us in the words before what Christ had done hee had gone about and spent all his life in doing good unto the Jews but they returned him evil for good to the grief of his soul and therefore as David lamenteth the death of Abner How dyed Abner his hands were not bound nor his feet chained but as a man falleth before wicked men so did hee fall 2 Sam. 3.35 that is Abner was a valiant and worthy man and so would have acquitted himself if hee could have met his enemy face to face and had not been wickedly and trecherously slain by Joab even so Christ continued a worthy person although according to the Counsel of God hee fell before wicked men through malice and envy and as David amplified both the sin and the punishment of such a wretch as so cowardly slew Abner when hee said know yee not that this day a great Prince is fallen in Israel even so the sin of the Jews was hereby heightned that a great Prince fell
and 3 In their several offices one to another as to send and to bee sent these three are one in nature and essence one in power and will and one in the act of producing all such actions as without themselves any of them is said to perform Secondly Although here is no contrariety yet here is an order in the working or administration of the person to bee observed for the Father as the first efficient in order raiseth Christ as man by the Son as a second efficient in order and by the Holy Ghost as a third For as it is in all the matter of creation so is it in all the works of redemption they are ascribed unto the Father especially not because they agree not unto the other two persons but because hee after a peculiar manner worketh them namely by the Son and by the Holy Ghost but they not by him but from him and so neither this or any other such place where it is ascribed to the Father to raise his Son Jesus must bee conceived either as making Christ as the Son inferiour in power to his Father or as excluding his own mighty power in raising himself for they shew onely the order of the persons but make no inequality in essence or power or will or working Thirdly where the Son is said to bee raised of the Father it must not bee understood of the person of the Son but in respect of his nature assumed that is his humanity Whence observe that as the former point shewed that Christ was a true man because hee was in the state of the dead whence hee was raised so this consideration sheweth him to bee a true and glorious God and notably concludeth that which the Apostle aimeth at who would hence prove him to bee Lord of all in that by his own power hee raised himself from death and so mightily declared himself the Son of God Rom. 1.4 Ubi resurrectio non passive sed active accipitur cum sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deitatis Christs Deity cle●red by his glorious resurrection and Lord of all blessed for ever This is it which maketh him the fit object of our Faith and if hee had not expressed himself as well a true and perfect God as a true and entire man wee ought not to have beleeved in him wee beleeve not then as the Jews scoffingly say in a crucified God but in a God raising and exalting to glory by his own omnipotent power an assumed humane nature even then when it lay under the curse of all the sins that ever have or shall bee committed by the true members of the Church the which thing no power of man or Angel nor any created nature could ever turn hand unto could ever have stood under and much sess have swum out with conquest and victory neither indeed had he himself if there had remained the least sin of any the elect to have been accounted for wee need then no other sign to be given us to prove his Deity but this sign of Jonas and when the Jews demanded a sign why hee took such authority upon him hee gave them no other but sent them hither destroy this Temple and I will rear it on three daies Joh. 2.18 19 c. It was necessary that Christ should rise again reasons The third point is the raising it self wherein three points are to bee opened 1 The necessity of Christs rising 2 The manner 3 The fruit or ends of it First it was necessary that Christ should rise again in three respects 1 For the accomplishment of things fore-appointed and foretold it was from all eternity decreed and appointed by God and therefore it behoved Christ to rise from the dead the third day Luke 24.46 and it was impossible that he should be held down of death Act. 2.24 Again the Scriptures must necessarily bee fulfilled all which beat upon these two points 1 His sufferings Luk. 24.26 2 the glory that should follow 1 Pet. 1.11 And more specially all those predictions and types of his resurrection inforced this necessity Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not leave my soul in grave which our Apostle proveth cannot bee meant of David whose body saw corruption but that David spake concerning him Isa 53.10 when hee shall make his soul an offering for sin hee shall see his seed and prolong his daies Besides his own prediction of his resurrection must either bee fulfilled or hee could not have been the onely true Prophet of his Church for himself had said that the Jews should slay him and crucify him but the third day shall hee rise again Matth. 