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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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is a free and full discharge from sin and the punishment thereof without any satisfaction on our part and this God doth when he is content for Christs sake not to impute sin unto us but to account it as not committed and the punishment as not due unto us being fully and freely contented with the All-sufficient satisfaction made by Christ in his Death and Passion Vs who are grievous sinners and are for ever forlorn without this mercy Vs that by faith do believe our sins are pardoned helping us against doubting and confirming our faith Vs who believe continuing to us this thy grace unto the end whereby we may daily have sin expiated and done away as by our weakness we are daily prone to sin Our Trespasses that is The infinite sins which proceed properly and naturally from us as from a most corrupt fountain and are no way to be imputed to thy Majesty as the Author thereof or to Fate or Constellation or to the Devil onely though he seeketh to bring us thereto for every man is drawn away by his own concupiscence Jam. 1.14 As we forgive c. This is the condition upon which we desire mercy at the Lords hands which chiefly consists in the reconciliation of the minde for though we demand satisfaction where there is ability yet remitting the malice the Lord requireth no more at our hands unless in the case of extreme poverty so that a Trespasser may be forgiven and yet lawful satisfaction required and a Debt may be forgiven and yet the Condition here set down not performed viz. if the minde be not reconciled but continueth still offended Now though a trespass be forgiven by man yet may it be retained before God and though not forgiven by man yet may it be by God upon the unfained humiliation and repentance of the Trespasser And although this forgiving of others is set as a condition required that we may be forgiven yet it is not for our forgiving of others that God will forgive us but this condition is put to teach us That when we come to God in prayer we should not come in wrath or hatred against other men or with a desire of revenge for this is contrary to the good Spirit of Prayer So then we must here observe That our forgiving of others is not a cause of our forgiveness but one effect of our Justification and a token of the Image of God in us For this condition imports That we must exercise mercy towards our brethren and so break off the course of our sins if we look for mercy at Gods hands for the words in this Petition are comparative betokening a likeness and similitude between Gods forgiving and ours which must be rightly understood because our forgiveness is mingled with much corruption through want of mercy and therefore we must not understand it of the measure of forgiveness nor yet of the maner simply but especially of the very act of forgiving And the force of the Reason stands thus If we who have but a drop of mercy forgive others then do thou who art the Fountain of Mercy forgive us Understand further That a man forgives a trespass onely as it is a damage unto man but as it is a sin against God in the transgression of the Moral Law so God onely pardons it These words thus understood must be conceived as a Reason drawn not from the cause or like example but from the sign or pledge of Gods forgiveness for God hath made a Promise to forgive us if we forgive our brethren their trespasses Mat. 11.25 Lastly the order of this Petition followeth That wherein we crave the needful good things of this life teaching that the main hindrance thereof is sin which till it be removed hindreth that we cannot enjoy the good we desire nor be freed from the evil we decline and that by having our daily bread we should lift up our mindes for Spiritual blessings unto God Luke 11.13 and that it is nothing at all to have our daily bread unless God give us also the pardon of our sins In this Petition we pray 1. That God would forgive us all our sins in thought word and deed both Actual and Original 2. That he would remit unto us the punishment that is due unto us for sin both here and hereafter In this Petition Christ willeth 1. That we acknowledge our sins 2. That we thirst earnestly after the remission of our sins 3. That our faith be exercised because this Petition confirmeth our faith yea and floweth from faith For what Reasons we are to pray for remission of sins viz. 1. That we may be saved because without remission of sins we cannot be saved for it is the very nature of sin to hinder us from all good things here Lev. 26. and of Gods Kingdom hereafter Psal 15.2 3. Rev. 21. 2. That we may be put in remembrance of the remnants of sin which are even in the holiest men and that to this end that Repentance may evermore encrease 3. That we may desire and receive the blessings prayed for in the former Petitions 4. That Gods goodness may be manifested and we moved to meditate of his infinite mercy to man when even the Angel● that sinned he spared not 2 Pet. 2. and also assured that though 〈◊〉 by sin forget to perform the obedience of Sons yet God still 〈◊〉 the compassion of a Father How sins are said to be discharged 1. When they are discharged by the person which co●●itted them so the devils and damned discharge their debts by suffering Mat. 18.34 25.41 2. When they are paid by another and so are our sins discharg'd by Christ Gal. 3.14 which satisfaction may be called forgiveness in a threefold respect 1. In respect of us who n●ther do nor can confer any thing to this satisfaction Luk. 17.10 2. In regard of Christ who alone doth forgive them Mat. 9.2 and we no way are able to requite him Psal 103.1 3. In respect of God the Father who in love giveth his Son and accepteth his obedience as our satisfaction Joh. 3.16 From these words Forgive us we may learn 1. That as we sue for our own pardon so must we with the ●●ints sue for others Exod. 38.32 2. That we must be sorry when men do sin Psal 119.136 3. That we may not uncharitably discover mens sins Gal. 6.1 2. 4. That we must not cause any man to sin Prov. 7.18 Gen. 39.8 5. That we must not delight in any sin Psal 119.104 6. That we must forgive our brethren Gen. 50.21 There are three kindes of debts in sin viz. 1. A debt of Obedience which we owe to God but have not paid it through our transgression of the Law Gen. 2.17 3.6 2. debt of Punishment because we have transgressed Rom. 6.23 3. A debt of Purity which we owe by reason of our corruption after our transgression Rom. 8.12 And against all these debts we must seek that we may get
all the Faculties alike renders thee insensible of thy Malady and thence nigh incurable Be it either or all of these do but savingly Believe in the Physitian and thy Faith shall make thee whole but then be sure to persevere in the Faith and beware of Relapses Some say the Times are very Leprous and that the people are pestered with very venomous Botches That the Gangrene of Envy hath almost unbowell'd them and the Scurf of Hypocrisie strangely deformed them That the Ulcer of Injustice hath cast a perpetual Odium on them and the Appetitus Caninus of Covetousness hath made but one Morsel of them That the Wolf of Sacriledge hath devour'd the Breasts which gave Christendom suck in her old Age That though the Land hath had a Bloody Issue of nigh Twelve years running yet never could have so much as a touch at the Hem of Christs Garment That the belching of Blasphemy in a Convulsion of Will-worship is as common as the disgorging of Oathes to unsurfet the high stomacks of the proud and prophane If these or the like be the Epidemical Maladies of these latter days wherein the Devil is put to his Wits end then let me prescribe this Holy Arbor as a standing Pharmacopeia not for the shelf of every closet but for the closet of every heart wherein there is not a Drug that hath the least allay of any Poyson in it nor a dangerous or obstruse Ingredient for the cautious Artist considering how untowardly ruder hands have gone to Composition with Divine Truths what spurious Extractions have been thence drawn and what Mischief hath thence followed knowing also what rural judgements and tender Spirits may meet herewith his care was greatest how he might be plainest The first and rarest Flower as Portal to this Holy Arbor that presents it self to thine eye is The Sacred Mystery of the Holy Trinity indeed a Mystery visible onely to the eye of Faith The unhappy Jews and Turks glance at the sight of a Deity but to this day discern not Three Persons in one Godhead The Gnosticks and Valentinians have their false Multiplying Glasses to see more Gods then One but want the Prospective of Faith to descry a Trinity of Persons in one and the same Eternal Essence Such a Deceptio visus hath so falsly presented the Eunomians with Three Gods or Spirits not distinguished onely but divided also as that they could never see Three Persons in one onely Godhead The Apollinarians superacted their ridiculous Faith and grosly held a Quaternity not a Trinity of Persons was to be Worshipped The purblinde Noetians and Hermogenians had sight enough to acknowledge the naked Name of Three in the Godhead yet denied the Persons The Patripassians that blasphemously held the Father became Flesh and suffered never saw into this Mystery The sacrilegious Arrian Hereticks who make Israel to sin grant indeed the Names and Persons of Three yet deny the Son and the Holy Ghost their Divinity yea the whole Trinity their Properties The prophane Trinitarians acknowledge Three Persons with their Lips yet deny their Divinity by the Infidelity of their Lives Thus rendring themselves guilty of more knowledge then they practice and consequently not of fewer stripes then are menaced All these are excluded this Arbor and an entrance open onely for such as by the Heaven-piercing eye of Faith can see into the Mystery of this glorious Truth and stedfastly Believe That there are Three that bear Record in Heaven the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost and these Three are One 1 Joh. 5.7 The next Flower in order is the Word of God Truths Standard the sacred Oracles of the Holy Scripture which while the Prophets Evangelists and Apostles penn'd the Spirit held their hands If there be any Wretch so much an Infidel under the notion of a Christian possessed with the spirit of Contradiction to this Basis of all Truths I conjure him by the Author of that parallelless Work That he haunt not this Holy Arbor whilest I leave this Memento with all selfless Christians Thou shalt put nothing to the word that I command thee neither shall ye take ought there from Deut. 4.2 The next concerns the Law and Gospel I dare not discouple what God hath joyn'd together The Law that Touchstone of all our works without which we had not known sin Rom. 3.20 Far be it therefore from all right by assed Christians to rebel in their hearts with the Libertines of any out-Lawed Generation That the Law is now totally repealed as if the Law were the transgression of the Gospel for though the Law of it self made nothing perfect Heb. 7.9 yet is the Law in it self a perfect and undefiled Law converting the soul Psal 19.7 whence the Royal Prophet in other places sets it down as a special character of a righteous man That the Law of his God is in his heart Psal 37.31 or that his heart is Gods Law-keeper Psal 40.8 yea Blessed are they stiled who sincerely walk in the Law of the Lord Psal 119.1 and ver 165. he proclaims Peace to them that love this Law you may guess then at the cause of War No marvel that notwithstanding our many Fastings and Prayers God still threatens us with War For he that turneth away his ear from hearing the Law even his prayer shall be abomination Prov. 28.9 And though now the Righteousness of God which is by Faith is manifested without the Law Rom. 3.21 yet God forbid that we should thence make void the Law through Faith whereby we establish it Rom. 3.31 We acknowledge That by the deeds of the Law no flesh shall be justified in the sight of God Rom. 3.20 nevertheless we must acknowledge That the Law is holy Rom. 7.12 and spiritual v. 14. And though Christ be ineffectual to them who expect Justification by the Law Gal. 5.4 himself being the end of the Law that is the Accomplisher thereof for Righteousness to every one that believeth Rom. 10.4 And though as many as be led by the Spirit are not under the Law that is not under the Bondage or Curse of the Law Gal. 5.18 And though now Faith being come we are no longer like untuter'd Learners under a Schoolmaster that is the Law Gal. 3.25 All this premised yet know ye not that the Law hath dominion over a man for term of life Rom. 7.1 Know ye not that Christ came What to do to destroy the Law no but to fulfil it Matth. 5.17 and in the 18 Verse most pathetically asseverates us an Assurance That one tittle shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled Wherefore let Heaven and Earth know That it is easier for them both to pass then one tittle of the Law to fail Luke 16.17 With the Law not improperly is joyn'd the Gospel that Olive Dove of Mans Salvation wherein Christ proclaims himself an Ark for all the Gospel Noachims against the Deluge of his Fathers Wrath. The light of this Gospel shines both on the
and the destruction thereof not long after shew the same 3. Christ was a new High Priest after the order of Melchisedeck who was greater then Aaron and therefore his order was to cease at the coming of this worthier 4. Christs coming made us to be of age when as before men were children and nothing differing from servants Again the Ceremonial and Civil or Judicial Laws are wholly abrogated as touching obedience so that there is no necessity any more of observing them 1. Because they were to continue onely unto the coming of the Messias Gen. 49.10 Eph. 2.14 2. Because the Messias being exhibited the Types cease such as were the Ceremonial Laws Col. 2.17 yet is not the Moral Law in like maner abrogated for this after Christ was exhibited ceased indeed as touching the curse and constraint but not as touching obedience for Christ fulfilled not the Law and redeemed us from the curse of it that we should continue and persist in sins and enmity with God The use of the Ceremonial and Judicial Laws against Anabaptists that would shut the Old Testament out of the Church of Christ and under pretence of his Spirit be a Law unto themselves 1. The first and principal use of the Ceremonial and Judicial Laws of Moses was to serve as a Schoolmaster unto Christ and his Kingdom 2. By these God would have his own people sorted out from others for his own glory and their salvation 3. Obedience or the observing of the Moral Ordinances 4. An exercise and a testification of their obedience towards God 5. Unto most of the ceremonies such as signifi'd Christs benefits was proper peculiar the sealing of Gods Covenant or the confirmation of faith to signifie what benefits God would give by the Messias to believers 6. They served for the preservation of that Mosaical Regiment until the coming of the Messias 7. Although they are now so abolished as the observation of them is not now required as concerning the Types yet these things are perpetual which are signified by them and therefore are a confirmation of the new Testament as well as the Oracles Prophesies of the old concerning the Messias his kingdom for types are visible promises The difference betwixt the Moral Ceremonial Civil or Judicial Laws 1. The Moral Law is known by Nature Rom. 2.15 and from the Creation because Men and Angels were created according to the Image of God The Ceremonial and Judicial Laws are not known by Nature but are instituted according to the diversity of causes and circumstances 2. The Moral Law was published and written by God himself and using the mediation of Angels which was not altogether so with the other Laws 3. The Moral Law bindes all men and in part the Angels also the Ceremonial and Judicial Laws were onely prescribed unto the people of Israel 4. The Moral Law was first given as most worthy the other afterward as not so much to be regarded in respect of it 5. The Laws of the Decalogue are perpetual the other were delivered at a certain time and again abolished Thus the Moral Law engraven in Tables of Stone was kept in the Ark which was a sign that it should last perpetually but the other Laws were to last onely to the fulfilling of all by Christ 6. The Moral Laws speak of both internal and external obedience the other of external onely albeit neither doth this please God without the internal and moral obedience 7. The Moral Laws are not limited by certain circumstances but are general the Ceremonial and Civil Laws are more special 8. The Ceremonial Law hath been oftentimes broken without sin but the Moral Law never without some special countermand from God as when Abraham was bid to kill his Son and the Israelites to rob the Egyptians Exod. 12.36 9. The Ceremonial and Civil Laws are types or figures of other things for whose cause they were ordained the Moral signifie or prefigure nothing but are signified by the Rites and Ceremonies 10. The Moral Law being neglected maketh men worse then Infidels yea then bruit beasts Isa 1.3 but the Ceremonial neglected made men onely worse then the servants and peculiar people of God 11. The Moral are the principal service and worship of God The Ceremonial and Civil serve for the Moral Ordinances that obedience to them be rightly performed 12. The Ceremonial Law was very chargeable and costly burthensom and grievous but the Moral Law requireth onely the right disposition of the heart and then obedience in practice will easily follow 13. The Ceremonial give place unto the Moral the Moral give not place unto the Ceremonial The Moral Law the Natural Law and the Decalogue do differ thus 1. The Decalogue is the sum of the Moral Laws which are scattered throughout the whole Scriptures 2. The Natural Law doth not differ from the Moral in nature not corrupted but in nature corrupted a good part of the Natural Law is darkned by sins and but a little part onely concerning the obedience due to God was left remaining after the Fall for which cause God hath in his Church repeated again and declared the whole Sentence and Doctrine of the Law The difference between the Law and the Gospel 1. In the maner of their Manifestation The Law is known by Nature the Gospel was manifested from above the Law is Natural and was in mans Nature before the Fall but the Gospel is Spiritual revealed after the Fall in the Covenant of Grace 2. In their Matter or Doctrine The Law teacheth us what to do and perform the Gospel teacheth how we may be such in Christ 3. In their Promises The Law promises eternal life and all good things with a condition of our own proper and perfect righteousness and obedience remaining in us the Gospel promiseth the same with a condition of Faith in Christ whereby we embrace his obedience performed for us Now with this condition of Faith is joyned by an indissoluble knot and bond the condition of new-obedience Thus the Law promiseth life to the worker and doer of it Rom. 10.5 but the Gospel offereth salvation to him that worketh not but believeth him that justifieth the ungodly Rom. 4.5 not considering Faith as a work but as an instrument apprehending Christ by whom we are made righteous So the Law sets forth Gods Justice in rigor without Mercy but the Gospel sets out Justice and Mercy united in Christ therefore the Law is called the Ministery of condemnation and of death 2 Cor. 3.7 9. but the Gospel shews mercy to mans sins in and by Christ if we repent and believe Thus the Law requireth a perfect righteousness within us but the Gospel revealeth our acceptance with God by imputed righteousness In like maner the difference between the Righteousness of the Law that of Faith stands thus 1. The Law requireth it of our selves but Faith calleth us from our selves to seek it in Christ 2. The Law requireth us to observe and do all
give them ability to obey For this is not to be under the Law and the Law not to be given to the righteous so that the Bond and Doctrine remaineth although the Condemnation and Constraint be taken away Let no Christian man whatsoever therefore think that he is freed from the obedience of the Moral Law for the compleatness and perfection of our wisdom and salvation which we have in Christ doth not exclude but include rather and comprehend the Doctrine of the Law Think not that Christ came to destroy the Law or the Prophets no he came not to destroy but to fulfil them Mat. 5.17 neither think that we make the Law of none effect through faith for thereby we establish the Law Rom. 3.3 which sheweth us what is to be done and the Gospel by the Spirit of Regeneration ministreth unto us power both to will and to do The word Gospel signifieth Good tidings but it is generally taken for that Doctrine which containeth the Promise of forgiveness of sins to the penitent and life everlasting made unto us of God in the Word by his Son It is the Doctrine made manifest of God by his Son the Mediator presently after the fall of mankinde into sin and death promising all believing and repentant sinners remission of sins and their receiving into favor and life everlasting freely to be granted through and for his Son the Mediator By which Doctrine the Holy Ghost doth forcibly kindle and work in the hearts of the chosen faith repentance and the beginning of everlasting life This Gospel is the Key which openeth the Kingdom of Heaven to all Believers and shutteth it against Unbelievers when by the commandment of Christ it is publikely declared to all and every one of the faithful that all their sins are pardoned them for the Merit of Christ so often as they embrace by a lively faith the Promise of the Gospel but on the other side it is denounced to all Infidels and Hypocrites That so long the wrath of God and everlasting damnation doth lie on them as they persist in their wickedness Joh. 20.23 Mat. 16.19 according to which Testimony of the Gospel God will judge them as well in this life as in the life to come This Gospel was first made known in Paradice Gen. 3.15 and afterward God did spread it abroad by the the Patriarchs and Prophets Gen. 22.18 49.10 11. Rom. 1.2 shadowed it by Sacrifices and other Ceremonies of the Law Joh. 5.46 Heb. 10.7 and lastly accomplished it by his onely begotten Son Rom. 10.4 Gal. 4.4 Heb. 13.8 All those things which are promised us in the Gospel are necessary for a Christian man to believe Joh. 20.31 the sum whereof is briefly comprised in the Creed of the Apostles or the Articles of the Catholick and undoubted Faith of all Christians So that these Promises of the Gospel are limited with the condition of Faith and Repentance being indefinite in regard of whole mankinde and universal onely to Believers and therefore men are not brought within the Covenant by the supposed Doctrine of Universal Grace and Redemption for had there always in the Old Testament such an Universal Grace been given to all whereby they might be saved if they would they would never have thought so grosly of God as some of them did nor could the Heathen have had such carnal conceits of God as we finde they had had they had but one spark of true knowledge of the Messias and therefore howsoever the Heathen had so much knowledge of God as made them without excuse yet we are to hold That before Christs coming they were left to themselves and forsaken of God in his just Judgement in regard of his special grace and favor yea in the first Age of the world there were some that were the sons of God others the daughters of men Gen. 6.2 After the Flood some the children of the Flesh others the children of the Promise Gal. 4.29 And under the Law a people of God and no people Hos 1.10 which distinction of man and man people and people could not be were the opinion of Universal Grace otherwise then false and erroneous The Gospel indeed which is that part of Gods Word touching remission of sins and salvation is by our Savior commanded to be preached to all Nations and though the Promises therein contained are near us yet unless God clear them we see them no more then Mary Magdalen did Jesus though he stood near enough to her or the Disciples with whom he conversed on the way or Hagar the Well till their eyes were open but to as many as are Gods chosen this his soft voyce or the voyce of the Gospel is said to be a clearing of the Promises and the immediate Testimony of the Spirit both which alway go together and are never disjoyned and to them onely doth God impute for perfect righteousness the Merit of Christ set forth in this Gospel and restoreth salvation unto them for that in them alone he obtaineth the end both of his Creation and of his delivery and Justification even his praise and glory for they onely acknowledge this benefit of God and yield thanks unto him for it the rest despise it The truth and certainty of the Gospel that is of the Promise of Grace appeareth 1. By the Testimony of the Holy Ghost 2. By the Prophesies which have been uttered by the Prophets and other holy men 3. By the fulfilling of these Prophesies which was accomplished in the New Testament 4. By the Miracles whereby the Doctrine of the Gospel was confirmed 5. By the end or property of the Gospel because that alone sheweth the way how to escape death and sin It is called the Gospel of Peace in a double respect 1. Of the subject matter which is the Peace and Reconciliation which Christ the Mediator made between God and Man 2. Of the effect being to work peace in them that hear and believe it the Spirit first moving us to embrace the Reconciliation offered therein and then quieting our Conscience The proper effects of the Gospel are faith Rom. 10.17 1.16 2 Cor. 3.8 and our whole conversion unto God Justification Regeneration and Salvation which are the effects of faith And herein the Gospel mainly differs from the Law for the Law is the Ministery of death and killeth but the Gospel is the Ministery of life and of the Spirit that is it hath the forcible operation of the Holy Ghost adjoyned and quickneth The Law by it self without the Gospel is onely the letter that is the outward preaching and bare knowledge of those things which we ought to do teaching indeed our duty and that righteousness which God requireth at our hands but not enabling us to perform that righteousness neither shewing us any hope to attain thereunto by another but rather accusing and condemning our unrighteousness but the Gospel is the instrument of the Holy Ghost which he properly useth to kindle faith in us