20.17 and this the High Priests and Pharisees remembred well when they came to Pilate and said Sir wee remember that this deceiver while hee was alive said within three daies I will rise command therefore that the sepulchre bee made sure c. Adde hereunto that all the predictions of his ascension of his triumph and of the last judgement depended hereupon Further the types which fore-shadowed his resurrection must not bee frustrate but answered in the truth of them as that of Jsaac bound upon the wood but yet reserved alive whom his Father received from the dead after a sort of Sampson escaping the revenge and malice of his enemies by carrying away the gates wherein hee seemed fast shut of the two goats one slain for sin the other a scape-goat shadowing Christ both slain for sin and yet escaping Levit. 16.5 of the two sparrows the one killed the other let flye and the most express of all that of Jonah which Christ himself mentioneth Matth. 12.39 and most properly applyeth to this very purpose Neither the person of Christ nor any of his Offices could suffer him to abide long under death 2 It was necessary in respect of himself whether wee consider the excellency of his person or of his office For his Person hee was by nature the eternal Son of God the Lord of Life and Glory and by no better means could hee bee discerned to bee this true and natural Son of God or the resurrection and life than by raising himself from death to life by his most glorious power Hence it was that himself a little before his death prayed in these words Father glorify thy Son Joh. 17.1 As for his Office as hee was set out by his Father to bee a perpetual Mediatour between God and the Church so was hee to bee an everlasting King of Glory Not his kingly of whose Kingdome there must bee no end Luke 1.33 according to that Prophecy of Daniel 7.27 The Kingdome of the most High is an everlasting Kingdom And according to the oath of the Lord recorded Psal 89.36 I have sworn once by my Holinesse that I will not fail David his seed shall endure for ever and his Throne as the Sun before mee hee shall bee established for evermore as the Moon and as a faithful witnesse in the Heaven Selah 2 He must be also a
Hope Patience Repentance Mortification Examine thy self by these notes for if God love thee as his Child thou lovest him and keepest his Commandements thou lovest not sin but hatest it even thy dearest sins and preservest a care to please him in all things Joh. 14.23 If any man love mee hee will keep my word and my Father will love him and we will come unto him 2 Whereas they say that others which nourish this care are as much crossed as any other and therefore they see no reason that they should make their Life so uncomfortable to no purpose let them know that all the crosses Gods Children whose care is to make up their peace with God Godly life not to be feared for the crosses attending it Reasons are exercised with 1 Proceed from the Love of God and not from hatred 2 They are tryals of Graces not punishments of sins 3 Their end is not rejection from God but through their purging and amendment to draw them nearer unto God 4 By this Reason Christ and his Apostles might have been refused and all the Saints of God who through many afflictions are passed into Heaven 5 The way to avoid Crosses and Punishments is to intend this one care of getting sin remitted And 6 If the way to Heaven bee so strawed with Crosses what is the way to Hell If the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the wicked and sinner appear 3 Whereas they object further against this care that men of good note and perhaps Preachers too account it but fantastical and more than needs and onely a few and those despised ones in the World do thus disquiet themselves who make their lives more uncomfortable than they need I Answer this is indeed one of Satans greatest holds Better going to heaven alone then to Hell with company but such a snare as God leadeth his Children out of in safety whom hee teacheth that it is their happinesse to go to Heaven though alone rather than to Hell with company Mary will sit her down though alone at Christs feet if shee cannot get her sisters company shee knoweth it is the good part that shall never bee taken from her And for those especially if they bee Ministers who should most advance this care but disgrace it as a needlesse vexation of the Spirit let them know that the Lord Jesus was of another minde who pronounced blessednesse on those that mourn now and promised that they should be comforted and far are they from the guidance of that spirit who hath taught us that of all Sacrifices none is comparable to that of a broken spirit and contrite heart which the Lord never dispiseth IV. Now follow the helps to the obtaining of remission of sins As Helps to attain this grace of remission 1 Thou must become a member of the Church Isa 33.24 The people that dwell there shall have their sins forgiven And Chap. 62.12 They shall call them the holy people the redeemed of the Lord. Now to know a mans self a true member of the Church the Prophet David giveth two infallible notes Psal 15.2 The former in regard of God to walk uprightly and sincerely as in Gods presence and under his eye and the latter in regard of men to exercise righteousnesse both in word and deed 2 Consider seriously of the nature of sin how odious it is in it self how vile it maketh thy self in the sight of God how it keepeth away all good things how it procureth all evil how proan thy self art unto it yea even after grace received this will bring thee to the judging and accusing of thy self to the confession and forsaking of thy sin which is the high-way to finde mercy Prov. 28.13 for the former Psal 32. I said I will confesse my sin and thou forgavest mee the iniquity of my sin And for the latter it is plainly implyed in Christs reason Joh. 5.14 Go thy waies ●ow thou art whole but sin no more lest a worse thing follow The fellon that hath been in prison endured the misery of his Irons hath been condemned and with the ●ope about his neck in fear of present death if he have escaped hee will take heed of coming into the like misery again and hee that hath found this grace in truth cannot by turning again to his sin turn it unto wantonnesse 3 Carefully use the means which the wisdome of God hath left to beleevers for the attaining and assuring of this grace of Remission As namely 1 The Ministery of the word which in the right use of it is the Ministry of Reconciliation in which the Lord offereth conditions of peace remission of sins and life everlasting 2 As also of the holy Sacram nts which are the seals of rem ssion of sins to all beleevers worthily receiving the same Matth. 26.28 and 3 another special means is fervent prayer for pardon of sin above all things in the World Drowsy Protestants esteemeth slightly of pardon of sin even as they do of sin it self which they think easily blown off with a Lord of mercy But the tender and distressed Conscience that seeeth and combateth with the danger sueth for pardon as one that would speed A poor fellon on the gallows ready to bee turned off would think a pardon the welcomest thing in all the World but the hardness and drowsiness of mens hearts every where argue that they bee a very few that find this rare grace unlesse wee will say that the greatest blessedness that living man is capable of can be given to him that sleepeth on both sides that never thinketh of it and never maketh means after it Companions of remission of sins V. The companions of remission of sins whereby it may easily bee discerned are five 1 The daily exercise of true repentance in all the parts of it as First In judging ones self for sin past and present and this was apparent in Paul himself who looking back to his former estate reckoned himself a Captain sinner and the chief of all sinners hee saw in himself many sinn●s and great sins which needed great mercy and much forgivenesse the which one consideration kept him under continually and fostered in him the grace of Humility when as otherwise through his abundance of gifts and revelations he might have exalted himself out of measure Secondly in watchfulnesse and fear of sin in time to come according to our Saviours holy Counsel Thou art now made whole go thy way and sin no more Thirdly In daily purging and cleansing from known and secret corruptions many are the places wherein the pardoning and purging of sins are joyned as inseparable Jer. 33.8 I will cleanse all their iniquity yea I will pardon all their iniquities whereby they have sinned against mee 1 Joh. 1.9 If wee confess our sins faithful is hee to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all our unrighteousnesse This was the summe of the Baptisme that is the doctrin which John preached even
〈◊〉 elder 〈…〉 wee can carry away the blessing and 〈◊〉 text teacheth ●s 〈…〉 of ●●ns standeth n t in the doing of any thing but in the rec●●●●ng of 〈◊〉 the hands of Christ by so many as be●eeve in his name All diligence must be given to 〈…〉 p●●d 〈◊〉 sin 〈◊〉 to our selves Vse 2. I● this so wort●y a grace of so excellent use and sw●etnesse thr●ugh the wh●le life then it standeth every man in hand 〈◊〉 lab●u● and ●ive all d●ligence to make sure unto himself the pardon of his 〈…〉 But lam●●table it is to 〈◊〉 the general care● sn●sse of men in a matt●● 〈…〉 and consequ●n●● as this is An● surely it will prov● t●● 〈…〉 the world that whereas the whole lives of men are th●ug●t too 〈◊〉 and all their ●ime t●o li●●● to be eaten up in worldly cares which br●ak their sleep their strength and often their brains yea and th●ir v●ry 〈◊〉 ●nly the last day of all and their dying-day is scarcely devoted to this 〈◊〉 of seeking remissi n of sin and the way to life everlasting See wee 〈…〉 h●w busy and ● rnest m st men are in the infin●te incumbrances