when the proper gifts or blessings of the faithful are augmented with perpetual encrease in the godly or converted Rev. 22.11 4. By Consummation or full accomplishment when the godly shall be glorified at the second coming of our Lord. We ought to desire that the Kingdom of God may come for these Reasons specially 1. For the glory of God or in respect of the first Petion because that we may sanctifie and hallow his Name it is required that he Rule us by his Word and Spirit 2. Because God will give his Kingdom onely to those that ask it The wants we are to bewail taught us in this Petition concern either our selves or others 1. We must lament and mourn for our own miserable estate by Nature whereby we are the servants of Sin and so in bondage and thraldom thereto Joh. 8.34 And the best of us do but weakly yield to Christs Scepter and where Sin raigneth there the Devil hath dominion 2. We must bewail the sins of all the world in the transgression of Gods Law whereby God is dishonored his Kingdom hindred and the Kingdom of Darkness furthered We must therefore bewail that there be so many hinderers of Gods Kingdom as namely the Flesh to infect the World to allure the Devil to seduce Antichrist to withdraw the Turk to withstand and the Wicked to trouble men that should be Subjects of this Kingdom Pray therefore Thy Kingdom come The helps which further Gods kingdom and are to be desired of us viz. 1. The Preaching of the Gospel and all other divine Ordinances whereby Gods Kingdom is erected and maintained that they may be where they are not and may be blessed where they are vouchsafed and herein for godly Magistrates and faithful Ministers 2. That God would enlighten the eyes of our mindes that we may see the wonders of his Law that so the Lords ordinances may be blessed unto us 3. That we may be wholly subject unto Christ and that of Conscience not onely in our outward behavior but in minde heart will and in all our affections that we may grow in grace and in the saving knowledge of Christ Jesus 4. We must desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ in the Kingdom of glory for this end that we may make an end of sinning and become more obedient Subjects unto Christ yea wholly ruled by him though for the good of others we must be content to live 5. That both by the hour of death and by the coming of Christ to Judgement this Kingdom in us and all Gods chosen may be accomplished that Satan being trodden under our feet and the power of death destroyed God may be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 6. That Christ would come in Judgement when all things shall be subdued unto God and all his obedient Subjects shall be fully glorified This we may desire in heart though we must leave the time to Gods good will and pleasure still waiting for it by faith in his Promise 7. That God would enlarge his Sanctuary here on earth gather his elect more and more and still defend and maintain his Church in every place in the world when these desires affect our souls then do we truly say Thy Kingdom come The duties to be practised by us that Gods Kingdom may come viz. 1. We must labor for true humiliation and conversion else we cannot enter into the Kingdom Matth. 8.3 Joh. 3.5 nay otherwise we do but mock God by saying well and doing nothing 2. We must be careful to bring forth the fruits of Gods Kingdom which are Righteousness Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 3. We must hence learn to be contented in all estates of this life whatsoever the hope of this Kingdom which we here pray for must swallow up all the sorrows that earthly calamities can bring upon us Luke 12.32 4. We must all labor in our places and callings to bring one another into this kingdom one neighbor another and one friend another Ezc. 18.30 5. Hence we must learn every day to prepare our selves to dye for by death our souls enter into the glory of this Kingdom which we pray may come unto us whence appears the monstrous hypocrisie of the world whose practice flatly contradicts their prayer Of this Petition 1. The Supplication is for the continuance of Gods gracious Providence over his general kingdom and of all good means and furtherances of his special kingdom his Church 2. The Deprecation is against all impediments and lets of Gods general kingdom as Anarchy Tyranny wicked Laws c. and against all hinderances of his special kingdom as Toleration of Idolatry Heresie Ignorance Idleness Infidelity Impenitency Hardness of heart c. 3. The Thanksgiving is for the Lords exercising his kingdom in the right ordering of the world punishing the wicked rewarding the godly spreading the glorious beams of his Word enlarging his kingdom for worthy Magistrates and faithful Ministers for Faith and all Spiritual graces In this glass we read the superstitious vanity of ignorant souls The rotten hypocrisie of formal Professors The cursed Rebellion of prophane worldlings The Antichristian Tyranny of Idolatrous Papists All which as we tender the Soveraign Power of Christs Scepter the Prerogative of his Royalty and the eternal happiness of our own Souls let us carefully avoid as by making it the language of our hearts so the loyalty of our whole lives to practice Thy Kingdom come A new-hatch'd old-laid Heresie appears That here on Earth yet full One thousand years Christs Kingdom is to come and triumph shall With all his Saints in Pomp Majestical Fond Dreamers Call ye this Terrestrial Which figures that which is Spiritual Raign in our hearts O Lord Protect augment Thy Church This is thy proper Regiment Cast down thine Enemies Compleat the sum Of thine Elect So let Thy Kingdom come §. 7. Thy Will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven THis Petition in order followeth Thy Kingdom come to shew That where Gods kingdom is set up his will is endeavored after and preferred always and not our own will It depends indeed on both the former Petitions for Gods Name is hallowed when his will is done and his kingdom comes when by doing his will we testifie our selves his obedient Subjects Wherein we desire that we and all the people of God upon earth may as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in heaven So that this Petition is propounded in a Comparison the former part whereof respects the grace of Obedience which we pray for the other the right maner of performing it wherein we must note That this particle As doth not betoken the degree but the kinde of doing Gods will which is the beginning of performing Gods will with continuance and encrease thereof not the Consummation perfection and full accomplishment thereof which yet we are to desire here that at length we may obtain it which though it be impossible in this life yet are we
our own Righteousness 6. Malice and thirsting after revenge when injury hath been offered us To prevent and avoid which we must consider 1. How much the Lord hath forgiven us for Christs sake 2. That both the Lord Jesus and all holy men have forgiven and prayed for their enemies the Devil alone is an implacable enemy 3. That the way of grace is thus stopped up and consequently the way of glory The Thanksgiving of this Petition is For illumination to see our sins for a sight and sense of our sins and for blindeness Spiritual expelled for Sanctification to turn us from sin for hard hearts mollified and for the extremes and bars of Grace Despair and Presumption removed for Justification to deliver us by the death of Christ from all sin for Love abounding where offences against us abound and for Malice banished and purged out of us that howsoever we sustain many grievous wrongs at the hands of men yet are we contented yea chearfully willing to forgive them all even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven us The Moral Law doth to Obedience binde The Vniversal Race of all Mankinde Which not perform'd by us we must endure The penal Statute of the Forfeiture ' Less he who as our blessed Surety stood Cancel the Obligation with his Blood This for the Faithful's done 't is now our part To Cancel to remit with all our heart Others their Debts that we for ours ne're may Be call'd t' Account at the Grand Audit-Day §. 10. And lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from evil THis Petition in order is immediately subjoyned after the other craving the pardon of sin to teach us That this is not the onely care of Christians to seek to have sins pardoned but for the time to come earnestly to strive against and resist it the Christian mans life being a continual warfare So that there be two Petitions for the soul but one for the body teaching us That our care for the estate Spiritual ought to be double to our care for things Temporal Lead us not into Temptation but c. that is Suffer us not to be tempted above our power or so that either we sin or wholly revolt from thee but strengthen us in our Temptations by thy holy Spirit and deliver us from evil as the cause thereof wherein we pray That the Lord would not suffer us to be carried away by the Temptations of the World the Flesh or the Devil to the committing of sin but that he would deliver us from the evil of all Temptations both of sin and damnation Lead us not into Temptation which we cannot bear so Augustine Redeem us from evil that we be not carried by Temptations so Calvin And we pray thus not that we may always be free which cannot be but that we may not be overwhelmed overcome and made subject to Temptations when we are by them assaulted But deliver us from evil that is Withdraw not thy Grace from us leave us not to our own lusts neither deliver us over to Satan to be hardned but in all assaults stand thou by us that our faith may not fail and deliver us from the evil both of sin and punishment So that the meaning hereof may be this O Lord we are every way subject to Temptations and by our sins we deserve to be left therein to the malice of Satan and to the power of our own Corruptions yet we beseech thee not to forsake us in any Temptation but give an happy issue thereto still upholding us by thy Grace Now here we must observe That God is said to lead a man into Temptation onely as Temptation is a punishment of sin and onely by permission leaving the party to himself and Satans malice for some former transgression For God tempteth no man to destroy him or to cause him to sin but to try and exercise his Graces in him wherefore this Petition which Christ taught us speaketh not simply of all tryal and manifestation of our faith and godliness unto which David offered himself of his own accord Psal 26. For God tempteth not to evil but man when he is tempted is tempted by his own evil concupiscence Jam. 1.13 14. The words themselves contain one onely Petition though some have thought otherwise consisting of two parts 1. The Petition it self Lead us not into Temptation or a Petition of delivery from a particular future evil 2. The Exposition thereof more general for delivery from all as well present as future evil There be two causes of temptations and consequently two sorts thereof 1. From God for the tryal of our faith godliness hope patience constancy and obedience by the Cross So God is said to have tempted Abraham Joseph Job and David This is good and holy when as God tempts a man which is an action of God whereby he proveth and tryeth man to make manifest unto man himself and unto others what is in his heart for God knoweth well enough before he tryeth him This is called Good both in respect of the Author which is God and in respect of the end which is the good of his servants And this we here pray not against 2. By the Devil our Flesh and wicked men which is every soliciting to sin which soliciting it self is also sin This is evil being a wicked motion allurement or perswasion arising partly from our own corruption and partly from the suggestion of the Devil whereby man is provoked to sin against God in the transgression of some Commandment Now by Nature man is prone to be tempted Gen. 31. Sin is a deceitful tempter Heb. 3.13 and Satan is a subtile cruel and diligent tempter 1 Pet. 5.8 And this is that we pray against in this Petition Temptations are of divers sorts viz. 1. Whereby God tryeth man 1 Kings 10.11 searching into his heart whether by affliction or otherwise for Reasons best known unto himself 2. Whereby man tempteth God as by murmuring and refusing to believe and to rest on his Providence without seeing evident present Signs of his goodness seeking after new miracles trusting in outward means prescribing God a time or maner of deliverance impatient at his corrections adventuring upon needless apparent dangers without warrant or burthening the faithful with vain and needless Traditions 3. Whereby man tempteth man seeking to circumvent him by trying him with politick devices Thus the Pharisees are said to have tempted Christ Mat. 22.18 4. Whereby man tempteth himself his corrupt heart alluring and drawing him to sin Jam. 1.14 5. Whereby the Devil tempteth man and provoketh him to sin From these two last Temptations of the Flesh and the Devil that is corrupt and evil motions of the minde we desire here to be delivered from the third we pray to be kept in the fourth Petition from the second in the second Petition From the first we pray not to be kept but rather that the Lord would try us and use all means he seeth best to
the Father because he is the Fountain as of the Divinity of the Son and of the Holy Ghost so also of those Divine operations which he worketh and performeth by the Son and the Holy Ghost Now that God is we know many ways but chiefly by our own Consciences accusing us for secret sins which cannot be but unto an infinite wisdom that knows the most secret thoughts of the heart such as is or can be neither Man Devil nor Angel but God onely All the Doctrine concerning God is either 1. Of his Nature which is taught in the Law and Gospel 2. Of his Will which is seen and made manifest in His Commandments His Threatnings His Promises 3. Of his Works which are The Benefits The Judgements of his Will which are to be beheld in the Creation Fall Restoring of Man The devils believe there is a God and tremble if any Atheist hath less faith then they and doubt the truth thereof he may believe it from these Reasons though as he is not worthy any so the truth hereof is above all 1. The beautiful and goodly order of Nature beheld in the Creatures and frame of the great body of the world Rom. 1.20 2. The preservation and government of the world created Acts 14.17 3. The Nature and excellency of mans minde the soul of man endewed with excellent gifts of Understanding and Reason 4. From the notions of general Rules and Principles naturally engendred in the minde of man yea the natural notion of this Principle That God is 1. Because every one hath experience hereof in himself 2. All wise men confess it 3. All Nations consent in it 5. From the terrors of Conscience which are stricken in the mindes of the wicked after that they have sinned 6. The punishments of the wicked which they suffer besides the torments of Conscience 7. From Bodies Politick which are wisely ordered and regulated by Laws 8. From the order and nature of efficient causes and from the final causes of all things 9. From certain and evident foretellings and clear significations of future Events 10. From heroical and noble instincts of minde For what Reasons the voice of Nature concerning God is not wholly to be rejected or contemned by reason of the insufficiency thereof 1. God will also out of the Church bridle the lewd and dissolute by the testimonies which their Conscience and punishments give of his will Anger and Judgement and according to them also will he have the maners of men regulated 2. He will have mans Corruption and his own Justice made more perspicuous and clear in punishing them who stubbornly withstand the known truth 3. He will by natural testimonies mens Consciences shewing the imperfection thereof have men stirred up to seek the true God in the Church Acts 17.26 27. 4. He will have also them who are converted to him to be more confirmed by the consent of Nature and the Word as the often alleaging of Natural testimonies in the Scripture declareth 5. He will the imperfection of Natural knowledge being considered have mens ignorance concerning God acknowledged and his mercy magnified who discovereth and openeth himself in his Word There is nor can be but one God for these Reasons 1. The sufficient testimonies of Miracles and Prophesies and other works 2. His own Authority and Majesty which admitteth no fellows 3. That which is greatest perfection can be but one for the whole is perfecter then any part thereof 4. There can be but one chief God but one Omnipotent but one Infinite 5. There can be but one chief Cause and more Gods would be unperfect or superfluous How God doth describe himself in Exod. 34.6 viz. 1. He is Jehovah that is he is a constant friend to whomsoever he is a friend he is alway the same that is I am that I am that is whatsoever the Lord was from eternity the same he is to eternity there is no change in him 2. He is strong that is Almighty that is he hath all Excellency in him and that in the highest degree 3. He is Merciful exceeding pitiful exceeding ready to forgive though our sins be many and exceeding great None so ready to forgive as God for if he were as man if he were not God could he bear with us as he doth Jer. 3.2 4. He is Gracious that is though there be no worth found in us yet he is ready to do us good Now to be gracious is to do things freely when there is no motive for Grace is nothing but freeness 5. He is Long-suffering that is though we provoke him out of measure he continues patient we cannot weary him out 〈◊〉 his mercy endures for ever though our sins are often repeated yet he as often repeats his Mercies 6. He is abundant in Kindeness that is though he be so great a God as he is yet he is exceeding ready to bear with us he is not harsh but ready to grant what we ask according to his will 7. He is abundant in Truth that is we shall finde him as good as his word he is engaged we have many Promises he hath made us nay abundant in Truth that is his performances exceed they run-over he will be better then his word whatsoever he hath said he will more then do it 8. He is a God reserving mercy for Thousands that is when any of us do him faithful service he cannot content himself to do good to our own persons but to our Children and to our Generation So Davids love extended not to Barzillai and Jonathan onely but to their posterity also 9. He is a God forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin Those three words are put in that we may know he forgives sins of all sorts and signifie That he is still and still forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin God is said to be 1. An Essence that is a thing which 1. Hath his Being from none but from himself 2. Is preserved or sustained of none but subsisteth by himself 3. Is necessarily 4. Is the onely Cause unto all other things of their Being 2. Spiritual 1. Because he is Incorporeal as being Infinite and Indivisible 2. Because he is Insensible as experience sufficiently manifesteth 3. Because both himself liveth and is the Author of all life both Corporal and Spiritual 3. Intelligent 1. Because he is the cause both of the minde of man and of the notions shining in it and also of the order which is in the nature of things and Common-weals 2. Because all intelligence or understanding of the Creature cometh from him both in respect of the faculty as in respect of the operation 4. E●ternal without beginning or end of Being Psal 90.2 and is so to us that we may oppose the certain hope of eternal blessings grounded upon his Eternity against the shortness of mortal life and against the frailty of mans condition 5. Other from all his Creatures which we must hold 1. Against Philosophers who will have the World or Nature
shorten their days Psal 37.37 38. Eccl. 8.12 Isa 3.10 11. Who say there is to Man no Honor due Belye that God that 's infinitely True And by this specious fond Delusion Vsher an Vnity of Confusion Both in the Church and State disjoynting more The Frame o'th'World then Babel did before Childe Reverence thy Parents thou shalt have By far the longer Journey to thy Grave But if the Lord doth sooner call thee hence Eternity shall be thy Recompence The Sixth Commandment Thou shalt do no Murther THe Sum of this Commandment forbiddeth all kinde of evil and commandeth all kinde of good to our Neighbors person So that the scope or end of this Commandment is the preservation of the life and safety of mens Bodies and of the welfare both of our selves and others herein being forbidden all those things which tend to the destruction of our life or the life of others And the defence of our Neighbor is here commanded because Negative Commandments include Affirmatives Thou shalt do no Murther therefore thou shalt help and aid thy Neighbor Thou shalt do no Murther that is according to thine own pleasure and lust but when the Magistrate punisheth God punisheth Now the Vertues of this Commandment are such as either hurt not men as particular Justice Mildeness Equability Peaceableness and the like or such Vertues as help and further the Safety of men either by repelling evils as Commutative Justice true Fortitude holy Indignation and Zeal or by doing benefits as Humanity Mercy Amity and the like So that herein we are commanded to preserve as much as in us lieth the life and health of our selves and others especially of our Neighbor and most especially the life of his Soul by good Counsels Exhortations and Admonitions Now here know therefore That to give or accept the Challenge to fight the single Combat is unlawful That which the Natural man accounteth Valor God esteemeth a Vice and therefore it is no disgrace to refuse it but rather true grace in yielding obedience unto God for no man must sin against God for the saving of his Credit and Reputation among men Duellists if they are slain are accessary to their own wilful and untimely Murther if they kill presently after the Murther committed they have cursed Cains fearful Mark stamp'd on them There was never any man rightly informed either in the Principles of Nature or in the gracious way to Heaven in the sober Passages of Morality or in the Justice of State or Policy or acquainted with the fairness of true Honor that ever gave any allowance to the Reputation of Honor falsly so called purchased by private Quarrel in the Field Now as Murther is one of those sins the Earth findes most unsupportable and cryeth the loudest of any other to Heaven for Vengeance So among all the several kindes thereof Parricide is the abominablest and most odious such as of old no particular Law was made against as being supposed an act too unnatural for any Childe to commit which Supposition deceived even Solon that wise Law-maker among the Heathen and caused him by his own confession to omit the Enacting Punishment against such Offenders Cic. pro Ros Ame. Yet when this inhumane impiety was known to the world the Civil Law ordained this most exquisite ingenious punishment That if any one should kill his Parent the Sword or Fire or any other usual punishment should not be his but being sewed in a Sack together with a Dog a Cock a Viper and an Ape he should be cast into the next Sea or River Just Cod. cap. 9. Tit. 17. as unworthy to live the life or dye the death of men unworthy the Element of Air while he lives or of Earth being dead To this high degree of Murther borders that ungodly and unnatural act of Parents in destroying their own Children whether at any time after Birth or in the Womb after Conception for that which hath received a Soul formed in it by God if it be unjustly cast away shall be Revenged yea if both or either of the Parents through any wilful default whatsoever cause the childe to miscarry they make themselves guilty of that miscarriage if both miscarry they make themselves guilty of the blood of both at least in the Court of Conscience before God Lastly because this horrible sin of Murther is most commonly occasioned by Duelling we must yet further know That the Law both of God and Man condemneth this common practice of Brawling Fighting Quarrelling or Challenging one another into the Field for private and personal wrongs Whosoever think it a disgrace to refuse such Challenges think it also a disgrace to walk in the ways of God and to obey the good Edicts of Princes and wholesom Laws of the Commonwealth The greatest disgrace is Not to yield Obedience unto God it is no credit to sin against him to salve a supposed Honor and Reputation among men for no man ought to revenge his own Cause or Quarrel Likewise the causes of these Duels are most commonly very wicked as sometimes Pride and Vain-glory sometimes Drunkenness and Lust sometimes Covetousness and Greediness of Gain and the cause of all these causes the Devil himself who was a Murtherer from the beginning The effects thereof are no better for they cause deadly Fewds breed Hatred never to be appeased nourish Contention and Confusion hinder Prayer and holy Exercises of Religion shed mans blood made in the Image of God and bring down the Vengeance of God upon our own heads Let all such therefore as challenge or accept of Challenges consider That he that killeth is guilty of execrable Murther before God and he that is killed is guilty of his own death and no better then one of the Devils Martyrs for as God hath his Martyrs that dye in his Cause so the Devil also hath his Martyrs that dye in his These words Thou shalt do no Murther do signifie 1. Thou shalt not desire to Murther either thy self or others 2. Thou shalt not intimate or signifie any desire of Murthering either thy self or others either in words behavior countenance or otherwise 3. Thou shalt not put this desire in execution This Commandment hath these two parts viz. 1. The forbidding of Murther and therein all the degrees and steps by which we come unto it 2. The commanding of keeping Peace and Friendship with our Neighbors The steps or degrees towards Murther are these three viz. 1. Hatred conceived in the heart Lev. 19.17 2. Rash sinful Anger which is a declaration of that hatred lying hid in the heart 3. Every hurt purposely offered to the person of our Neighbor whereupon ensueth sometimes Murther it self That Murther may be committed in the very Affection or Will may be thus manifested 1. Because when the Effect is commanded or forbidden the Cause is so also 2. From the scope or end of the Commandment God will not have us hurt any therefore he forbiddeth the means also whereby we may hurt 3.