of the world whilest this one thing is the only thing neglected May wee not observe how sure m●n devis● by learned counsel at their great charge to make to themselves their Deed● Leases Bonds and other instruments and assurances of the things of this life who in all their lives scarce ever dreamed of this assurance Oh how wilfully herein doe men forsake their own mercy how carelesly doe they cast out of their hands the only comfort of their life and death Whosoever therefore thou art that hast hitherto despised so great salvation that hast set light by Gods gracious invitings to repentance and that hast frowardly rejected his kindest offers of mercy now at length begin to take up shame in thy face and sorrow into thy heart in earnest accuse the security of thy soul the deadnesse of thy spirit the hardnesse of thy heart the unthankfulnesse of thy whole life say with thy self Ah my folly that have neglected my mercy so long alas how have I hated instruction how unkindly have I dealt with so loving and patient a God I see now that it is high time to look to the main businesse of my life to make up my peace with God to get my pardon sealed I will live me to the Throne of Grace I will henceforth lay hold of eternal life I see now that there is one thing necessary and that is the good part which I will chuse and which shall never bee taken from me Now we come to the second point propounded which is the last of this worthy Sermon namely what is the condition of every one that hath attained this excellent grace of remission of sins Whosoever hath attained remission of his sins is an happy man and that is to bee a blessed and happy man for such a one hath part in Christ and with him of forgivenesse of sins in which David Psal 32.1 placeth blessednesse Quest But how can this man be a blessed man seeing hee is compassed with a body of sin and death and subject unto infinite afflictions than whom no man is in this life more miserable no sort of men more perplexed inwardly with sence of sin none more outwardly disgraced for well-doing Answ There be three degrees of blessednesse 1 In this life Degrees of blessednesse when God bringeth his children into the kingdom of grace and giveth them his Son and with him their whole justification and sanctification in part 2 The second degree is in the end of this life when God brings the souls of the faithful to Heaven and their bodies to the earth safely to be kept until the last day 3 The third in and after the Day of Judgement when he bringeth both soul and body into the glory prepared for the elect Of this last which is happinesse by way of eminency the two former are certain fore-runners and hee that hath attained the first hath also assurance of the last and must needs bee a blessed man not only in time to come but even for the present whether wee respect his outward estate or inward For his outward estate Gods blessing never faileth him but affordeth him all good things and that in due season and in due measure his riches are often not great but ever precious and his little shall nourish him and make him as well liking as the water and pulse did the Jewish children in Chaldea The same providence which watcheth to supply all his good keepeth him from all evil it pitcheth the Angels round about him to guard his life let him be persecuted he is not forsaken his losses become his gain his sickness is his phisick his heart is cheared even in trouble which maketh that part of his life comfortable his soul is bound up in the bundle of life with God death shall not come before hee can bid it heartily welcome yea let violent death come it shall not be to him deadly slain he may be but not overcome victory attendeth him and blessednesse every where abideth him But all this is the least part of his blessednesse for if we look yet a little more inwardly into him we shall see the boundlesse extent of his happinesse farre more large whether we respect the spiritual misery hee hath escaped or else the spiritual good which with the pardon of his sins hee hath attained for on the one hand he hath escaped the heavie wrath of God due to sin and so is discharged of an infinite debt healed of a most deadly poyson and pardoned from a fearful sentence of eternal death and perdition ready to bee executed upon him and on the other hee hath obtained a plentiful redemption hee hath purchased the pearl received Christ with his merits and graces such as are Wisdome Faith Hope whence issue our peace and joy of heart which is Heaven before heaven for in these stand the Kingdome of God and the comfort of a good conscience which is a continual feast By all which it appeareth that hee is no small gainer that hath got his part in Gods mercy reaching to the remission of his sins Open thine eyes and see the happiness of the Saints Vse 1 Wee are here admonished to open our eyes that wee may more clearly see and grow in love with the felicity of the Saints which the most see not because 1 It is inward the glory of the Spouse is like her Head and Husbands glory shee is all glorious within 2 Because of their infirmities and frailties which wicked eyes altogether gaze upon 3 Because of their Afflictions wherewith they are continually exercised If the Tower of Siloam fall on any of them they are thenceforth greater sinners than all other men holy Job because hee was afflicted cannot avoid the note of an Hypocrite even among his own Friends and Visiters And no
Christ who 361 Comfort of the godly who meet with strange entertainment in the world where they are strangers 293 Comfort that Christ is stronger than all 327 Common Protestant beleeveth not the Article of free remission of sins 414 Communication in sin sundry waies but all to be avoided 330 Companions of remission of sins 412 Consent of the Church to any Doctrin to be required and received with five several cautions 389 Conditions of reconciliation two 347 Consideration of the last Judgement a ground of the godlies patience 379 Consolations from Christs Resurrection 348 Co●solation of Gods children that their Saviour shall be their Judge 376 Consolation issuing from pardon of sinne 409 Cros● of Chri●t an honourable chariot of our triumph 334 Crosses some more smart and durable why 357 D DAnger of sin 406 Davids sin and punishment both forgiven though the child must dye 404 Death of Christ after a special manner infamous 332 Death of Christ hath more power in it than all the lives of Men and Angels 334 Death of Christ a destroyer of death and all destroyers 342 Death though it remain after sin is pardoned both the fault and punishment 〈◊〉 notwithstanding removed 333 Degrees of blessedness 415 Devil not cast out but by Christs power 324 Differences between Christian and worldly peace 265 Differences between Christs annointing and all other 308 Differences between Christs miracles and miracles of the Prophets and Apostles 313 Difference between the miracles of the Prophets and Apostles and those wonders wrought by Satan in three things 314 Difference between the life of the natural and regenerate man in matters both civil and religious 349 Difference between Civil and Ecclesiastical power 363 Difference between the kingdome of Christ and Antichrist 364 Divinity of Scripture proved 298 E ENemies even spiritual not only foyled by Christ but made after a sort friendly 345 Essential properties of Faith three 395 Evangelists all large in the Article of Christ his resurrection Why. 339 Every thing must bee esteemed in the measure and degree of the goodness of it 410 Examination of heavenly life 352 F FAith what it is 391 Faith is not of all reas 391 Faith never lost reas four 392 Faith commendeth every thing 394 Faith of most not rightly qualified 399 Faith seateth it self in an humbled soul 395 Faith in the resurrection an hard point 366 Faithful are seasonably remembred of God at least on the third day 357 Fame of Christ begun in Galilee why 303 And why after Johns preaching 305 Fear of God what and wherein it consisteth 288 Fearers of God must bee accepted of us 293 Few men see the necessity of preaching why 372 Five deadly enemies foyled by Christ 1 Sin 2 Death 3 Hell 4 The Devil 5 The World 344 Five excellent fruits of saving faith 393 Five sorts of men all boast of faith and yet all of them want it 399 Freedom by Christ 302 Fruits of faith four 397 Fruits of Christs death reduced to two heads 335 Force of consent in doctrin wherein it standeth 390 G. GAlilee of the Gentiles why so called 304 Glory of the last Judgement described 378 Glory of God in his children turned into shame 416 God no accepter of persons why 284 Gods providence over-ruleth every special event with the special circumstances 306 God was with Christ how and how with his servants 322 Gods wisdome and power most seen in chusing the most weak things 364 God only properly forgiveth sins why 402 God forgiveth sins not only properly but perfectly that is both the guilt and punishment 4●7 Godly must enquire of the truth of Doctrin delivered by the Scriptures 363 Godly enter not into the judgement how 377 Godly must lift up their heads in expectation of the day of their redemption 383 Godly who have all hard sentences passe against them shall have justice at the last day 379 Godly must addresse themselves to the Judgement Day two ways 384 Godly life must not bee shunned for the crosses that attend it 411 Graces in the soul of Christ after his resurrection were incomprehensible by all Creatures but in respect of God finite as the soul it self is 343 Guilt of sin is wholly abolished in beleevers although not the whole corruption of it 344 H. HAppinesse how it standeth in remission of sins 415 Hearers how to know they have heard aright 374 Heavenly life discerned by the notes of it 349 Helps to attain the grace of remission of sins 411 Hope is Faiths hand-ma●d 396 How the Lord of life could be subdued of death 328 How God can be just in punishing Christ an innocent and letting the guilty go free ibid. ●ow an infinite Justice could bee satisfied by so short a death ibid. How