Table 2. Against Man as those against the Second 1 Sam. 2.25 Matth. 28. Sin may admit of Aggravations seven ways viz. 1. By the object or person sinning 2. By the object or party which is offended 3. By the thing done in which the offence is committed 4. By the place where it is done 5. By the end in regard whereof it is done 6. By the maner how it is committed 7. By the time when it is committed One and the same Sin admits degrees four ways viz. 1. By Temptation when the Devil cast in the Motion 2. By Conception when the Will approves to act the Motion 3. By Birth when the Motion comes into Execution 4. By Perfection when men by Custom have got a habit in sin Three degrees of Lust in man viz. 1. When the Temptation is first received into the Minde 2. When the same Temptation prevaileth though with some resistance of the Minde 3. When the Temptation so far prevaileth that the Heart and Will are overcome and the Duties of Religion for the time utterly hindred Again in Sin consider two things 1. The Corruption of Sin or the matter of it which still remaineth in us 2. The Guilt of Sin which we are freed and Redeemed from by Christ The general nature of Sin is a Defect which Defect is an Absence 1. Of good Inclinations in our Minde 2. Of the Knowledge of God and his Will 3. Of Motions to obey the Law of God 4. Of Inward Actions which are required in the Law 5. Of Outward Actions which follow the Inward For Inclinations and Actions may in themselves be both good and bad 1. As they are things in Nature made and raised of God they are good of themselves 2. As they are in men corrupted or as they are done by men they are of themselves evil and vicious because they are committed against the Law of God The four Crying Sins which are so often passed by in the world yet cry to Heaven for Vengeance 1. The Crying of Blood 2. The Lust of the Sodomites 3. The Noise of the oppressed 4. The Hire of the Laborers There are five Principal Divisions of Sin viz. The First Original which is in all men not by Imitation but Propagation Isa 48.8 Actual which is every inward and outward Action repugnant to the Law of God The Second Reigning Sin which is all Sin not repented of nor resisted by the Grace of the Spirit Sin not reigning which is repented resisted and whereof we obtain Remission The Third Against the Conscience as in those who wittingly and willingly sin Not against the Conscience which we unwillingly commit yet acknowledge bewail but are not able to avoid The Fourth Pardonable whereof men truly repent and obtain Pardon Unpardonable which is a purposed Denial and oppugning of the known Truth of God and his Will and his Works Now they are excluded from Pardon who are from Repentance The Fifth Of it self Sin as all things forbidden of God in the Law Sin by Accident which is when things in themselves indifferent do by circumstances become sinful and are done with offence or without Faith All Sins either in our selves or others are all the works of Darkness viz. 1. Because they come from Satan the Prince of Darkness 2. Because they are practised in the Kingdom of Darkness 3. Because they are practised by them who are Darkness Prov. 4.19 4. Because they love Darkness 5. Because they end in Eternal Darkness Four maner of ways is Sin committed in the Heart 1. By Suggestion which cometh by the Devil The Serpent perswaded 2. By Delight Eve delighted 3. By Consent Adam consented 4. By Boldness of defending Sin by our elation and stubbornness when Adam was urged to confess his fault he defended it by an audacious Excuse The least breach of the Second Table even all sin whatsoever that is committed is committed against God himself Proved 1. Because Sin is nothing else but the Breach of the Law of God 1 Joh. 5.17 2. Every Sin is liable to Judgement against whomsoever it be committed it is punished of God he taketh the matter into his own hands Rom. 1.18 3. No one can forgive any Sin but God it followeth therefore that all Sin is committed against himself 4. Because the Love of our Brethren is made the fulfilling of the whole Law and the tryal of our selves whether we love God or not Rom. 13.8 9 10. No Sin in its own nature is venial yet may Sins be said to be not mortal or venial 3 ways viz. 1. In regard of the Event or Success so such are venial which do obtain Pardon and when forgiveness followeth them though they be in themselves most grievous 1 Joh. 5.16 Thus may we say of Davids Adultery and Murther 2 Sam. 12.13 though the least sin in its own nature is mortal and merits Damnation No sin is venial so long as we follow it and no sin is mortal when once we forsake it Prov. 28.13 All sins are made venial by Repentance no sin is venial without it 2. In regard of the Cause from whence they proceed whereupon they sooner obtain pardon if they are not done of malice and set purpose but of ignorance and infirmity This Paul sheweth to be the cause why his sin was venial unto him and why he obtained mercy and forgiveness 1 Tim. 1.13 yet sins of all sorts springing from this Fountain of Error and Ignorance in themselves considered are damnable 3. In regard of the nature of the Sins themselves so no Sin not the least sinful thought can any way be said to be venial but deserveth temporal and eternal Punishment whatever the Papists prattle who most damnably teach That some Sin in its own nature may truly and properly be called Venial The occasions of Provocation to Sin are many which may be reduced to these six Heads viz. 1. Bad Counsel hereby came the Fall of the First Adam and the Death of the Second Mat. 27.20 2. Consent or Approbation of Sin which is twofold 1. Secret when men see sin committed and are not grieved thereat 1 Cor. 5.12 2. Open when men countenance sinners and lewd persons which make profession of bad practices This is the horrible Sin of this Age. 3. Provocation unto Sin when either by word or deed men excite or draw on others to some evil This is the common fault of such as delight in drunken fellowship 4. Neglect of good Duties unto our Brethren as of Exhortation Admonition Instruction Edification by word or example Reproof or Rebuke 5. Evil Example in the practice of any Sin whatsoever This is like Wildefire 6. The private Slandering of Gods Ministers and the disgracing of their Ministery which causeth many to contemn the means of their own Salvation Communication with Sin may be sundry ways 1 Tim. 5.22 As thus viz. 1. By Counsel so Caiphas when he gave counsel to put Christ to death 2. By Commandment so David in the Murther of Vrias 3.
Leaving man to the liberty and mutability of his own Will not hindring his Fall by supply of Grace and by Satans Tempting who being himself faln and envying Gods Glory and Mans Happiness subtilly addressed himself in the Serpents shape 3. Mans Yielding who being left to the mutability of his own Will voluntarily enclined to that evil whereunto he was tempted The Sins committed in the first Sin of Adam viz. 1. Discontent in not being contented with that estate wherein he was placed 2. Pride against God Ambition and an Admiration of himself 3. Incredulity Unbelief and Contempt of Gods Justice and Mercy 4. Stubbornness and Disobedience even when there was but one Commandment and man qualified to keep it 5. Unthankfulness for Benefits received at his Creation 6. To his Posterity Unnaturalness Injustice and Cruelty 7. Apostacy or manifest Defection from God to the Devil whom he obeyed and believed Man through the Devils instigation was the first Author of Sin the true Cause thereof therefore God is not the Author of Sin 1. Because he is of his own Nature Good the Chief Good no evil thing then can proceed from him 2. It is written Gen. 1.31 All that God had made was very good 3. The Law of God condemneth all evil things and commandeth all that is good 4. He were unjust if he should punish Sin in man if himself were the Author of it 5. The Description of Sin is a destruction of the Image of God in man 6. The many places in Scripture to the contrary Psal 5. Jam. 1. Eccl. 15. Rom. 3. The Causes of Gods Permission of the first Sin viz. 1. To shew his Justice and Power to the Wicked and his Mercy to the Chosen Rom. 11.32 Gal. 3.22 2. That it might stand for an Example of the weakness and infirmity of the Creatures even the most excellent of all the rest The greatness of Adams sin viz. 1. He regarded not the Promise of God whereby he was willed to hope for Everlasting Life 2. He despised the Commandment of God restraining him from the forbidden Fruit. 3. He brake out into horrible Pride and Ambition whereby he would be equal unto God and seek an estate higher then that wherein he had set him though it were most excellent 4. He shewed an unfaithful Heart to depart away from the living God his Creator so that he did not believe or not regard the Threatning of God that he should dye if he sinned 5. He brake out into foul and fearful Apostacy from God to the Devil from his Maker to the Tempter giving more credit to the Father of Lyes then to the God of all Truth of whose Goodness he had such great Experience Other Sins in Adams sin of eating the forbidden Fruit 1. Disloyalty in being content to hear his Maker blasphemously discredited and in his heart consenting to the Blasphemy in charging God of Envy for forbidding him to eat of the Tree of Knowledge 2. Intemperance in that he was carried so far by his Appetite as to exceed the Bounds set him 3. An Inordinate Love to his Wife swaying him to eat more then the Love of God to refrain 4. Curiosity in that he would try what Vertue lay hid in the Fruit. Our former state and condition by Nature is oft and seriously to be thought on and that in respect 1. Of Christ the more to magnifie his Love Psal 8.1 4. 1 Tim. 1.12 2. Of our selves to humble us and to keep us from insolent boasting in those Priviledges whereof through Christ we are made partakers 1 Cor. 4.7 3. Of others to move us the more to commiserate their woful estate who yet remain as we once were to conceive hope and use means of their alteration Tit. 3. The heinousness and grievousness of obstinate sinners viz. 1. Obstinate proceeding in sin keepeth all Mercy from us as a thick Cloud that suffereth not the comfortable Light of the Sun to shine in our faces Rom. 11.25 28. 2. It maketh the least sin that a man committeth or can commit to be like to that Sin against the Holy Ghost that shall never be forgiven neither in this world nor in that to come Mat. 12.32 for it is not so much Sin simply that condemneth a man for then all men should be condemned insomuch as all men have sinned as Obstinacy and Wilful continuing in sin 3. It is a Sin against the Gospel it self and the very Doctrine of Salvation If then we believe in earnest that we shall come to Judgement if we take not Heaven and Hell the Eternal Joys of the one and the Everlasting Torments of the other for meer Fables if we think the Blessedness of the holy Angels worth the having or the condition of the infernal Spirits worth the avoiding Let us not continue in sin Rules how to perceive the grievousness of our sins viz. 1. Compare them with other mens sins as with Adams sin for doubtless we have many sins considered in the fact come after his onely in time and yet by that sin Adam brought not onely on himself but on all his Posterity Mortality and Destruction the first and second Death 2. Let us consider our sins in the Punishment thereof that is Subjection to all Wo and Misery yea and to Death it self in this life and to Death Eternal after this life with the Devil and his Angels This is the Reward of every sin in it self 3. Consider these thy sins as they were laid on the holy Person of our Savior Christ which he endured not onely outward bodily Torments on the Cross but inwardly in Soul apprehended the whole Wrath of God due unto us for the same which caused him to sweat Water and Blood and to cry My God my God why c. 4. Have recourse to the last Commandment which forbids the very first Thought and Motions in the Heart to sin though we never give Consent of Will thereto nay though we abhor the Fact it self How God doth punish Sin viz. 1. Most grievously for the greatenss of sin because the Infinite God is offended thereby 2. Most justly because every sin violateth his Law and therefore even the least sin meriteth Eternal Death abjection and casting away 3. Most certainly as in respect 1. Of his Justice which punisheth whatsoever is not agreeable to it 2. Of his Truth because he had before denounced That he would punish men if they obeyed not his Commandment The degrees of the Punishment the wicked do and shall suffer for sin viz. 1. In this Life when the Conscience for their misdceds doth gnaw vex and punish them then beginneth their Hellish and Infernal Worm 2. In Temporal Death when they departing out of this life without comfort go into the place of Torment and Vexations Luke 16. 3. At the Day of Judgement when again to every of their Bodies reunited to their Souls the Pains of Hell to both shall be consummated The Effects of Sin viz. 1. Sins that follow are the Effects
excellency of Gods Gifts 7. If our Works should merit Christ should not be a perfect Savior nor Heaven purchased for us by his Blood onely which now to affirm is To Crucifie him worse then the Jews did Good Works cannot justifie us for these Reasons viz. 1. Because our best works yea the works of the Saints are not perfectly good and pure and that for these Reasons viz. 1. We do many things we should not and omit many things we should do 2. We mingle evil with the good we should do or we do good but we do it ill The thing done may be good but not the maner of doing it 3. The Saints which do good works do many things which are sins in themselves and so deserve to be outed of Gods favor Deut. 27.26 4. Because there is not that degree of Goodness in these good works that proceed from the Saints which ought to be or as God requireth 2. Though they were perfect yet are they due and debt so that we cannot satisfie by them 3. They are Temporary and bear not proportion with Eternal Blessings 4. They are Effects of Justification therefore no Cause thereof 5. They are excluded that we might not have whereof to glory 6. If they were part of our Justification our Consciences should be destitute of stable and certain Comfort 7. Christ should have dyed in vain and have risen in vain not to our Justification if we could have been justified by Works That justifying Faith which is required in every good work hath a double use in the causing thereof 1. It gives the beginning to a good work renewing the Minde Will and Affections of the worker whence the work proceedeth as pure water from a cleansed Fountain 2. It covereth the wants that be in good works for the best work done by man in this life is imperfect but hereby both the person of the worker is accepted and the imperfection of his work covered in the sight of God All these are excluded from being good works viz. 1. Which are sins in themselves and repugnant to Gods Law and his VVill revealed in his most sacred VVord 2. VVhich are not repugnant to the Law neither in themselves good or evil but which may yet by an accident be made good or evil 3. VVhich are good in themselves and commanded by God but yet are made sins by an accident in that they are unlawfully done or not as they ought to be How the works of the Regenerate and Unregenerate differ viz. 1. The works of the Unregenerate proceed not from Faith as those of the Regenerate do 2. The works of the Unregenerate are not joyned with an inward Obedience and therefore are done dissemblingly and are meer Hypocrisie but it is far otherwise with the Regenerate 3. As the works of the Unregenerate proceed not from the right cause so are they not referred to the chief end which is Gods Glory but in both these the works of the Regenerate are rightly and truly qualified Though the works of the most Regenerate yea his best works are good onely in part not perfectly because he is not wholly Spirit and no Flesh yet God approves of them And therefore we must again consider Good VVorks two ways viz. 1. In themselves as they are compared with the Law and the rigor thereof and so they are sins because they answer not to that perfection which the Law requireth for there be two degrees of Sin viz. 1. Rebellions which are Actions flatly against the Law 2. Defects when a man doth those things the Law commandeth but faileth in the maner of doing and so mans best works are sins 2. As they are done by a person Regenerate and reconciled to God in Christ and so God accepts of them for in Christ the wants of them are covered The Benefit of putting and keeping on the Holy Spiritual Brest-plate of Righteousness which is Good VVorks viz. 1. It keepeth us from being mortally wounded for so long as we retain a true purpose and faithful endeavor answerable thereto we shall never give our selves over to commit sin and iniquity 2. It bringeth great Assurance of our Effectual Calling and Spiritual Union with Christ yea even of our Election and Salvation Eph. 1.4 1 Joh. 2.29 3. It procureth us a good name in Gods Church while we live 2 Cor. 8.18 and a blessed Memory after we are dead Prov. 10.7 4. It confirmeth the Truth of Religion and so it may be a means to win such as are without 1 Pet. 3.1 to strengthen those that stand 1 Thess 1.6 7. and to stir up all to an holy emulation 2 Cor. 9.2 5. It doth highly honor God and occasion others to glorifie him Mat. 5.16 That we may be moved to the doing of Good Works and to live righteously observe here the blessed fruit and issue thereof as it is declared in Scripture viz. 1. Generally that the Lord loveth Righteousness Psal 11.7 that verily there is a Reward for the Righteous Psal 58.11 that Blessings are on the head of the Righteous c. Prov. 10.6 2. Particularly for the Righteous person himself viz. 1. In this Life the eyes of the Lord are upon the Righteous Psal 34.15 God will grant their desire Prov. 10.24 he delivereth them out of all trouble Psal 34.19 they shall never be forsaken Psal 37.25 they shall flourish like a Palm-tree Psal 92.12 c. 2. At their Death when they have hope Prov. 14.32 and are taken from the evil to come Isa 57.1 3. After Death their Memorial shall be blessed Prov. 10.7 in everlasting remembrance Psal 112.6 4. At the Resurrection they shall go into Life Eternal Mat. 25.46 They shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father Matth. 11.43 5. For their Posterity The Generation of the Righteous shall be blessed Psal 112.2 Their seed shall not beg their bread c. Psa 37.25 XIII REpentance is a constant turning from all sin unto God or an inward sorrowing and continually mourning for sin joyned with Faith and Humiliation and both inward and outward amendment It is an aversion or turning from all a mans sins and a reversion or turning again unto God with all our Hearts Or Repentance is an unfained sorrow for and hatred of sin with an earnest Love of Righteousness by the which we are continually stirred up to abhor our Vices and are moved to do good Works not for fear of punishment or hope of reward but for that love we bear towards God that with a joyful heart we are moved to his Obedience and with grief go astray from his Commandments A Godly sorrow whereby a man is grieved for his sins because they are sins is the beginning of Repentance and indeed for substance it is Repentance it self So a desire to repent and believe in a touched Heart and Conscience is Faith and Repentance it self though not in Nature yet in Gods acceptation for in them that have Grace God accepteth the will for the