the jews are said to put Christ to death seeing they had no power to doe it 329 How Christs crucifying crucifieth the lusts of Christians 335 How Christ can bee said to rise ag●●n seeing neither his Deity nor the soul of his Humanity did 337 How Christ is said to rise seeing God the Father and the Holy Ghost are said also to raise him 339 How Christ hath slain our sin which yet is so stirring in the best 344 How beleevers may know they are risen with Christ 349 How the Apostles were furnished to their witnesse 361 How Christ could eat and drink after he rose again seeing he rose not to natural life 365 How preaching could bee Christs ordinance being so long before his incarnation 367 How Christ is ordained Judge seeing the Father and the Holy Ghost judge as well as he 375 How Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to his Father 375 Humiliation of Christ must humble Christians and h●w 334 I IEsus of Nazaret why so called 306 In Gods udgement wee must stand naked 288 In all spiritual captivity hasten to Christ 324 In cases of sor●ery what to do ibid. In all divine things wee must lean on a sure ground 302 In reading the Prophets wee must still be led to Christ. 390 Ingratitude of the Jews most extream 330 Joshua in many things a singular type of Christ. 333 Judging of our selves standeth in four things 385 L LAw of perfect righteousnesse is the charter of heaven 351 Life of Faith wherein 393 Lets which hinder men from seeking the remission of their sins 409 Love of God expressed in three things 397 Love of men wherein chiefly descerned ibid Love and thankfulnesse to God attendeth the remission of sins 413 Lowest degrees of murther condemned as murther 329 M MAgistrates must not accept of persons 286 Mallice of the wicked against the godly never wanteth matter to w●rk upon 331 Many men bodily possessed by the Devil in Christs time above all other times before or since why 308 Manner of Christs resurrection in three things 34● Map of humane frai ty in Peter 283 Means by which quick and dead shall bee presented before the last judgement 377 Means to increase the stock of Faith 398 Men
That God is to bee loved above all and that for himself being the chief good This is the scope of the whole first Table the first and the great Commandement Mark 12.33 To love God with all the heart all the understanding all the soul and all the strength is more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices as the Scribe conf●ssed whereupon the Text infers hee answered 〈…〉 cordate discreetly wisely and that in Christs Judgement This is wisdome to give God the first place first thoughts first service chief praise and precedency for of him and through him Rom. 11.36 and from him are all things 2 An●ther chief point of spiritual wisdome in the things of God is 2 Purchase Christ above all gain to purchase Christ and Remission of sins above all things in the World The sound Christian is that wise Merchant that sells all to buy the Pearl that is Christ and his Righteousness that wise builder that lays Christ a sure foundation in his heart Hee is of the number of those Wise Virgins that will bee sure what ever they lack to furnish themselves of Oyl in their Lamps to meet their Bridegroom Wisdome will procure the best commodities and chief gain which is Christ both in life and death Phil. 1. ●1 Paul was a wise Merchant who esteemed all things as dross and dung in comparison of Christ So were the Disciples saying Master wee have left all and followed thee John 6.63 So were the Martyrs whom the world accounted simple fools in following Christ with the loss of life and all Happy is that soul and filled with sound and saving Wisdome that comes to Christ with this resolution Master thou hast the words of eternal life and whither shall I go 3. Let us prefer in our election and choise things of higher nature 3 Chuse best things first before things of inferiour for wisdome keeps a method by which it ever subordinateth lower things to higher This rule our Saviour prescribeth Matth. 6.33 First seek the Kingdome of God and his righteousness and then the things of this life First provide for heaven and then for earth By which rule of wisdome 1 All profits and pleasures must give place to piety for all is but pidling gain to godliness 2 By this rule of wisdome the special calling and trade of life must give place to the general calling which is the trade of Christianity 3 By this rule a Christian must chuse to bee rich in God and good works rather than in the world which because the Rich man in the Gospel neglected hee is called fool for his labour Luke 12.10 4 By this rule we must with David Psalm 4. more affect one glimpse of Gods favour and countenance than all Corn Wine and Oyl that is the most necessary and delightful profits in the World 5 By this rule wee must make more account of pardon of sins looked up in our breasts than of the whole treasury of a Kingdome in our chests 6 By this rule wee must esteem a grain of grace above a million of gold And 7 a poor godly man above a wicked Prince Eccles 4.13 Better is a wise Child than an old foolish King which will not be admonished 4 Fear God and keep his Commandements for this is the whole duty of man 4 Fear God keep his Commandements Eccles 12.13 This is to apply our hearts to Wisdome to set our hearts to keep Gods commandements and do them This is our Wisdome Deut. 4.5 Who is a wise man among you indued with knowledge Let him by good conversation shew his works in meekness of wisdome Jam. 5.13 A Wise man will attend the mouth of the King and will fear the danger of the Law So a wise Christian will walk in the Law of the Lord Psalm 119.1 and will bee sure to keep him to this rule and warrant contained in the word of God Gal. 6.16 And as a Wise man is careful to keep his Assurances and Evidences for the certainty of his Lands and earthly Livelihoods and is loath to forfeit any of them by failing in any of the conditions So it is the Wisdome of a godly man to keep the word safely in his heart which assureth him of his estate in heaven and which hee is loath to forfeit by failing in the conditions and clauses of it CHAP. VIII Containing Rules of Wisdome concerning the Inner man and first of the Mind Thoughts and Will BEing to entreat of the Rules of Wisdome concerning man and the things of man good order requireth that wee b●gin with such as concern first Ones self And secondly others They which concern a mans self respect either the inner man of the outward The inner man in five particulars 1 In his Mind 2 Thoughts 3 Will. 4 Conscience And 5 Affections Rules for the Minde 1 To inlighten it For the Minde these rules of wisdome are necessary to bee remembred 1 To furnish it with necessary profitable and humble knowledge The wise mans eyes are in his head Eccles 2.14 This is a wisdome to sobriety Rom. 12.13 where also the Apostle condemneth curiosity and conceitedness which wastes our time and brings infinite idle questions wherein men presume above that which is meet The Prophet David professed hee medled not with things too high for him Psalm 131.1 1 Cor. 2.2 And the Apostle Paul desired after his conversion to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified As for humbleness in knowledge Solomon saith The way of a Fool is right in his own eyes Prov. 1● 15 and A wise man in his own conceit is more hopeless than a Fool Prov. 26.12 16. Our rule therefore must bee to grow up in wisdome and as wee grow in knowledge so to grow in humility for the more sound knowledge a man attains the more shall hee see in himself to humble him 2 To deck 2 To deck and adorn the minde with humility holiness modesty shamefastness c. 1 Pet. 3.4 5. and Col. 3.12 As the Elect of God put o● tender mercy kindness humbleness and meekness but above all things put on love verse 14. Rules for the Thoughts The second sort of Rules concerns a mans Thoughts The general is in Prov. 4.23 Keep thy heart with all diligence for it is slippery and deceitful more than necessary to watch and suspect it and to set time apart to check and reclaim it But for the better keeping of thy thoughts in order think on these particulars 1 Give God the first thoughts 1 Give God thy fi●st thoughts that hee may hold the chief part in thy heart and this will sweetly rell●sh th● heart and by estranging it from worldly impediments fit it and keep it in preparedness for all good occasions Psa 108.1 2 3. David prepares his heart and will awake early to praise the Lord The way to walk safely and comfortably all the day is first to reform that which is
in their worship and yet if our righteousness exceed not theirs wee can never enter into the Kingdome of heaven Mat. 5.20 3 The righteousness of God goes beyond all civil and outward righteousness it is inward in Spirit and truth It cuts off not onely outward acts of Murder Uncleanness Theft c. but inward motions of Hatred Wantonness Covetousness It strikes at roots and branches and hates the least and secretest evil which civil righteousness makes no bones of Object 2. But this circumspect and strict walking is taken up but by a few and those of the meanest some men of great wisdome place and learning favour it not but scorn and oppose it Answ 1. Christianity was ever hated by the most of the world because of the Cross the Church is black because the Sun looks on her Cant. 1.5 but comely to God and his Angels and this makes few enter that way 2 The Apostle directly meets with this Objection 1 Cor. 1.27 Not many mighty not many noble not many wise but God hath chosen a few poor people Zeph. 3.11 and they shall call upon his Name And why not many of those Because they cannot so easily deny themselves and this evil world which they must do that will bee saved 3 Let us not wholly cast our eyes upon the examples of the world now declining and at last so at worst but upon such as formerly have been set as eye-marks in the Scripture and wee shall finde some both great and noble and learned going before us in strict and circumspect walking The holy