it Must we never pray it because it may not always be absolutely necessary may it therefore be never expedient Hence then never let any sober Christian more undervalue this Form for Prayer for the reason onely of others thinking too highly of it nor admire it for the reason of others vain undervaluing it but pray it in Knowledge Faith and Fervency without which the words are as a dead letter This Form is compleatly Comprehensive of all things petitionable whether Spiritual Temporal or Eternal an exact Epitomy of what God hath promised to give or man hath leave to ask It is that Form of words for Prayer which our Savior taught his Disciples commanding them when they pray to say Our Father which c. Next follows that Creed which vulgarly is stiled Apostolical whereby we make Confession of that Faith which believes in one God even the true God one in Essence Deut. 6.4 Three in Persons 1 Joh. 5.7 The Father the Creator Psal 134.3 the Son the Redeemer Rom. 5.18 the Holy Ghost the Sanctifier 1 Pet. 1.2 which Believes that the Holy Eph. 1.3 4. and Catholick Church Isa 54.2 consists of the Faithful people of God which Believes that there is a Communion of Saints Eph. 4.15 16. Pardoned of all sins Isa 44.22 Appointed to Rise from Death and to enjoy Eternal Life both in Body and Soul Joh. 6.39 40. In the next a word of the Decalogue in general How in the Table of mans Heart it stood engraven before it was repeated in stone Also how and in what maner the Law was given How many ways the Decalogue's divided with Rules concerning the substance and meaning thereof in general Various and voluminous are the Expositions on the Commandments but here as in a Map quasi uno intuita thou mayest descry the whole Region of the Law of God The same may be said of the whole Work as it stands in relation to the subject it treats of Now because we are not under the Law but under Grace some have dream'd That the Enacting of the Gospel hath Repealed the Statutes made when Moses was Speaker the Lord awaken them Do we now make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Rom. 3.31 David a man in request with God a man after his own heart took the Testimonies of God for his Heritage for ever made them the joy of his heart and resolved to keep the Commandments of his God Psal 119.112 115. and in ver 126. he saith It is time for thee O Lord to work for they have made void thy Law and in the next Verse most passionately declares his affection saying I love thy Commandments above gold yea above fine gold A plain Discovery why others reject them But if thou wilt live keep the Commandments Prov. 7.2 keep them exactly universally constantly chearfully and sincerely Have no Gods but One and that the onely true God Worship no Created thing In vain do not take Gods Name in thy thoughts actions or otherwise Consecrate the Seventh day Reverence thy Superiors but not with Religious Worship Commit no Adultery by the eye or otherwise Do not play the Thief in thy Calling or otherwise Give no false Testimony and endeavor after that excellent gift of Contentation Thus with holy David have thou respect to all the Lords Commandments and that continually Psal 119.117 for the Lord sheweth Mercy unto Thousands of them that love him and keep his Commandments Exod. 20.6 The next is touching the Infinite Love of God to Man The Decree of Election according to the good will and pleasure of God from all Eternity The Creation of all things out of nothing without any Instruments Means Assistance or Motion onely by the Word of God alone The Redemption of Man by the Imputation of the sufferings of the punishment due for sin in the person of our Mediator Vocation whereby we are called from Darkness to Light from a state of Nature to a state of Grace from out of the World to the Kingdom of Heaven from being Limbs of Satan to be Members of Christ from Children of Wrath to become the Heirs of Heaven Justification whereby God absolveth true Believers from the guilt of sin by the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ Sanctisication or the inward changing of a justified man purged from all the corruption of Nature and endued with inward Righteousness whereby the Image of God is restored in him Adoption whereby the justified through the Union they have with Christ are accounted of God as his own Children Regeneration or the repairing of the decayed estates of our souls the Holy Ghost actuating the hearts of Gods Elect to a free constant and faithful exercise of a holy life Conversion or mutation of a corrupt Minde Life and Will into a good stirred up in the Chosen by the Holy Ghost through the Preaching of the Gospel Repentance that inward and continual sorrowing and mourning for the Commission of sin joyned with Faith Humiliation and a constant turning from all sin unto God with a hatred and loathing thereof thus accompanied with both inward and outward amendment and New Obedience whereby a man is renewed unto that whereunto he was enabled by Creation whereby being endued with Faith and Repentance he doth according to the measure of Grace received endeavor to yield Obedience to all Gods Commandments with the whole man for which end even the Revelation of the Mystery which was kept secret since the World began was made known to all Nations Rom. 16.26 The next speaks of Fasting that holy and extraordinary Abstinence from the commodities of this life for our better humiliation and preparation to Prayer when any Judgement on our selves or Brethren is either threatned feared begun or executed How this part of Divine Worship hath been of late years prophaned in this Land may to this day be read in the Euroclydons of Gods fearful Judgements Insomuch as it s now necessary that we Fast for our Fasts For did we not Fast to Wrath to Revenge to Strife to Envy to Debate Did we not Feast our Lusts when nought but the posture of a Bulrush could denote our Fasting Did we not Fast at Noon to surfet at Night Did we not even then afflict our Brethren in stead of our Souls Did we not finde pleasure in the day of our Fasts and exact all our Labors Did we not draw Iniquity with cords of Vanity even then when we should have loosed the Bands of Wickedness Did we not even then load on weights grievous to be born in stead of undoing the heavy Burthens Did we not even then also receive the gain of Oppression in stead of letting the oppressed go free Did we not then likewise take the staff of Life from such as were half famished before in stead of dealing our bread to the hungry Did we not then also cast the poor out of their own Dwellings in stead of bringing them that were cast out into our own
giveth unto him the Spirit of revelation Eph. 1.17 4. In regard of the maner of searching them for if men cursorily carelesly reade the Scripture no marvel if they understand little or nothing thereof The Reasons why the Scripture is in some respects difficult 1. To declare unto man his natural blindeness and to suppress all self-conceit for by the Mystery of the Word the wisdom of man is found to be foolishness 2. To keep holy things from dogs and so to make a difference betwixt the childe of the kingdom and the wicked 3. To maintain the divine Ordinance of Preaching and Expounding the Scriptures 4. To raise up in us an appetite after the Word and an high esteem of it and to keep us from loathing it By the perspicuity of it we are kept from starving and by the difficulty of it from loathing it 5. To stir us up diligently to study and search the Scriptures and carefully to use the means whereby we may finde out the hidden treasure in it 6. To make us to call upon him who is the Author of the Scripture to give us the Spirit of Revelation and not to reade or hear the Word without faithful and earnest prayer For our help in the finding out of the true sense of the Scripture there are divers profitable means As 1. Understanding of the Original Tongues because divers Errors and Heresies have been drawn from Translations and every language hath some kindes of speech proper to it self 2. Skill in the Arts whereby proper and figurative speeches and phrases may be discerned and distinguished and the true construction of words with the just consequents of arguments may be discern'd 3. Knowledge of the Analogy of Faith that is of the fundamental points of our Christian Religion that no sense be made contrary to any of them 4. Observation of the scope of that place which is interpreted and of the circumstances going before and following after 5. Comparing one place with another as the obscure places with the perspicuous Thus the meaning of many Types and Prophesies in the Old Testament may be understood by the application of them in the New 6. Prayer for thereby the Spirit of Revelation is obtained Eph. 1.17 7. Faith and obedience in to Gods word so far as it is made known The four graces needful to use the Scriptures aright 1. Knowledge whereby in all things that we do we may be able to judge what is the good will of God what is pleasing and acceptable to him Rom. 12.2 Eph. 5.17 This knowledge is attained by diligent reading of the word by meditation on what we reade by a reverend conferring thereof and by a careful humble attention to the preaching thereof 2. Wisdom which teacheth us rightly to apply the word and that both in the true sense and meaning of that particular place which we alledge and also according to the present matter for which it is alledged otherwise we pervert the Scripture to our own destruction 2 Pet. 3.16 3. Faith whereto the power of the Scriptures is restrained for the Word is the power of God to every one that believeth Rom. 1.16 without this all knowledge all wisdom is in vain 4. Obedience for in Religion a man knoweth no more then he practiseth Happy onely which so know as to do what they know John 13.17 by neither carelesly neglecting that which is commanded nor by preposterously doing that which is forbidden The Scripture contains matter concerning all sorts of persons things which may be reduced to these 5 Heads 1. Touching Religion and the right worship of God they teach how to serve him and what to believe of God or Man 1. Touching God that he is one in Essence and three in persons 2. Touching our selves 1. That by Creation we were made good holy and righteous 2. That by our Fall we are become wretched by reason of sin and not able of our selves to think one good thought or to stir one foot forward toward the Kingdom of heaven 3. That by Regeneration we are born again and made the Sons of God by Adoption and by faith we lay hold on Christ our Wisdom our Sanctification our Righteousness our Redemption 3. Touching the Church That it is the company of the Faithful that have been from the beginning By them also are we led to know the two Sacraments and what to believe of the general Judgement that shall be of the godly and ungodly 2. Touching Kingdoms and Commonwealths and touching the Duties of Magistrates and Subjects they inform us how the one ought to rule and the other to obey and neither the one nor the other do their duties for conscience till the Word inform them 3. Touching Families and Houshold-affairs in which are Husband and Wife Parents and Children Masters and Servants no duty required of them is omitted but all contained herein 4. Touching the private life of every particular person how to behave our selves in the whole course of our life 5. Touching the common life of all men we learn in them how to lead our lives in every estate whether we be rich or poor whether we be high or low we can be in no estate but we shall finde sufficient store of heavenly precepts and examples to teach us the way wherein we should walk The way to profit by the Scriptures 1. We must have recourse by prayer to God the Author of the Scriptures he onely is able to unlock them and so to bring us into the secret chamber of his presence 2. We must keep such order in the reading of them as may stand with our Calling and state of life and take all opportunity to do it redeeming this day what we omitted the last 3. We must understand to what ends uses they were written as 1. To teach that we may learn the Truth 2. To improve that we may be kept from error 3. To correct that we may be driven from vice 4. To instruct that we may be setled in the way of well-doing 5. To comfort that in trouble we may be confirmed in patience and hope of an happy issue 4. We are to remember that the Scriptures contain matter concerning all sorts of persons and things 5. We must have the Doctrine of the Scriptures plentifully dwelling in us not in the mouth but seated in the heart that we may be able to rise up being fallen to stand in the truth to continue unto the end The several kindes of neglecters of the Scriptures and consequently self-enemies to their own souls 1. Such as care not to reade it or hear it at all of all Books they least respect the Bible 2. Such as seldom reade it having fair bound Bibles onely to keep them company at Church 3. Such as reade much but do onely reade never search the Scripture to finde out the true sense and meaning thereof 4. Such as reade and seek out the true sense also but onely to understand the truth of the
of the Lords supper three things are required 1. A right preparation which chiefly consists in knowledge prayer self-examination contrition and repentance faith a resolution against sin for the future and charity for this Sacrament is a Communion whereby all the receivers joyntly united by love do participate of one and the same Christ 2. A right receiving wherein is specially required the renewing of our knowledge or general faith which is renewed principally by meditation in the use of the Supper and the renewing of our special faith in Christ 3. A right use of it afterward when we must give God thanks for so great a benefit 1 Cor. 11.26 and look to receive by it encrease of faith and repentance to rise from sin and to receive power against the Devil The Rule of examination must be the Law of God and the thing chiefly to be examined is sin 1. In thought and therein these especially Idle thoughts Lascivious thoughts Treacherous politick thoughts Blasphemous thoughts 2. In word and therein such as these Idle words Angry and rash words Filthy and immodest words False and untrue words Cursing and imprecating words Charming and Necromantick words Words immediately agains God as Oathes and Blasphemies 3. In deed Some whereof are of Commission Others of Omission We must also examine our Graces and therein 1. What Knowledge we have Prov. 19.2 Of God Of our selves Of the Covenant of Grace Of the nature and use of this Sacrament 2. What Faith we have Acts 8.37 3. What Repentance we have Exod. 12.8 4. What Obedience we have Psal 26.6 5. What Love we bear to our brethren Mat. 5.23 24. The examination of our knowledge is by inquiring of our hearts whether we know 1. God that is acknowledge him the true God and him alone 2. Our selves that is acknowledge our selves to be 1. Sinners and that both Originally Actually 2. Accursed sinners deserving the wrath of God 3. Burthened sinners weary and heavy loaden desiring Christ to refresh us 3. The Passion of Christ not so much to talk and discourse of it as to know and apply the vertue of it We may examine our Faith by these marks 1. Whether we can from our hearts renounce our false supposed goodness and can wholly relye upon Christ in the matter of our salvation for this Nature cannot do 2. Whether we have peace of conscience arising from the apprehension of Gods love in Christ and our reconciliation with him Again our Faith which is the wedding garment may be examined by these particulars viz. 1. Whether we believe that Jesus Christ is the Messias and Savior of the world 2. That he was crucified and shed his blood 3. That the merit of his Passion is able to save sinners 4. That this merit is conveyed unto us in the Sacrament being rightly administred and duly received In the examination of our faith we must also enquire 1. Whether we have onely a general Faith an historical temporal Faith or a legal Faith none of which alone doth save 2. Whether we have an Evangelical Faith in the Promises of the Gospel approving to our own hearts on true and sound ground that they belong to us in particular and so a Justifying Faith without which we may not dare approach the Lords Table So also we must examine whether we have these five things required in Faith viz. 1. A true understanding and knowledge of God and his will in his Word 2. A true consent and assent in the heart that it is Gods word and all of it most true 3. A profession and approbation of it 4. An application of Christ upon a sound ground to be thy Savior in particular 5. A continual declaration of our faith by the diligent and constant practice of good works Lastly we must examine whether we are not given too much to presumption or desperation either of which are main lets and hindrances unto Faith Then we must try our Faith by the marks of it 1. Towards God as 1. Peace of Conscience 2. Love towards God 3. Hope of Salvation 4. Constancy in the faith and truth of Christ 5. Boldness to come to God 6. Confession of his truth 7. Obedience to God and his Word 2. Towards our Brethren as 1. Mutual concord in Religion 2. Brotherly love that we can forgive forget do them any good and pray for them 3. Towards our selves as 1. Patience rest in God and joy in afflictions 2. A deadly hatred of sin 4. Against sin the world and the Devil conquest and victory We may know whether we have Repentance or not by enquiring of our own hearts 1. Whether we have a godly sorrow for sin whereby we are displeased with our selves because by sin we have displeased God 2. Whether there be in us a changing of the minde and a purpose to forsake sin and ever after to please God 3. Whether we do daily break off our sins and abstain from inward practice keeping under our corruptions and ungodly thoughts 4. Whether we mourn for the present corruption of our nature 5. Whether we have been grieved and craved pardon for our late sins even since we were last partakers of the Lords Table In Repentance we must examine 1. Whether it be from the heart in truth and uprightness or onely in hypocrisie 2. Whether it be from the whole heart or whether we use not double-dealing with God 3. Whether we return from all our sins or onely from some living still in our sins 4. Whether we repent as we sin every day or no or onely for a fit and return to our sins again 5. Whether we behave our selves uprightly both before God and men publikely and privately or whether we do not rather seem better then indeed we are and so commit horrible and shameful sins in secret Again in our Repentance we must examine 1. Whether we have acknowledged sin to be sin with the circumstances and punishment thereof 2. Whether we are truly humbled inwardly and outwardly for them 3. Whether we have a godly sorrow for them which bringeth forth a circumspect care a clearing of our selves just indignation filial fear earnest desire fervent zeal and a holy revenge 4. Whether we do often call to God for mercy and pardon in Christs Name 5. Whether we have fully purposed and resolved to amend our lives and turn unto God with the whole man And this resolution must be forthwith put in practice and continued to our lives end for otherwise we but mock God and deceive our own souls The truth of Faith and Repentance may be known by these notes viz. 1. If our faith be directed upon the right object which is Christ alone 2. If there be a hungring and thirsting after his body and blood 3. If we have a constant and a serious purpose not to sin 4. If there follow a change in the life The companions of Repentance are a broken and a contrite Spirit a bitter soul and oftentimes a weeping eye but the
Pet. 1.12 much more doth it concern us to be diligent searchers out of this mystery in the Gospel 2. The Angels are maintainers of true Religion and of the worship of God for the Law was given by Angels Gal. 3.19 they brought the Apostles out of prison to preach the Gospel they are enemies to Idolatry Rev. 19.10 Herein also let us be their followers 3. The Angels were always nigh unto Christ at his Nativity Luke 2.9 10. in his temptation Mat. 4.11 in his Agony Luke 22.43 in his Resurrection Mat. 28.2 and Ascension Acts 1.10 And so should we perform unto Christ all the service we can 4. They are alway praising and lauding the Name of God so should we labor to have our hearts enlarged for his glory and our mouthes filled with his praises 5. They be serviceable for our good if we be Gods children though they be far better then we are Heb. 1.14 So must we imploy our selves in soul body calling credit and all we have for the good of men 6. They are joyful when sinners are converted from sin unto God Luke 15.10 and are grieved when men by sin dishonor God the like affections should be in us for in the world to come we shall be like the Angels in heaven in glory Mat. 22.30 This patern of Angelical obedience here propounded for our imitation must teach us 1. To acknowledge and bewail the natural hardness deadness and untowardness of our hearts in yielding obedience to the will of God 2. To bewail the want of sincerity and faithfulness in doing Gods will our maimed and defective obedience shews how far we come short of this Angelical example Many content themselves with the outward service of the body and never regard the inward worship of the heart and others have respect to outward duties of piety that concern God but for uprightness and mercy towards men they little regard This the Angels do not This Angelical example informs our judgement what honor we are to give to the blessed Angels namely the honor of imitation and not of any divine worship for when John would have worshipped the Angel he forbade him saying See thou do it not worship God Rev. 19.10 From all which let us be perswaded to begin our heaven upon earth by resembling though not equalling the Angels in obedience that so with them and all the Host of Heaven we may sincerely say Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven How many say Gods will be done and yet The Idol of their own Will-worship set In stead thereof How many vainly say In Prayer what they practice to unpray Or with the words conclude the work as though The will of God were done by saying so Help Lord for of our selves we proudly draw Back from thy Will and make our own a Law Assist us by the Spirit of thy Son To keep thy Law then shall Thy will be done §. 8. Give us this day our daily bread UNder the name of Bread by that usual figure Synecdoche our Savior Christ compriseth not onely all corporal blessings and such as are necessary for this life but also the profitable use of them Give us that is Bestow bless and sanctifie all temporal necessary good things unto us Sanctifie all outward comforts unto us which by reason of sin stand accursed that they may not be a destruction to us in the use of them as we deserve Bestow uphold continue and maintain that which thou hast given us Bless make prosperous and wholesom our meats and drinks for the strengthning of our bodies and refreshing our Spirits so as we may be enabled in the strength of thy blessing to serve thee in our Callings as thou hast commanded This day that is we desire not such abundance for so long a time as whereby our dependance upon thee should be cut off but to be content with things necessary for the present and to wait upon thee for the future from day to day Daily bread that is Bread for our substance such as Nature doth require to uphold it no dainties or costly feastings but onely necessary food and cloathing whereby the substance of our bodies may be continued and not pine away Our daily bread that is not the bread the clothes the substance of another but such things honestly gotten by our labor through Gods blessing upon us according to the Apostle 2 Thess 3.2 And the wealthiest in the world may not think himself too rich to beg this daily bread for he knows not ere the day pass to what extremity with Job he may be brought This Petition followeth immediately Thy will be done because to have things necessary for our maintenance is a stay and help unto us the more chearfully to do the will of God and keeps us from unlawful enterprizes and because the Rule of seeking things temporal must not be our own but the will of God So likewise this Petition in order is placed before this Forgive us our Trespasses not for that the things of this life are to be sought before those that concern the life to come for this is forbidden Joh. 6.27 but to provide against our infirmities whereby we distrust God for food raiment and worldly deliverances when we profess that we believe in him for the remission of sin and deliverance from damnation and to provide for the strengthning of our faith touching things eternal by ascending from these his gifts below wherein we taste of his goodness daily By which order we are taught to consider the corruption of mans Nature which ought in the first place to seek things Spiritual but because we live rather by Sense then by Faith we do principally desire things corporal Again hereby appears Christs mercy unto man in that by this order he descendeth to our infirmity who rather depend on him for the pardon of our sins then trust him for our provision in this life which argues we are but of little faith Matth. 9.5 Lastly by this order we are taught to depend upon him for the forgiveness of our sins for when we see that he is here so careful for our bodies he will doubtless be more careful to provide for the good of our souls Rom. 8.32 The Reasons why in this Petition Christ addeth This day 1. To meet with our distrustfulness and covetousness and to reclaim us from both these vices 2. That we should depend on him onely as yesterday so this day as this day so to morrow and for ever 3. That the exercise of faith and prayer may be always continued in us The Reasons why Christ calleth it Daily bread 1. Because he will have us daily to desire as much as may for every day suffice us 2. Because he will bridle our raging and endless lusts and desires for we are not to be inordinately careful for any thing but to depend upon Gods Providence 3. Because he will have us to know That as we expect daily our supportance from God
our discharge in this life that we be not tormented in the life to come The Reasons why sin is called a Debt to man 1. Because we owe love which is thereby broken Rom. 13.8 2. Because we owe punishment for doing wrong Judg. 1.8 3. Because we owe satisfaction for the wrong done Lev. 6.4 These words As we forgive our debtors are added for these Reasons 1. That we may rightly desire remission of sins that is with faith and repentance a sign and token whereof is the love of our Neighbor 2. That when we finde in our selves true faith and repentance we may so have a certain argument and comfort in us that we are of the number of them to whom remission of sins is promised and that therefore we shall doubtless obtain the same All offences that are done to us of others may be reduced to these three Heads 1. Such as do onely displease us but bring no loss or hurt to us 2. Small injuries such as do not onely displease us but withal bring some little hurt to us either in our life goods or good-name 3. Greater injuries such as are not onely offensive to our persons but withal do prejudice our life and bring a ruine upon our estates both in goods and good-name The forgiveness between man and man is fourfold viz. 1. Of Revenge that is when we requite not evil for evil either by thought word or deed This belongeth to all men 2. Of private Punishments when men return not punishments for injuries done by way of requital though we cannot forgive wholly and perfectly yet we may truly and sincerely 3. Of Judgement when we judge not an injury done to be an injury 4. Of Satisfaction when it is due for some hurt done Now man is said to forgive man when he doth pardon either the wrong done Gen. 50.21 or the punishment appointed for the wrong 2 Sam. 19.23 or the satisfaction which the offender is bound to make Luke 7.4 or all of them as occasion is offered Mat. 18.32 The conditional words of this Petition are useful to us many ways viz. 1. To inform us that asking of pardon and testimony of Repentance go together he that receives the one must express the other for where God gives pardon there also he gives grace to repent and mercy is not granted but on condition of repentance Acts 2.37 38. 2. To teach us to forgive our brethren every day to renew our repentance and to humble our selves and to let us know That we are bound to forgive all persons Gol. 3.12 all sins Prov. 10. and at all times Mat. 17.22 when men offend us and that fully 3. To afford us a notable sign of pardon of sin namely our forgiving of and mercy to our brethren 4. To admonish us to beware of the common sin of this Age which is desire of revenge spite and grudging for if we forgive not we pray in effect that God would not forgive us yea we curse our selves 5. To discover unto us the gross hypocrisie of our Nature for so oft as we make this Petition we make profession of reformation of life in new obedience for this one branch of brotherly Reconciliation here professed doth presuppose our Conversion from all sin since true Repentance for one sin cannot stand with a purpose to live in any other 6. To stir us up to hunger after love mercy gentleness meekness and to endeavor to practice the same continually living in peace 2 Cor. 13.11 laboring to make peace Mat. 5.9 and shewing all tokens of love to our adversaries that they may assure themselves we have wholly forgiven them 7. To shew us the way how to keep true peace of conscience for ever for when we are at one with God and man we have a blessed peace and this is by calling upon God for the pardon of our sins every day and by following after peace with men in the practice of forgiveness and reconciliation which is never sincere without repentance 8. To acquaint us That no man living in malice can say the Lords Prayer as he ought to do Mat. 5.24 and that is a sign of grace to forgive Mat. 17.32 9. To exclude from pardon all such as persecute the Saints of God till they repent and practice as they pray in this Petition By this Petition we are taught 1. To bewail our carnal security going on from day to day in sin without thought of the debt thereby 2. To relye and settle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it self on the meer mercy of God in Christ by faith in his Blood for the pardon of our sins 3. Not to lie down in the sins we daily commit but renew our estate by true humiliation and repentance which consists in daily examination confession contrition supplication and conversion 4. To use this Petition as a remedy against despair which must not embolden any to sin presumptuously for the Lord hath said he will not be merciful to that man Deut. 29.19 5. That no man possibly can fulfil the Law for the Apostles themselves were commanded to ask pardon for sin every day whereby it is plain they could not fulfil the Law much less can we 6. In all godly maner to endeavor after what we pray for for it is gross also hypocrisie daily to ask the pardon of sin and still to continue in the daily practice thereof 7. Not onely to pray for the pardon of our own sins but of our brethrens also whereby we are taught that the good estate of their souls should be dear and precious to us In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for what soever tendeth to the forgiveness of our sins as 1. The knowledge of our sins without which the tongue may pray for pardon but the heart cannot Thus many poor and miserable souls ignorantly deceive themselves 2. Grace to acknowledge our sins for he that hides them shall not prosper Prov. 28.13 and all that know them do not confess them or else some way justifie themselves 3. Grace to be truly humbled for sin and that in the sense of Gods curse due for it else we are still in our sins and cannot pray to speed 4. Justification through the death and blood-shedding of Christ Rom. 4.25 That Christs righteousness may be made ours and our sins laid upon him for his mercies sake 5. Love and charity towards our brethren that God would give us a heart to be reconciled to them pardoning their offences against us The Deprecation of this Petition is against all things that may shut up Gods mercy and goodness from us as 1. Blindeness of minde and ignorance of our inward estate which is through ignorance of the Law 2. Hardness of heart which keepeth from repentance 3. Despair of Gods mercy and goodness which driveth from God to the Devil 4. Presumption which is the promising of happiness to ones self on false ground 5. Continuance in sin and the least opinion of
further our Sanctification The four degrees of Temptation by which it proceedeth till it bring a man to destruction unless it be cut off Jam. 1.14 15. 1. Suggestion when the minde conceiveth a wicked thought put in by Satan or arising from natural corruption 2. Delight when the evil thought conceived and for a time retained in the minde descendeth to the heart and there pleaseth the will and delighteth the affections 3. Consent when the will yields to the evil motion and the heart resolves to practice it 4. Perfection when a Sin is often committed and by custom becomes as it were ripe whereupon follows destruction Now a man is led into temptation when he is left of God to an evil motion suggested into his minde so as he gives consent unto it and goes on to the practice of it To be led into Temptation is to be possessed and held by the Temptation after it hath assaulted us For in every Temptation there be two actions viz. 1. One of God whereby in his just Judgement he leaves a man to himself or to the malice of Satan 2. Another of man himself whereby being left of God he enters into the midst of the Temptation as it were plunging himself into it How the Lord is said to lead into Temptation 1. By withdrawing his Grace without which every man falleth and is not able to stand in the day of Temptation Psal 119.8 2. By leaving a man to his own lusts by which as by a violent Torrent he is carried quite away Rom. 1.24 3. By delivering over unto Satan for the punishment of former notorious Sins to be hardned as in Pharaoh and Saul The Reasons for which the godly may be led into temptation 1. To keep them under that they be not proud of Gods Grace 2 Cor. 12.7 2. To winnow the chaff of Sin from Gods Corn Luke 22.31 3. That Gods power may appear in mans weakness 2 Cor. 12.9 4. That his mercy may be seen in keeping them from a final fall Luke 22.32 5. That they may be like Christ their Head Rom. 8.17 6. That they may acknowledge that all strength is from God 2 Cor. 3.5 7. That by this they may know themselves to be Gods children who alone are so tempted that they recover in Temptation Psal 37.24 How many ways God is said to tempt man 1. By afflictions as he did the Israelites Deut. 9.3 2. By Commandment as he did Abraham Gen. 22.1 3. By prosperity as he did David 2 Sam. 12. 4. By offering objects as he did Eve Gen. 3. The Graces to be desired of God which are helpful against Temptation viz. 1. Spiritual heed and watchfulness to prevent Temptations and to avoid the occasions thereof 2. Grace to pray in the time of Temptation that God would lessen and moderate the violence and force thereof 3. That in Temptation God would be so far from withdrawing his Grace from us that he would then adde Grace to Grace even new Grace unto the former 4. That in continuance of Temptation when it abideth long upon us God would strengthen us to hold out 5. That he would give us patience to bear the irksomness the trouble of it 6. That in the end of it God would give a comfortable issue for his glory and our own good The Christian Armor against Temptation 1. Truth or verity whereby a man professeth true Religion and endeavoreth himself in the practice of all the duties of Religion in sincerity his speeches and his actions are suitable proceeding from an honest heart that truly meaneth whatsoever the tongue uttereth or himself practiseth 2. Justice or Righteousness when a man leads his life unblameably and uprightly 3. The preparation of the Gospel of Peace that is when we finde our affections so cleave unto Christ that by way of thankfulness for the glad tidings of Salvation by Christ revealed in the Gospel which promiseth pardon of Sin and life everlasting by Christ we can deny our selves take up our Cross and follow him 4. The shield of Faith by which a man lays hold on the Mercy of God in Christ for his salvation and under it shrowds himself against the fiery darts of Satan 5. Hope by which we wait for that salvation which we apprehend by Faith Remedies against Temptation to Covetousness 1. We must meditate That God hath taken upon him to be our careful Protector Psal 23.1 2. That this Sin is the root of all Evil and that every covetous man is an Idolater Col. 3.5 3. That our life stands not in abundance Luke 12.16 and that Christ and his Disciples were poor Mat. 8.2 4. That we shall carry nothing with us Job 1.21 and that we must give account of our getting Luke 16.2 5. That it will hinder us in the service of God Luke 14.18 19. and make us unwilling to dye Eccles. 41.1 6. That our riches may suddenly be taken away from us Prov. 23.5 or we from them 7. That rich men come hardly to heaven Luke 18.24 and many woes denounced against them Amos 6.1 Remedies against Temptations to Pride 1. We must meditate That we must not be proud because we have all things of gift 1 Cor. 4.7 2. That God resisteth the proud 1 Pet. 5.5 and that we are but dust and ashes Gen. 18.27 3. That pride hindreth a greater largess of Grace Luke 18.24 and that it cast Angels out of Heaven into Hell 2 Pet. 2.4 4. That if it be in Apparel I have more need to be humbled for my shameful nakedness Gen. 2.25 5. That Christ left me an example of humility Mat. 11.29 but pride argues me a Son of the Devil for it is Signum Reproborum Hieron 6. That pride is the causer of contentions Prov. 13.10 and that by it we make others to contemn us Esth 3.2 Remedies against Temptations to Adultery 1. We must meditate That God sees us Prov. 5.21 and will punish us Gen. 20.3 2. That we are members of Christ 1 Cor. 6.15 and our bodies the Temples of the Holy Ghost 3. That Adulterers shall not inherit heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 they seldom repent Prov. 7.26 27. 4. That for the whorish woman a man is brought to a morsel of bread Prov. 6.26 5. That we wrong the Church and Commonwealth by obtruding on both a bastardly generation for neither without evidence know their true children 6. That as thereby we endanger our souls so we decay our bodies and when we are dead our memory is more rotten above ground then our carcases under it leaving behinde an inexpungeable blot Prov. 6.32 33. Remedies against Temptations to Gluttony and Drunkenness 1. We must meditate That Solomon commands us at great Tables to put our knives to our throats Prov. 23.1 That we thereby abuse our own bodies Luke 21.34 The good creatures of God Eph. 5.18 and that which might do good to the poor Mat. 14.4 5. 2. That by them we are made unfit for Gods service 1 Cor. 10.7 and that these sins
are the main instruments of other sins Prov. 23.33 3. That all civil Nations have detested these sins that we are unfit to keep any secret and become a scorn to the sober Gen. 9.22 4. That since Christ tasted gall and vinegar for us why should not we abstain from surfetting and drunkenness for him Remedies against Temptations to Despair of Gods mercy viz. 1. We must meditate That we were by Baptism received into the Church and it hath been to us the laver of Regeneration Tit. 3.5 2. That we once heard and believed the word and therefore we shall stand ever by this faith 2 Cor. 1.24 3. That our Election is in Gods keeping and therefore Satan can never steal it away Eph. 1.4 for that the calling of God is without Repentance and whom he loveth he loveth to the end Rom. 11.29 Joh. 13.1 4. That we know by our love of the brethren that we are translated from death to life 1 Joh. 3.14 That we desire to believe in Christ and to run the ways of his Commandments Mark 9.24 5. That we hate sin with an unfeigned hatred 1 Joh. 3.9 and that we are sorry that we can be no more sorry for our sins which to us is an argument of faith 2 Cor. 7.10 6. That Christs Merits are far greater then our sins and he is the propitiation for our sins Joh. 1.29 7. That though the righteous fall yet he shall rise again for God supporteth him with his hand Psal 37.24 8. That the Spirit doth though very weakly witness to my Spirit that I am the childe of God Rom. 8.16 Remedies against Temptations to presume of Gods mercy 1. We must meditate That God bids us not be high-minded Rom. 11.20 and that Security destroyeth more then any Sin Luke 17.26 2. That he is blessed who feareth always Prov. 28.14 and that we must work out our Salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2.12 3. That as God is a God of Mercy so is he also a God of Justice Deut. 9.20 4. That the more I presume the more subject I am to fall Luke 22.33 34. and Satans main weapon to vanquish me is this That God is merciful Rom. 6.15 5. That the longer we continue in sins the more hardly may we leave them 2 Sam. 3.16 6. That even David prayed to be kept from Sins of presumption Psal 19.13 In praying that God will deliver us from evil we desire 1. That he would send no evil on us but deliver us from all evils present and to come both of crime and pain 2. That if he send on us any evils that he would mitigate them in this life and turn them to our salvation that they may be good and profitable unto us 3. That he will at length in the life to come fully and perfectly deliver us and wipe away every tear from our eyes By Evil is not meant Satan onely for it comprehendeth all our Spiritual Enemies and that for these Reasons 1. The Title Evil is not onely given to Satan but to Sin also Rom. 12.9 and to the World 1 Joh. 5.19 and to the Flesh that is the corruption of our Nature for that is the evil treasure of the heart Mat. 12.35 2. That advantage which the Devil hath against us is by the World the Flesh and Sin as his Agents and Instruments in Temptation against us and therefore with that evil one the Devil Sin the World and the Flesh must be understood That which we pray for we must endeavor to practice and therefore our special care must be 1. To resist the Devil and to keep our selves from the assaults of Satan unto Sin 2. To beware of all Satanical practices by using Charms seeking to Witches or the like as means of help in any distress This is gross hypocrisie to pray against the evils of Satan and to give our selves to the practice of them 3. Not voluntarily to thrust our selves into such a place as is haunted by the Devil nor to meddle with it or him without a warrant and calling from God to whom we must betake our selves by humble and earnest prayer 4. We must avoid the company of evil persons Prov. 1.10 Gen. 39.10 5. Not live in places where evil is practised though we might gain much by it 2 Cor. 6.17 6. We must take heed of evil speeches which may corrupt our selves and others Eph. 4.29 7. We must hide Gods word in our heart that we do not sin against him Psal 119.11 In these words of this Petition we pray against Satans slights policies which he exerciseth against all men but especially against Gods children for their ruine destruction They are many but these six are most dangerous policies of Satan which we are as well to watch as pray against 1. When men have many good things in them as knowledge in the mystery of Salvation beside Moral vertues then the Devil labors that concupiscence may still raign in their hearts by their living in some sin or other whereto they are naturally enclined 2. When Satan cannot procure some strong Corruption to raign in the childe of God then he labors to get him to commit some offence or sin whereby the Name of God may be dishonored his Profession disgraced his Conscience wounded and Gods children offended 3. When the childe of God is faln into any sin then the Devil labors to to cast him asleep therein that he may lye in it without remorse and so never repent 4. When the Lord vouchsafeth to men the means of Salvation then Satan labors to make the same void and of no effect that so they may not onely miss of Salvation but be condemned the more deeply for the neglect and contempt of the means 5. When he cannot work his will inwardly in their souls as he desires then he essays to do them mischief by some outward Satanical operations Thus he plagued Job 6. Satan labors to bring Gods children to some fearful and miserable end not so much for the bodily death as in regard of the inward horror and terror of Conscience for the extremity of his power and malice at a mans last gasp he hopes will be most powerful and if he be not restrained he will endeavor to make him dye in presumption or despair How many ways God is said to deliver us from evil viz. 1. By preserving us from committing sin Gen. 20.6 and by freeing us from Judgements due unto sin 2 Sam. 12.13 2. By keeping us from the hurt of sin and afflictions Psal 91.13 and by turning all those sins which we commit and the afflictions which we sustain to our good Psal 51.1 119.67 71. 3. By bridling Satan that he cannot subdue us Rom. 16.20 4. By giving us his holy Spirit that by a lively faith we overcome all evil Rom. 8.2 5. By no means Mat. 4.2 by small means 2 Kings 4.3 by ordinary means Josh 5.12 by extraordinary means 2 Kings 6.16 contrary to all means Dan. 3.25 6. By