Patriarchs Noah Abraham Isaac Jacob godly and zealous Kings David Solomon Josiah the holy Apostles who endeavoured alwayes to have a clear conscience before God and all men Act. 24.16 Yea the most wise noble and learned that ever was the Son of God whose conversation was such as none could accuse him of sin These are the cloud of witnesses which wee must follow in running the race set before us Heb. 12.1 Object 3. But what an impossible Commandement is this and who can bear it Can wee bee Saints in this world thus to order our selves in every thing Wee are sinners and must bee sinners and cannot bee thus strict as you require Wee hope we generally mean well and God wee hope will supply the rest Answ 1. The scope of this plea is to give over all because they cannot attain all which is but a false fire by which the Devil discourageth many from the narrow way and the narrow looking to their own way For true it is that wee call with the Scripture for a keeping of all Gods Commandements alwayes and to live with God and walk with him but with Evangelical interpretation which accepteth the will desire and endeavour to walk with God in every thing which cannot but in some measure bee found in a true beleever and cannot but in Christ bee accepted where it is true and hearty Thus the Scriptures interpret themselves 1 Chron. 28.7 If Solomon shall endeavour to keep my Commandments c. Hos 6.3 We shall endeavour to know the Lord. What can God accept less or a good heart tender less than hearty wishes where strength is wanting to please God in all things 2 Let us by the strictness of the Commandement consider whence wee are fallen and see our impotency and confess our failings but not therefore allow our selves in any evil or venture on any sin which we might by this Circumsspection avoid or remit our endeavour in respect of all Gods Commandements 3 For such as think it sufficient to mean well in general Consider this that as no Master is pleased if his steward bring him in a general Bill of great summes spent wherein hee may hide much deceit but sets down no dayes accounts or weeks bills of parcels no more in the matter of heavenly treasure is it enough to hide himself in general good meanings but in every particular to avoid deceit and suspicion of it And as it is with a Traveller in an unknown way who will not go at random nor count it a sufficient direction to bee set Eastward or Westward but hee will ask every man of every Town and take good heed of every mark to pass him from one place to another so in this our passage to heaven wee must keep our special directions and walk with God in every thing if wee will happily pass unto heaven Object 4. But what need such daily and continual troubling of our selves What was the Sabbath made for but for Gods service and wee keep our Church as well as any but for the week-dayes wee have Callings to follow and cannot intend such things and it were better if some of these nice fellows were more diligent in their Calling as wee be● Answ 1. Seeing the Rule by which wee must walk is to serve God i● holiness and righteousness all our dayes Luke 1.75 wee have no liberty to part the week between God and us Neither must wee put on holiness as an holy-day garment to put it off at night neither may wee bee less holy on other dayes than on the Sabbath howsoever wee must exercise our holiness in the publick worship of God on that day and in the private worship and in the p●rsonal Callings on the other dayes 2 Hee is a good Christian that keeps a perpetual Sabbath and is not onely one on the Sabbath day The trial of soundness is at home Psal ●01 2 in the midst of a mans house and not at Church where the Phariseee is often above the Publican 3 Thou hast a Calling on the week-day in which thou must sweat and abide who ever thou art but thou must not so play the good husband as to become a worldling Vse the world as not using it 1 Cor 7 31. as not affecting it and acknowledge thy special and personal Calling to bee subordinate to the general for in the whole exercise of thy special Calling thou must shew forth thy knowledge and religious keeping of a good conscience once divorce these two and never look for success on thy labours Object 5. But this is fitter for Ministers and cloystered persons who have given themselves to continual devotion than for ordinary and common men who are not acquainted with such novelties Answ 1. If all Christians bee alike subject to sin all have need to bee continually alike fenced against it If all have the same enemies all had need stand upon their ground If one mans heart bee as wicked as anothers every man had need set a watch round about himself And if any have more need than other it is unlearned and simple persons who want such means of helping themselves as learned Preachers have 2 As for the novelty of this Circumspect course wee must needs say it is so to such as are of Festus his suit who thinks Paul learned even to madness to call him to such strictness or Gallio his Disciples Act. 18. who