Christ Jesus who overcame the World by obeying the Flesh by suffering and the Devil by triumphing over him in his Cross Joh. 16.33 1 Pet. 4.1 Col. 2.15 The wants we bewail in this Petition viz. 1. The Rebellion of our wicked Nature by which we resist the Spirit of God Rom. 7.14 c. 2. Our readiness in each little Temptation to yield up our selves to the committing of sin Luke 22.45 46. 3. That we cannot enough mourn for the remnants of our bondage whereby we are kept in the power of Satan 4. That so many fall by Satans Temptations Psal 119.136 5. That we cannot here get mastery over our own Corruptions 2 Cor. 12.8 6. That we love so this Spiritual Sodom in which we are subject to and fall by Temptation Gen. 19.16 7. The Tyranny of Satan our Adversary going about each way to subdue us Mat. 9.12 This Petition being negative the Deprecation thereof is first to be considered which is 1. Against Temptation as it may be a means to draw men from God to sin 2 Cor. 12.7 8. 2. Against Afflictions as they are punishments of sin Curses from God motives to impatience or means to make us take Gods Name in vain Prov. 30.9 Against grievous afflictions long continuing to make us despair of Gods Mercy or hearing our prayers 3. Against Spiritual desertion or forsaking of Gods Spirit which if gone all power to stand and all Spiritual comfort is gone also for it is in us the new life the Spirit of the soul 4. Against Solicitations to sin either by the Devil the World or the Flesh 5. Against Sin even when we are most solicited and tempted because we shall meet with temptations yet that we may not be overcome and made slaves unto Sin 6. Against future relapse into Sin blindeness of minde hardness of heart through custom in sinning or through some notorious sins committed 7. Against backsliding from the Truth either in part or in whole all sorts of Judgements temporal or eternal and what hurt soever may befal either by prosperity or adversity 8. Against sudden death that we may not be prevented of Repentance for renewed trespasses and eternal death the greatest evil of punishment The Supplication of this Petition is for such things as are best for us preserving us from Sin damnation as 1. The Spirit of Grace which is threefold 1 Light of understanding of the holy Scriptures whereby we are able to use them 2. Stedfastness of faith whereby as by a shield the fiery darts of the Devil are repressed which also is of vertue to purifie the heart 3. Patience in bearing any cross or affliction whereby we are tempted at any time that in stead of sin the issue thereof may be hope Rom. 5.3 2. The helping hand of the Lord to turn evil into good unto us and this he doth 1. By Humiliation and casting us down under and for these things as Nebuchadnezzar the proudest and Saul the bloodiest Persecutor 2. By alienating and estranging our affections from the world and worldly things by affliction 3. By framing us by the Cross to a more careful obedience for the time to come Psal 119.71 4. By prevention the Lord punishing us in this world that we may escape in the world to come 1 Cor. 11.32 3. Everlasting life that God for his mercies sake in and through the meritorious satisfaction of our Savior Jesus Christ would bestow this infinite good upon us The Thanksgiving of this Petition is For that in the former things which we pray for God hath so enabled us to resist as that neither the corruption of Nature enticements of the World the policies of Satan nor present Affliction hath so subdued us but that we are able to rise again as also for good arising to us by Temptations and deliverance from the punishments by our sins deserved Since first the proud aspiring Angels fell There was no want of Policy in Hell The Devil knows by Observation The pulse of each mans Inclination The tide of all our Actions yea he knows How low our Graces ebbe how high Sin flows How the least spark of any Lusts desire Kindles the Heart and sets the Will on fire Help Lord let not the World the Flesh or Devil Prevail but still Deliver us from evil §. 11. For thine is the Kingdom the Power and the Glory for ever Amen THis Conclusion is added as a Reason of all the Petitions to strengthen our Faith that God being both able and willing doth grant all our Requests made unto him in the Name of Christ and therefore in the end we post-adde a note of Confidence and say Amen which is originally an Hebrew word yet used in all Languages It signifieth Truth or Faith the uttering of it after a Prayer implieth an Assent unto the Prayer together with carnestness of desire and Faith for the obtaining that which is prayed for Thus the people were commanded to say Amen Deut. 27.15 c. and accordingly was it practised Neh. 8.6 For thine is the kingdom that is both general over the World and special over thy Church and Chosen both thy Kingdom of Providence and of Grace And in this faith do we pray unto thee submitting our selves as thy Liege-people The Power that is The Almighty power whereby thou art able to do all things whatsoever thy people ask and beg of thee there is nothing out of thy power but we are without all power and might in our selves to help our selves therefore our eyes of Faith wait upon thy power And the Glory that is Thou shalt make thy glory shine more and more in being beneficial unto us thy Faith and Religion shall be the more esteemed and reverenced the end of all that thou dost for us shall be thine eternal praise thine is the excellency and majesty which Property rightly and onely belongs to thee thou alone having an absolute Soveraignty over all things and Power answerable to dispose and govern them at thy pleasure yea we give thee all glory in confidence of thy goodness and say Amen in token that we verily believe it shall be so with us as we crave and do with all fervency beg O Lord let it be so do thou subscribe to our desires and say So be it These words are a Reason of the former touching which we must observe two things in general 1. That they are not a Reason to move God whose will is unchangeable but to perswade the childe of God who prayeth thus that God will grant his requests 2. That this Reason is not peculiar to the last Petition but general belonging to them all The Reasons for the propping of our faith and assurance in our prayers contained in this conclusion are taken 1. From the Kingdom of God a good King delights in the welfare of his Subjects how much more doth the King of kings who is Goodness it self in the happiness of his He will hear defend and preserve his Subjects 2. From the Power
Holy Ghost 2. That we believe the Office of the Holy Ghost 3. That by our sins we grieve him not Concerning the Holy Ghost we believe 1. That he is true and coeternal God with the Eternal Father and the Son Gen. 1.2 1 Cor. 3.16 2. That he is also given unto us Mat. 28.19 to make us through a true faith partakers of Christ and all his benefits Gal. 3.14 To comfort us Acts 9.13 and to abide with us for ever Joh. 14.16 That the Holy Ghost is a person of the Godhead is proved by these Reasons 1. By his visible Apparitions Luke 3.22 2. Because he is called God 1 Cor. 3.16 Acts 5.3 4. 3. Because he is the Author of our Baptism and we are Baptized in his Name 4. The Properties of a person are all attributed unto him Luke 12.12 Joh. 16.13 5. Because he is plainly distinguished from the gifts and graces of God 1 Cor. 12.4 11. The Holy Ghost is a person distinct from the Father and the Son for these Reasons 1. He is called a Spirit and none is his own Spirit his own Father his own Son 2. The Holy Ghost in express words is called Another from them both Joh. 14.16 3. He is sent of the Father and the Son Joh. 15.26 therefore another from them both 4. The Holy Ghost hath distinct Attributes or Properties personally from them both That the Holy Ghost is equal with the Father and the Son is thus plainly manifested 1. The Essence of the Father the Son is communicated unto him 2. It appears by those Divine Attributes and Properties which are attributed unto him 3. The same Divine Works that are attributed to the Father and the Son are also attributed unto him Job 33.4 4. Equal and the same honor is given to the Holy Ghost as to the Father and the Son 1 Joh. 5.7 5. Those things which are spoken in the Old Testament of God or Jehovah are applied to the Holy Ghost in the New 6. The Holy Ghost is the Father and the Sons Spirit and there is but one God Why this third person of the Godhead is called Holy 1. Because he in himself by himself and of his own nature is holy 2. Because he is the immediate Sanctifier of others For what reasons this third person of the Godhead is called a Spirit 1. Because he is a Spiritual Essence or Substance Incorporeal and Invisible 2. Because he is inspired of the Father and the Son they move by this Spirit 3. Because himself inspireth and immediately worketh motions in the hearts of the Elect. 4. Because he is God equal with the Father and the Son and the same God and God is a Spirit The several Titles of Commendation given to the Holy Ghost in Scripture viz. 1. The Spirit of Adoption because he assureth us of the Fatherly good-will of God in Christ towards us 2. The Earnest and Seal of our Inheritance because he assureth us of our Salvation 2 Cor. 1.21 3. The Spirit of life because he mortifietli the old man and quickneth the new Rom. 8.2 4. Water whereby he cleanseth us refresheth us nigh dead in sin and maketh us fruitful to good works 5. Fire because he consumeth daily our concupiscence in us and kindleth in our hearts the love of God and our Neighbor 6. The Fountain because all celestial Riches do flow unto us from him 7. The Spirit of Prayer because he is the souls voyce in the chosen 8. The oyl of gladness because he cheareth and refresheth us in all our troubles 9. The Comforter because by working faith in us he causeth us to exult in afflictions 10. Intercessor because he maketh requests for us with sighs and groans that cannot be expressed Rom. 8.26 11. He is called The Spirit of Truth of Wisdom of Joy of the fear of God of Boldness and the like Joh. 14.16 Now some of the ungodly may have the Holy Ghost as concerning some gifts of the Holy Ghost as Saul and Judas had but they have not the Spirit of Adoption for the same Spirit doth not work the same things in all for he worketh Adoption and Conversion in the Elect onely The operations of the Holy Ghost are twofold 1. External common to all men for he illuminates every one that cometh into the world 2. Internal special and proper to the godly not onely illuminating their mindes but proceeding to their hearts moving the affections and becomes unto the whole man 1. A Spirit of Sanctification 2. A Spirit of Intercession 3. A Spirit of Consolation The Office and Operations peculiarly attributed to the Holy Ghost in Scripture viz. 1. To teach and illuminate Joh. 14.26 16.13 To enlighten mens mindes with the knowledge of the Gospel and to reveal unto them the good will of God and way to happiness whence he is called The Spirit of Revelation Eph. 1.17 2. To perswade their hearts of the truth of those things which he hath revealed to their understandings by the vertue whereof they taste of the good word of God Heb. 6.5 3. To Regenerate that is to work Faith and Repentance in the hearts of the chosen Joh. 3.5 4. To conjoyn us with God and Christ and to make us partakers of all his benefits 1 Cor. 6.11 5. To Rule and guide that is to instruct and encline us to all duties due to God and Man 6. To Comfort Joh. 14.16 in all perplexities and miseries whatsoever 7. To Confirm to make courageous and bold in and for the maintenance of the Truth being moved to acknowledge and profess the Gospel to be the Word of God Many other are the Works of the Spirit but that Unpardonable Sin against the Holy Ghost is committed against him in regard of these Operations of the Spirit so as it is against the Truth of God which the Spirit hath revealed to a man and evicted and perswaded his heart of the certainty thereof How the Holy Ghost is 1. Given 1. After an ordinary way by the Ministery of the Word and the use of the Sacraments 2. In manifesting himself unto us through the studying and meditation of the Gospel 3. He is given by working a desire of him in the Elect for he is given to them that desire him Luke 11.13 and is received by faith 2. Retained 1. By meditation in the Doctrine of the Gospel and by studying to prove it thereby Psal 1.2 2. By continuance and increase of Repentence and amendment of life that is by a desire of bewaring to offend against our knowledge or Conscience Matth. 13.12 3. By daily and earnest prayer and invocation Luke 11.13 4. By applying Gods gifts to their right use that is to his glory and our Neighbors good Luke 22.32 3. Ecclipsed in its present comforts 1. By neglecting the Word and Doctrine and by neglect of Prayer 2. By carnal Security and by giving our selves to commit sin against our Conscience 3. By abusing the gifts of the Holy Ghost as when they are not imployed
any man in thought conceived it 1 Cor. 2.9 and which life we begin to live the soul entreth into it at the time of every faithful ones bodily death and the body also at the time of the general Resurrection for there is no sleeping of the soul as some dream neither any other place to keep it in nor ever was To believe everlasting life is to be assuredly and certainly perswaded 1. That after this life there shall be also a life wherein the Church shall be glorified and God magnified of her everlastingly 2. That I also am a Member of this Church and therefore partaker of everlasting life 3. That I also in this life have and enjoy the beginning of life eternal Life is three-fold 1. Of Nature wherein the good and bad promiscuously live together 2. Of Grace wherein onely the Sons of God in the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ live in this life it is the same with that death whereby they dye to sin 3. Of Glory in the blessed presence of God for ever Contrary to that death wherewith the bodies and souls of the wicked shall be tormented eternally That is Everlasting 1. Which hath neither beginning nor ending So God is everlasting 2. Which hath no beginning but hath an ending So the Decrees of God 3. Which hath a beginning but shall have no end as everlasting life Three degrees of eternal life 1. In this world when we begin to repent and believe in Christ and have true peace of Conscience 2. In death for that cuts off all sins both Original and Actual 3. When body and soul reunited go both together into everlasting Glory We may claim to our selves everlasting life by a double Right through Christ viz. 1. Because for us he hath fulfilled the whole Law 2. By Right of Inheritance for Christ being made ours we are the children of God Rom. 8.17 How far we are in this life made partakers of heaven and everlasting life 1. The purchase of it is made for Christ by his Blood hath purchased it 2. We have received the first-fruits of it as Peace of Conscience Joy in the Holy Ghost free access unto the Throne of Grace with confidence in Christ and the like 3. We are actually entred into the Kingdom of Grace which is the beginning and a part of the Kingdom of Glory 4. We have the earnest of the Spirit as a Pledge and Pawn till we come to the full possession of the purchased Inheritance 5. Christ our Head hath full and actual possession whereupon we being Members of his body are in him exalted and set in heavenly places In this life not onely we may but we ought also to be assured of everlasting life otherwise we shall never have it And we may thus by these infallible signs be assured of it viz. 1. By Faith by a full perswasion of the good will of God towards us 2. By the beginning of true Repentance 3. By the Peace of Conscience by a desire of and joy in God Eternal life is called a Rest and that for these two Reasons 1. Because then and there we shall Rest from all our works that is from our sins for then we shall sin no more but shall know God even as we are known 2. We shall Rest from all troubles and miseries of this life Rev. 14.13 hence it is called Abrahams bosom Luke 16.22 23. which in the faithful is even in this life begun by the outward Ministery of the Word and the inward Ministery of the Spirit the consummation whereof hereafter shall never be given to whom the beginning thereof that is Faith and Conversion hath not arrived in this life The life of Life Everlasting is the Beatifical Vision or the perfect Vision of God when Gods Elect shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 Yet that we be not deceived herein we must know that perfect sight is twofold viz. 1. Simple Perfect Sight when man sees a thing wholly as it is in it self and thus God is not seen by the minde of man 2. Comprehensive Perfect Sight when the creature seeth God so far forth as it is capable of his knowledge and thus shall men see God in the world to come perfectly and be filled therewith though they know him not wholly as he is in himself even as a vessel cast into the Sea may be perfectly full of water though it receive not all the water in the Sea The duties of this faith are these 1. Carefully to break off those sins the doers of which are expresly threatned that they shall never enter into the Kingdom of Heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Gal. 5.19 2. To strive to enter and to walk on in the way that leadeth to everlasting life and never to go out of it to our dying day and this is the way of good works Joh. 5.29 3. To use the remembrance of eternal life as a salve against all sores as a Cordial to comfort our hearts against our greatest heaviness 4. To pray that this time might be hastned wherein we shall enter into life and even to rejoyce when we see it approach to any of us in particular Amen signifying verily certainly or undoubtedly is added for these Reasons 1. To shew that we do not in word onely believe those things whereof we have made confession but from our very hearts 2. Not waveringly but certainly and without doubting 3. Not as if we were secure for our firm and stedfast belief of these things but earnestly craving this Faith at the hands of God and thus it is as much as So be it Amen in the close of our Prayers as well as of this Confession doth not onely express our desire of the things we ask but also testifies our Faith in assurance of Receiving them according to our lawful desire So that it is not here to be taken as it is commonly onely for a bare assent of the people answering the Minister in the Congregation but as a declaration of Faith both in Minister and People Here words are of no use expressions vain The humblest fancy a presumptuous strain Bright Cherubins a Quill from off your Wings Might reach this Note which should the low-tun'd strings Of Mortal Tongues endeavor to express Would if 't were possible but strain it less And though the blessed Musick of your Quire We cannot understand we may admire Mean-while our Faith shall rest in Hope in this That know we shall when we enjoy your Bliss CHAP. V. §. 1. The Decalogue THe Commandments were given about Two thousand five hundred years after the Creation not that men were left all this time without Law for there was a Law written in their hearts Rom. 2.14 but to make that more plain which by the corruption of Nature was become very dim and much defaced so that as long as men have been there hath also been a Law although not expressed in words yet written in the heart wherefore if it be well observed we shall finde
4. That he is Just To leave my wicked ways and to restrain my self from sin 5. That he is merciful To turn unto him by Repentance 6. That he is Omnipresent To carry my self as in his Presence 7. That he is Omniscient To keep my heart upright before him continually 8. That he is Infinite To stand in awe reverence and fear of him The Vices repugnant unto the knowledge of God viz. 1. Atheism which is the Acknowledgement of no God 2. Ignorance or not knowing the true God and his Will 3. Errors conceived or false Imaginations and Opinions of him 4. Prophaneness which is a Regardlesness of God and of his special Service 5. Magick Sorcery or Witchcraft in such as desire the help of it as well as in those who use it 6. Superstition Soothsaying Observation of Dreams Divinations Signs and Predictions or Foretellingof Wizards 7. All trust or confidence reposed in the Creature 8. Idolatry whether Inward when another is worshipped then that one true God or when the Worship of God is given unto Creatures by Praying unto them Trusting in them or Setting the heart upon them which kinde doth properly belong unto this First Commandment or Outward when though the true God is worshipped yet after another maner then God himself hath prescribed 9. The contempt of God which is to know those things of God which are true but not to be moved thereby to love him Were all the Wisdom of the East in one Compris'd Couldst thou discourse with Solomon From th'Isop to the Cedar or of ought In Heav'n Earth Hell Couldst thou foresee a Thought And so prevent it or by strength of Brain When 't is thought Argument it back again Hadst thou all Arts and Sciences refin'd Couldst joyn East to West or divide the Winde Wer 't thou for Wisdom the Worlds Nource or School And knew'st not God thou wer 't a damned Fool. §. 2. Of Faith or Trust in God THe second Duty required in this Commandment is To Trust in the onely true God and in him alone to put all trust and confidence Psal 20.8 This is Faith by which whosoever is united unto Christ the same is Elected Called Justified Sanctified and shall be Glorified Joh. 3.36 5.24 By this Faith is not meant an Historical Faith as to know and think all those things to be true which are manifested from above either by Voyce or by Visions or by any other maner of Revelation and are taught in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles and thus to be perswaded of them for the asseveration and Testimony of God himself firmly assenting to the truth of those things contained in the Scripture for the Authority of God that spoke them which Faith is good in it self but made ill yea sin by them that cannot apply it Thus Simon Magus is said to have believed Acts 13. By this Faith is not meant a Temporary Faith as to assent unto the heavenly Doctrine which is delivered by the Prophets and Apostles to profess it and to rejoyce in the knowledge thereof and to glory therein for a time yet not for any feeling of Gods grace towards them but for other causes whatsoever and therefore without any true Conversion and final perseverance in the Profession of that Doctrine for this kinde of Faith is led as in a string with the commodities of this world and with them doth live and dye By this Faith is not meant the Faith of working Miracles which is a special gift of working Miracles that is a certain perswasion springing from an especial Revelation and Promise of God whereby a man firmly resolveth That some extraordinary or miraculous Work and contrary to Nature shall come to pass by Gods Power which he hath foretold and would have to be done in the Name of God and Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 13.2 which Faith so flourishing in the Primitive Church ceaseth in those days for that the Doctrine is now sufficiently confirmed so sufficiently indeed as he that will not now believe without a Miracle may stand for a Wonder himself But by this Faith is meant Justifying Faith wrought in the hearts of the Elect by the operation of Gods Spirit grounded on Gods Promises whereby we do undoubtedly believe that God hath freely forgiven us all our sins applying Christ Jesus in particular to be our Savior and Redeemer From this Faith Gods people can never finally and totally fall away howsoever it may be sometimes shaken obscured and eclipsed so as it may not so manifestly appear at one time as at another and this Faith is incident onely to the Elect Acts 13.48 For it is a principal Grace of God whereby man is ingrafted unto Christ and thereby become one with Christ and Christ one with him Eph. 3.17 By this Faith in Christ we are partakers of the Merit of the Death and Resurrection of Christ so as it is Satisfaction for us and Forgiveness of all our sins a special grace or habit infused into the Soul by the Holy Ghost whereby we are enabled to believe not onely that the Messias is offered unto us but also to take and receive him as a Lord and Savior Thus Justifying Faith cometh not neither proceedeth or ariseth out of the instinct of Nature neither out of sense or experience neither out of Demonstrations or Reasons borrowed from Philosophy but it cometh and dependeth of a peculiar and supernatural Revelation or Divine Testimony it proceedeth from the Holy Ghost who kindleth it in our hearts by the Preaching of the Gospel Eph. 2.8 and confirmeth it by the use of the Sacraments Mat. 28.19 20. Now we are not said to be made Righteous through Faith onely or that we please God through the worthiness of meer Faith but because onely the Satisfaction Righteousness and Holiness of Christ is our Righteousness before God 1 Cor. 1.30 and we cannot take hold of it or apply it to our selves any other way then by Faith 1 Joh. 5.10 Yet Faith without Righteousness is Presumption as Righteousness without Truth is Hypocrisie And thus Faith is as it were an Addition of a New Light to Reason without which Reason is purblinde and begins to breed in the heart when the party begins to be touched in Conscience for his sins and hungers withal and thirsts after Christ and his Righteousness the first act of the understanding being to assent to the Truth contained in the Promises wherein Christ is offered and then the act of the Will to consent unto them that is to embrace them But before a man will be willing to take Christ the heart must be changed by God for none will take Christ upon Christs conditions till they be throughly humbled and have their hearts broken that know what the wrath of God is and have their Consciences awakened to see sin till they have been stung with a sense of their sins till they be heavy and have felt the weight of Satans yoke till then they will not come under the yoke
yet be a sound true and saving Faith it is not the difference of degrees and measure that takes away the nature of it For Faith in regard of the extent of it admits degrees not because the Habit is encreased but because the Revelations and Objects are more and therefore those poor Christians that are yet ignorant may have a true habit and as true a Grace in the heart And though a man be more conversant in the Scripture knows more then they hath more Revelations and in that sense though he hath a greater Faith then the other yet the other hath a like precious Faith with him in regard of that Grace Nor do Infirmities break the Covenant betwixt God and those that have once taken Christ and have true Faith though in the least degree Now in Taking Christ the stronger the Will is by how much stronger Assent the Minde and Understanding gives to those Truths which concern Justification delivered in the Scripture And we must labor to believe hard things like Abraham or easie things propounded with slender Arguments like Nathaniel for if we believe in difficult cases God will make us with facility to believe them another time We must labor for the extent of Faith for the multitude of Revelations to be filled full of Faith as Barnabas is said to be and this is by studying the Word much for therein will God reveal this This Faith is the Mother of all Sanctifying Graces for by it we are ingrafted into Christ and so live the life of Faith the life of God the fruits of Faith are almost infinite for all the several and distinct branches of Piety and Charity if they be rightly performed are fruits of Faith And where there is a true Faith there is a secret perswasion wrought in the heart whereby God assures us that he is ours and we are his for we may know and be assured that Christ dyed for us and Redeemed us in particular if we can finde in our selves that we have true Faith in Christ and true Repentance for all sins And we may be assured of our Vocation if through the Mystery of the Word seconded and made powerful by Gods Spirit we are quite altered and changed from our former evil lives and have attained unto Faith and Repentance And we may be further assured That we are Redeemed and are the children of God if we finde that we have the Spirit of God dwelling in us which if we want we are none of Gods which if we have it will appear by the fruits of the Spirit in us for as Exercise begets Health and we are made fit by Health for Exercise or as Acts beget Habits and Habits are means to exercise those Acts so Assurance grounded upon the Promise enableth enlargeth and encreaseth Sanctification and Sanctification encreaseth Assurance but first see Faith and then the other as fruits of it Now Faith is wrought in us thus The Spirit comes and shews Christ to us and not onely the profit we have by him but the beauty and excellency of him it shews us what Grace is and makes us love it and then shews us Mercy Out of this we come to long after Christ and to say I would I had him Now to this work he addes a second Christ comes and tells a man I will have thee he comes and shews himself discovers himself and speaks plainly to him I am willing to marry thee Now the longing Soul hearing those glad tidings embraces the motion and the work is done We may know whether this Faith be wrought in us by reflecting upon our own hearts and considering what actions have passed through it for the works of Faith are manifest And we must use Faith in comforting our selves for whatsoever Christ hath by Nature we have it by Grace when we have Faith if he be a Son we are Sons if he be an Heir we are Heirs c. yea Faith makes a man regardless of all earthly things Those that have Faith are able to use it of themselves but many have it that do not use it and though God doth work in us all the work of Faith as it is received yet know He doth not work in us onely but by us he makes us Instruments yea we shall be called to an account for the Talent of Faith if we have it and use it not and if we use it not we shall have little enough o● it for the using of it is that which strengthneth Faith and makes it effectual Now that we are saved by Faith appears from these places of Scripture Joh. 3.16 Rom. 1.16 3.28 Eph. 2.8 Mark 16.16 Rev. 21.8 2 Thess 2.11 12. Gal. 3.7 9. Luke 7.50 Yet know That a man is not saved by Faith simply as it is Faith for it doth not in its own nature merit Salvation but it is said to save us in respect of its Object which is Christ not as it is a gift quality or property but as it is an Instrument to apprehend and apply this Object so that we are saved by Faith as an Instrument not for Faith as a Cause So Faith alone is said to justifie us but that Faith which is alone without other Graces doth not justifie us neither were ever any justified by Faith without Works For Faith is not onely a Perswasion that our sins are forgiven but also a thorough Repenting that our sins may be forgiven not onely a Perswasion that the Promises are true but a Holiness of living that we may have a share in those Promises not onely a Perswasion that the Scripture is true but an Obedience to Gods Will revealed therein not onely a Perswasion that Christ dyed for my sins but also such an uprightness of walking as that I crucifie him not again by my Lusts for Faith doth not onely work a good meaning in us but it doth work power in us to do good and to mortifie our affections for where Christ dwells indeed he gives power against sin and that by his Spirit and where the Understanding is fully convinced the Will and Affections follow Faith and the Desire of satisfying Lusts cannot stand together and he that trusts not God for Earthly things cannot trust him for matters of Salvation for if we have Faith in the main we will have it in particular cases We are said to Believe three maner of ways viz. 1. We believe one God that is we believe that there is a God 2. We believe God that is that God is true touching his Promises These two ways Infidels yea the Devils believe and tremble 3. We believe in God that is according to those Promises to put our whole trust and hope in God In the Doctrine of the Church mention is made of four sorts of Faith 1. Historical when men believe the Bibles History This saves not James 2.19 2. Temporary when men believe onely for a time neither doth this save 3. Miraculous proceeding from special Revelation which is now out of use
and so was it with Pauls Viper Faiths double Act 1. The Direct Act of Faith by which we apprehend and take Christ 2. The Reflect Act by which we know and are assured that we have apprehended and taken Christ Faith hath also this double Quality 1. To lay hold of Christ offered 2. To empty a man of all things else whatsoever especially 1. Of all opinion of Righteousness in himself 2. Of all opinion of strength and ability to help himself Faith admits Degrees in four respects viz. 1. In Perswasion That Christ is offered that he is ours that he is given by God the Father 2. In regard of the difficulty and hardness of the things to be believed 3. In regard of the Extent of it when there are more things revealed to us 4. In regard of the Proof and here as the Evidence of Sanctification is more so is the Assurance Opinion is but an Assent to the Truth with a fear lest the contrary may be true So that Faith and Opinion differ in these three things 1. In the Object which is something in its own nature uncertain but Faith pitcheth upon the Word of God which is in its own nature infallible and cannot deceive 2. In the working Opinion being a matter of Speculation and no more Faith a matter of Practice but that is not all 3. In overcoming Doubts for Opinion goeth no farther but stays in a Doubt but Faith proceeds to full Assurance To be rooted and grounded in Faith is To have the first ground right and so to proceed from one to another As thus 1. Stedfastly to believe the Scriptures in general 2. All the Promises therein contained in particular 3. To apply and appropriate them to our selves justly and upon good ground No man knoweth what Justifying Faith is but he that hath it whose true Properties are these 1. He being convicted thereof in his Conscience knoweth that whatsoever things are spoken in the Scriptures are true and Divine 2. He findeth himself bound to believe them 3. He is certain That through Christs Satisfaction he is received of God into favor and is endowed with the Holy Ghost and is by him regenerated and directed 4. He applyeth to himself all those things concluding that they belong unto him 5. He rejoyceth in the present Blessings which he hath but most of all in the certain and perfect Salvation to come And this is that peace of Conscience which passeth all Understanding 6. He hath a Will to obey the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles without any exception in doing or suffering whatsoever is therein commanded 7. He is certain that his Faith though it be in this life imperfect and languishing and often very much eclipsed yet being builded upon the Promise of God which is unchangeable doth never altogether fail or dye Faith is said to work four ways viz. Towards 1. God by a quiet and peaceable Conscience grounded on Gods love Rom. 5.1 2. Our Neighbor by mutual concord especially in matters of Religion Acts 1.14 3. Our selves by Patience with joy and thankfulness in Afflictions Rom. 5.3 4. 4. The Devil and the World by victory over their Assaults and Temptations 2 Joh. 5.4 5. 1 Pet. 5.8 9. The work of Faith towards God 1. Peace in Conscience from our Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 2. Love towards God and Christ Luke 7.47 3. Hope of the Glory of the Sons of God in the world to come and joy in troubles Rom. 5.3 4. Boldness to speak unto God grounded on a sure confidence in him Eph. 3.12 5. A Confession of the Truth 2 Cor. 4.13 Rom. 10.10 6. Obedience to God Rom. 1.5 for which Abraham is chronicled as the Father of the Faithful 7. A Perseverance and Constancy in the Truth of Christ Joh. 6.68 And a commending of our Souls to God Acts 7.59 The work of Faith towards our neighbors 1. A knitting of the mindes of men one towards another Acts 1.14 2. It extendeth Brotherly love even to our Enemies 1 Tim. 1.6 The work of Faith towards our selves viz. 1. It makes us entertain with joy and thankfulness Gods loving Chastisements Rom. 5.3 4. 2. A Resting upon his Providence and Promises for Blessings Temporal and Spiritual Mat. 6.25 3. It affects our hearts with comfort strengthning them against all troubles Joh. 14.1 4. It worketh in us a hatred of sin and of our former ways with shame and grief Joh. 12.46 A thing may be said not to be done of Faith three ways viz. 1. Conscientia Dubitante when a thing is done with a doubting or unresolved Conscience as in those that are weak in knowledge 2. Conscientia Errante thus the Mass-Priest sinneth in saying Mass though in his Conscience he think it the Ordinance of God 3. Conscientia Repugnante though upon Error and false judgement of the Conscience it is in the doer a sin Thus an Anabaptist that holds it unlawful to Swear sinneth if he take an Oath In what sense Faith is called Effectual 1. When it does its proper Office or Function namely To Take Christ 2. When it is true real and substantial when it is opposed to vain Faith 3. When it is an operative lively stirring and a fruitful Faith 4. When it goes thorough with the work in hand that is when it Sanctifieth the heart throughout in respect of parts and throughout in regard of time when it brings a man to the end of his Salvation when it carries a man through all impediments when it leaps over all difficulties a growing pervailing overcoming Faith Wherein the Effectualness of Faith consists viz. 1. In being well built that is when the preparation is sound and full by Humiliation 2. When a man believes the Promises on sure infallible grounds and sees them distinctly 3. When the Will takes Christ out of love to him not his not out of fear nor out of mistake 4. When it turns not onely the Will but all the Affections when it turns the whole man when it shoots it self into life and practice The Causes of Uneffectual Faith viz. 1. The Taking of Christ upon misinformation without due consideration 2. The Taking Christ out of fear not out of true love to him as men in sickness 3. The taking Christ for the love of the good things by him not of his person 4. Want of Humiliation that should go before it 5. Because Faith is not grounded aright when men falsly take to themselves a perswasion of the Remission of their sins upon an uncertain and wrong ground The Reasons why God accepts no Faith but such as is Effectual 1. Because otherwise it is not Faith for it is dead 2. Other Faith hath no Love which condition is required 3. Other Faith the Devils have for they believe and tremble 4. Else it works no Mortification for we must deny our selves 5. Else Christ should lose the end of his coming into the world 6. Because good Works are the way to Salvation The usual means that
Satan doth labor with to weaken shake cut down the Faith of Gods children viz. 1. By suggesting to the childe of God a consideration of the flourishing state of the wicked how imperiously and prosperously they domineer and revel it in the world whilest himself lies trampled on by their Insolencies Oppressions and Prophane Censures But this the childe of God may repulse by considering and understanding with David the end of these men how suddenly they are destroyed perish and come to a fearful end 2. He curiously observes all seasons and advantages therefore if he findes us cast down with some sad and heavy accident he presently afresh represents unto the view of our Consciences the many and great sins of our unregeneration in their foulest shape to cause new unnecessary doubtings distrusts and fears to loosen the hold of our Faith But this the childe of God must repel by reflecting on his All-sufficient Savior 3. When the heart of a godly man is sweetly refreshing it self with an Assurance of his future happiness and eternal enjoyment of endless joys in Heaven Satan labors to cast into his minde even some thoughts of impossibility of the performance of the Promises of Salvation and of the attainment of that excellent weight of glory But this the childe of God must resolutely repel by the power of Prayer knowing that God who hath promised is Omnipotent and able to perform Faithful and true and will perform 4. If Satan by the violence of some temptation be able to hale us again into some gross sin to which we were principally obnoxious before our Calling then from thence he draws and enforces upon us discomfortable and Faith-killing Conclusions and presently infers upon such relapses that we have deceived our own Souls that our Holiness is but Hypocrisie our Faith but Temporary and our Conversion but Counterfeit But this the childe of God must overcome by speedy renewed sound Repentance The two main pillars which support our Faith in the recovery of Grace 1. One without us which is the Author of Grace even God in whom the same Cause which first moved him to bestow the Graces of his Spirit on a man still remaineth to move him to renew his Spirit and that is even his own free mercy and goodness 2. The other within us that is the Seed of Grace which is not corruptible but incorruptible 1 Pet. 1.23 called The seed of God 1 Joh. 3.9 which is the holy Sanctifying Spirit of God and compared by Christ to a Springing well whence flow Rivers of water of Life Joh. 7.38 39. whereby Supply and Repair of Grace if it fail by reason of infirmities may be made renewed and recovered through Repentance How Faith and Hope differ 1. Faith embraces the present benefits of God and his Will towards us Hope embraces the effects and fruits which are to come of this present and perpetual Will of God 2. Faith is that which maketh those things to be which are hoped for and which sheweth those things which are not seen but Hope that is seen is not Hope for how can a man hope for that which he seeth Wherein Faith Hope agree viz. 1. In the Author and Worker of them both which is Gods Holy Spirit For as Faith is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 so we abound in Hope through the power of the Holy Ghost Rom. 15.13 2. In the common matter for both of them are saving and sanctifying Graces As we are saved by Faith Eph. 2.8 so also by Hope Rom. 8.24 And as by Faith the heart is purified Acts 15.9 so he that hath Hope purgeth himself 1 Joh. 3.3 3. In the Ground of them both being grounded on the Promises of God 4. In the Properties of Assurance and Patience Heb. 6.11 10.22 5. In Continuance which is onely till they have brought us to the possession of the Inheritance promised 1 Cor. 13.13 in which respect Love which continueth even in Heaven is preferred before them both 6. In many excellent Effects as A clear and quiet Conscience An utter denyal of a mans self A casting himself wholly on Gods grace A patient bearing of Crosses and perseverance unto the end The childe of God may not doubt of his Salvation for these Reasons 1. Because it favoreth the Opinion of the Papists against the Truth 2. The doubting of Salvation wracks the Conscience by a servile and slavish fear 3. Because it doth quench the motions of the Spirit and all goodness 4. It taketh away our Patience in Troubles and willingness to undergo them 5. He that doubteth hereof bewrays his ignorance of Gods Word and his unbelief A man may ought to be certain of his Salvation from these Arguments 1. From the Example of Job Job 19.95 2. From the words of Paul 2 Cor. 5.1 Rom. 8.14 3. It was Pauls own perswasion of himself Rom. 8.38 4. The Spirit is the Earnest of our Inheritance Eph. 1.14 5. He that believeth shall be saved Mark 26.16 Joh. 3.16 We may be assured that we are the children of God by these five infallible Signs 1. By the Testimony of Gods Spirit 2. By a stedfast Faith in Gods Promises 3. By a daily dying unto sin 4. By a profitable keeping of Gods VVord 5. By a careful observation of all Gods Commandments We may be assured that we have the Spirit of God dwelling in us if we finde and feel in our selves 1. A more love and desire to good things then to evil and a loathing and hatred of all sin because it is sin 2. The fruits of the Spirit as Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Goodness Gentleness Faithfulness Meekness Temperance Sobriety Chastity Holiness Uprightness and such like Two ways to encrease Assurance viz. 1. By the Promises the sure Word on which Faith is built 2. By the fruits of Sanctification in our selves Now when we finde these languishing we should go to the first and the other will be encreased by it We offend about this Assurance three ways viz. 1. By doubting of our Salvation as the Papists teach others to do 2. By Infidelity not being throughly perswaded of the goodness of God nor believing his Promises 3. By grounding our Hope upon our own unworthiness sins infirmities and so not upon God Six Considerations to help Faith in comforting the soul viz. 1. God justifies the ungodly 2. Christ is made Righteousness to us 3. The Pardon is general 4. God takes delight in shewing Mercy 5. His Mercy is Infinite 6. Christ came to pardon the greatest sins Certain Instances of Faith guiding a man in difficult cases 1. In confessing of Christ as in many of the chief Rulers Joh. 12.12 2. In praise with men as in Paul 3. In case of Profit as it should have been in Saul touching the fat Cattel and in Balaam Judas Gehazi Achan c. 4. In case of Safety and Danger as in Saul and the Philistims and in Joram Jer. 42. 43. 5. In great Fears as in Stephen
resteth secure for Salvation 2. A Spiritual Joy of heart in regard of the benefit of Faith 1 Pet. 1.8 2. A clear Conscience that is a faithful endeavor to approve our selves unto God by doing what is acceptable and avoiding what is offensive to his most excellent Majesty The ground of this clear Conscience is Love for a sense of Gods Love worketh love to God and it is always accompanied with a pure heart 1 Tim. 1.5 2 Cor. 1.12 These two things are especially Requisite as Helps to Faith 1. A faithful Remembrance of Gods Promises 2. A right Application of them For the right application of Gods Promises three things are to be observed viz. 1. The matter contained in them 1. General concerning supply of all good things and deliverance from all evil Gen. 3.15 22.18 Rom. 8.28 1 Cor. 3.22 2. Particular fit for our particular estates and needs and they concern 1. This life therin 1. Temporal things as 1. To Supply things needful 2. To Remove things hurtful 2. Spiritual things Jer. 31.33 c. Luke 11.13 2. The life to come for which heavenly and glorious things are promised Luke 23.43 1 Cor. 15.22 Phil. 3.21 Mat. 25.34 2. The kinde or quality of them viz. 1. Absolute which God hath simply and absolutely determined to accomplish even as they are propounded so all saving and sanctifying Graces being absolutely necessary to Salvation are promised to all Gods children 1 Cor. 1.5 and eternal life Joh. 10.28 2. Conditional which are no farther promised then God in his wisdom seeth to be most for his own glory and his childrens good and are no otherwise to be prayed for by us Thus conditionally are promised 1. All Temporal Blessings which Lazarus an holy man wanted Luke 16.20 2. Freedom from all Crosses and troubles what Saint hath not had his part in some of them 3. Freedom from all Temptations as our Head was tempted so have his members been from time to time 4. Less principal Graces which are called Restraining Graces These the Spirit distributeth severally 1 Cor. 12.8 Not all to every one some to one some to another 5. The measure of sanctifying Graces for though every Saint hath every saving Grace in him yet have they not all a like measure some have a greater and some a less 3. The maner of propounding them 1. Expresly declared and they are either Generally propounded to all Or Particularly applyed to some particular persons 2. By consequence imployed in the Examples Prayers of Saints 1. By those Blessings which they have enjoyed 2. By those which they have prayed for in Faith and obtained Our laboring to strengthen Faith is of much use to us especially these three ways 1. In getting Assurance of Pardon after some sin is committed 2. In Conflicts with strong Lusts 3. In want of Spiritual Graces The use of Faith in Prosperity viz. 1. It maketh us acknowledge That it is the Lord who hath so disposed our estate 2. It maketh us rest upon God for the time to come that all shall go well with us for Faith hath eyes whereby it doth after a maner see that to be true which yet it seeth not accomplished Faith hath also a double use in Adversity viz. 1. It upholdeth us in the present distress when else we know not what to do 2. It maketh us patiently wait for deliverance Hos 6.1 2. for God having promised to give a good issue Faith resteth upon it even as it were now and already accomplished The Vices repugnant unto Faith and forbidden in this first Commandment viz. 1. Unbelief which assenteth not to such Doctrine as is heard and known concerning God 2. Doubtfulness which neither stedfastly assenteth to it nor altogether gainsays it 3. Distrust which applyeth not unto it self the knowledge which it hath of God and his Promises and doth through fear of Gods forsaking us surcease the doing of that it should do 4. A Dissembling or Hypocritical Faith 5. Temporary Faith or a Revolting from Faith 6. A Tempting of God stubbornly and proudly provoking him to anger 7. Carnal Security without thinking of God his Will or our own miserable estate under sin Faith doth the Sun in 's Zenith far out-shine Inflames with Love and makes us all divine Cancels our Debts makes all our Reck'nings ev'n Takes wing at Christ and flies us up to Heav'n Lifts us above the World and does advance Hope ' yond Hope and rests us in Assurance Which first sucks life from Faith returns back then The sap much stronger to the Root agen He that hath Faith hath Heav'n onely does stay To take a Death and Cross or two in 's way §. 3. Of Humility HUmiliation is the fruit of Faith and the first effect whereby Faith which lies hid in the heart doth appear And in the very instant when a sinner begins truly in heart and conscience to humble himself before God he is then entred into the state of Salvation Now if a man finde himself hard-hearted and of a dead Spirit so as he cannot humble himself as he ought or as he would such persons if they humble themselves must be content with that Grace which they have received for if thou be truly and unfainedly grieved for this That thou canst not be grieved thy Humiliation will be accepted And though it may be thou art more humbled and hast a greater grief for an earthly loss then for thy committed sins yet mayest thou even then be truly humbled and grieved for thy sins too because the one is a bodily natural and sensible loss and the other a supernatural insensible and spiritual Now sensible things do more affect and urge the minde then the other The heart of man cannot be lifted up in Assurance of Gods favor to the apprehension of heavenly things unless it be first abased by true Humiliation brought to nothing in it self To this must be added Faith for in the practice of a Christian life the duties of Humiliation and Faith cannot be severed Till the heart be throughly by Humiliation prepared by being broken with the sight of sins and Gods wrath Christ and the Gospel is preached to it in vain and though some drink in the Truth of the Gospel with their Education yet such usually hold not out without also sound Humiliation Thus by the Spirit of Elias is meant a sharp Ministery to shew men their sins that they may be throughly humbled and prepared else they will never take Christ so as to keep close to him for without sound Humiliation sin is not accounted the greatest evil nor Christ the greatest good We cannot love Christ till upon the consideration of our sins we are humbled for them and are become poor in Spirit and then the Lord regards us highly and will raise us up but the want of sorrow for sin is a greater Argument of the want of love to Christ then the sin it self Now Humiliation is not required as a Qualification antecedent and precedent to
the pardon of our sins for no Tears of ours can give Satisfaction beside Judas the Reprobate had it but it is required as that without which we will not come to Christ Now the taking of Christ is nothing else but what we call Faith and Faith is nothing else but when these two things concur That God the Father will give his Son and freely offers Righteousness and we receive this Righteousness taking Christ for our Husband our King and our Lord. And when we are truly entred into the state of this Humiliation we shall not fail of that Humility required in this Commandment for we shall then acknowledge all those good things which are in us and done by us not to come from any worthiness or ability of our own but from the free goodness of God we shall then by the acknowledging of Gods Divine Majesty and our infirmity and unworthiness subject and submit our selves unto God to give the glory of all good things which are in us to him alone We shall then truly fear God We shall then acknowledge and bewail our own defects and vices we shall not then covet any higher place or condition we shall not then trust in our own gifts but in the help and assistance of God we shall then hold our selves contented with our own Vocation and Calling we shall not then despise others in comparison of our selves neither let or hinder them in the discharging of their duty but acknowledge that others also are and may be made profitable Instruments of Gods glory and therefore give place and honor to them we shall not then attribute to our selves things above our force and power we shall not then affect any one excellency above others neither shall we then murmure against God if we fail of our hope or if we be despised but in all things ascribe the praise of Wisdom and Justice unto God Let no man therefore presume above that which is written For who hath separated thee or what hast thou that thou hast not received 1 Cor. 4.6 God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble 1 Pet. 5.5 Whosoever shall humble himself as this little childe the same is the greatest in the kingdom of Heaven Mat. 18.4 And this is that Humility required in this Commandment and him in whom it is the Lord will exalt in due time 1 Pet. 5.5 The Vices repagnant to Humility viz. 1. Pride and Arrogancy which is to ascribe our gifts not unto God but to our own ability and therefore to stand in admiration of our selves and gifts not to acknowledge our wants or bewail our defects to be ever aspiring to some higher place or calling to attribute to our selves those things which we have not to overlook our poor Brethren to be guilty indeed of all those Vices from which the humble man was even now said to be free 2. A feigned Modesty or Humility which is a double Pride and it is to hunt after the praise and commendation of Humility by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man doth in his minde attribute unto himself either truly or falsely and by refusing of that honor which he desireth above the peace of a good Conscience and covertly laboreth to compass Going to take a Survey of my Sins I heard a voyce which sadly said Who brings Help to my wounded Soul And having cry'd At least a heart-full of Tears Faith apply'd A precious Soveraign Salve but said It came from far cost dear and therefore praid He would esteem it highly Then me thought He somewhat else in dust and ashes sought What it should be I ask'd Hope who stood by And Love reply'd it was Humility §. 4. Of Patience PAtience is the knowledge and acknowledging of Gods Majesty Wisdom Justice Power and Goodness resolving through a confidence in Gods Promises and so in hope of Gods assistance and deliverance to obey God in suffering those evils and afflictions which he sendeth on us and willeth us to suffer and herein not to murmure against God or do any thing against his Commandments but by this knowledge and full perswasion of Gods good will and pleasure herein To comfort our selves in our distress and to Pray in Faith and Wait in Hope for his deliverance Humility and Patience belong unto this first Commandment not onely because they are parts of that internal obedience which God requireth immediately to be performed unto him but also because they follow and accompany the true Knowledge Confidence Love and Fear of God as necessary effects of the same For in cases of Distress of Persecution and Affliction we must not live by feeling but by Faith for Afflictions are Pledges and Tokens of our Adoption if we make the right use of them Heb. 12.7 And when God defers deliverance he doth it upon great and weighty causes and considerations best known unto himself for in his Wisdom he hath set down certain and unchangeable Times for the accomplishment and issue of all things that are And indeed there is a necessity of having this godly vertue of Patience for we need many afflictions because the corruptions of the heart are of diverse sorts and we need long afflictions because sin is very natural yet there may be good in that evil we suffer and in the worst dangers there is somewhat that makes the godly trust in God that keeps them up from sinking A sound Spirit will bear any Affliction and therein is a Christian happy for God loves us tenderly in Affliction whence the difference between the Saints and others in the same Afflictions is That though the same Afflictions befal both yet God hath respect to his in it not to the others Jer. 24. The wicked though prospering yet stand in slippery places the godly though afflicted are built on the Rock Christ To prosper in sin is the miserablest condition in the world for when the wicked are not interrupted in their course God hath a purpose to destroy them as Hophni and Phineas Prosperity hurts evil men yea and as much as Affliction doth good to the godly Evil men may prosper and good men be crossed many times not prospering in their business and that in those things which they do according to Gods Will as in the success of Pauls Ministery at Macedonia and the Disciples jeopardy on the water though they were there on Christs command Thus the Lord dealeth promiscuously with good and bad in outward things that we may not know where to have him in his ways and actions which are past finding out therefore we must not judge by Gods outward proceeding till he hath finished the work nor murmure at his Providence or prove impatient under the smart of any Affliction whatsoever For the Afflictions of the godly are not punishments and satisfaction for their sins but onely fatherly chastisements and the Cross whereby they are brought to Humility To the wicked they are indeed a punishment which is either Destruction or Torment inflicted by
the order of Justice on the person guilty of sin And this is proper unto the Reprobate because it is inflicted on them to this end That Gods Justice may be satisfied for the Law bindeth all men either to Obedience or to Punishment Now the wicked despairing of the Mercy of God murmure at his Justice and are even mad with impatience when his inflicting Scourge is on them but the godly kiss his Rod and in patience possess their Souls resting on the Promises of God This is that which sets them at liberty in the dungeon makes them run the paths of Gods Commandments even when Irons manacle them makes them go chearfully to the Faggot and embrace the Flame makes them smile at the frowns of their Persecutors and in an holy patience makes them as it were anticipate Death by dying to all impatience that when it comes indeed they may be said rather to be changed then dye And indeed this one Consideration How that those that persecute the Saints here would undoubtedly persecute Christ himself were he now upon Earth is sufficient of it self to support the Spirits of any that now are or may be under Persecution beside the consideration that God will as undoubtedly deliver his to his glory and their advantage as he permits Persecution to befal them We have need of Patience for these two Reasons 1. Because there are so many Mockers and Scoffers at our Profession Luke 21.17 2. Because the Object of our Hope is of things invisible Rom. 8.25 The Signs or Properties of Patience 1. A heart resolved to abide whatsoever is laid upon us whether it be for sin or for tryal 2. When we suffering and suffering much do yet never cease to love the Lord who striketh us 3. Humility and humbling our selves under his blows and strokes laid upon us 4. Chearfulness and Joy in Suffering when we are so far from murmuring under it that we rejoyce in it Patience must have her perfect work James 1.4 which work is said to be perfect in these three respects viz. 1. In respect of the Condition it must be true hearty and sound not feigned and counterfeit Luke 21.19 2. In respect of the Extent it must reach to all maner of Crosses heavy and light inward and outward at home and abroad whether they come from the Devil or any of his wicked Instruments or from God himself and his own hand of what kinde quality quantity soever they be 2 Cor. 6.4 3. In respect of the Continuance it must endure unto the end not onely unto the end of that Affliction which lieth upon us but also to the end of our life so as we must both patiently bear the present and also prepare our selves for future Crosses Mat. 10.22 Necessary it is that Patience have this perfect work in us and that for these Reasons viz. 1. The Crosses whereunto we are subject are not troubles in shew and appearance onely but such as pierce both Body and Soul Therefore counterfeit Patience will stand us in no stead 2. The Number of Tryals whereunto we may be brought is uncertain one calamity upon another as Waves may fall upon us therefore the extent of our Patience need be very great 3. It is Uncertain how long we shall be subject to Tryals because the continuance of our life is uncertain therefore there is a Necessity in it that our Patience continue unto the end for while we are in this world the field of the Lords Battel the Enemy will assault us The good which God aymeth at and effecteth by those Troubles he inflicteth on his children which should incite us to Patience 1. The Preventing of some great Mischief and Evil 2 Cor. 12.7 2. The Purging out of some festering poysonsom sin 2 Chron. 33.12 3. The Upholding and keeping us safe and stedfast in the right way Heb. 12.10 11. 4. The Proof and Tryal of such Gifts and Graces as he hath bestowed on us 1 Pet. 4.12 The Saints must possess their Souls in Patience from the consideration of those Ends which God hath in afflicting them As 1. His own Glory Joh. 9.3 2 Cor. 12.9 2. The Edification of others Eph. 3.1 3. Their own good 1. By preventing 2 Cor. 12.7 or curing some dangerous disease Psal 119.67 2. To manifest the Grace of God bestowed on them Job 1.12 3. To draw them nearer to God Hos 5.15 4. To make them long the more for heaven 2 Cor. 5.2 5. To lead them by this Correction as it were by the hand to Repentance 6. To try and exercise their Faith Invocation of Gods Name Patience c. 7. To breed in them a loathing of worldly and a love of heavenly things 8. To shake off their over-much carefulness for outward things 9. To suppress and amend the viciousness ingrafted in their Nature 10. To save them from being condemned with the world So likewise doth God suffer his Church to be under the Cross and afflicted for these special Reasons 1. The more to manifest his Pity Power Providence and Truth in keeping promise 2. That the Members thereof by their Afflictions may be acquainted with their own wants and infirmities which they would not much regard were they freed from the Cross 3. That by Affliction they may be kept from many grievous sins into which they might otherwise fall 4. That others seeing the Correction of the Church for sin may learn thereby to hate and avoid sin 5. To wean them the better from the world Much prosperity makes us resemble the fool spoken of Luke 12.19 6. To make Heaven the more longed for while we are on earth and the more acceptable when we come to possess it like Victory after a tedious and dangerous Combat 7. That the Church may glorifie God in a constant and couragious maintenance of the Truth unto death for even in persecution is Gods Truth preserved against the Reason of mans Wisdom The Reasons of the worlds Hatred to Gods Church may be these 1. The Church of God in the Ministery of the Gospel seeks the ruine of the Devils Kingdom who is the Prince of the World the Devil therefore rageth and inflames the hearts of his Instruments with malice against Gods Church that they may quite destroy it if it were possible 2. Gods Church is a peculiar people severed from the world in their Profession Doctrine and Conversation and therefore the world hates them Joh. 15.16 and this the world will do to the end thereof The Cross is the Affliction of the godly but not properly a punishment and is of four sorts viz. 1. The Chastisements for the remnants of sin in them and oftentimes for peculiar sins committed by them that they may see their uncleanness and repent 2. The Proofs and Tryals of their Faith Hope Invocation Fear of God and Patience 3. Martyrdoms which are Testifications concerning their Doctrine delivered others 4. The Cross is their Ransome even the obedience of Christ alone The causes of the Affliction of
the wicked 1. The Impellent Cause is sin because it is an evil merit and deserveth evil 2. The Principal Efficient Cause is the Justice of God inflicting punishment for sin 3. The Instrumental Causes are divers Angels and Men both good and bad and all other Creatures 4. The Final Cause is That the Justice of God may be satisfied The Causes of the Cross of the godly viz. 1. The Acknowledging and purging out of sin 1 Cor. 11.32 Psa 119.71 2. The Hatred of the Devil and wicked men Joh. 15.19 1 Pet. 5.8 3. The Tryal and Exercise of Godliness Eccl. 34.10 4. Particular Defects and Failings in the Saints as in David and others 5. The Confirmation of the Truth by their Martyrdom Joh. 21.18 6. Their glorious Delivery that is the Manifestation of the immeasurable Wisdom Power Mercy and Justice of God in their wonderful deliverance 1 Sam. 2.6 7. The making of a Conformity between the Members and Christ their Head both in Affliction and Glory 2 Tim. 2.12 8. A Testimony and Confirmation of the Judgement and Life to come because Gods Justice and Truth requireth that in the end it go well with the good and ill with the bad but this cometh not to pass in this life In all Chastisements how sharp soever God is alway to be acknowledged just in laying them upon us 1. Because his Punishments though many times very grievous yet are alway less then our deserts and offences Psal 103.10 2. Because our sins are the procuring Causes of all the Evils we suffer Mic. 7.9 3. Because in all his Corrections and Judgements he remembreth Mercy Hab. 3.2 The Comforts and Consolations which are to be opposed to Afflictions to invite us to Patience viz. 1. Remission of Sins and Reconciliation unto God in Christ Rom. 5.1 8.3 2. The Necessity of Obeying God and the love which we owe him Job 2.10 Psal 3.9 3. The worthiness of Vertue that is of Obedience towards God the true Vertue Mat. 10.37 16.25 4. A good Conscience the godly being assured of Remission of sins purpose to obey God being confident of pardon in Christ resolve to suffer any thing 5. The Final Causes thereof as Gods glory Psal 119.75 Our Salvation 1 Cor. 11.32 The Salvation of others Acts 5. 6. The comparing together of Ends and Events it is better to suffer now then hereafter 7. The Hope of Recompence for the Reward is great in Heaven Mat. 5.12 8. The Example of Christ for the Servant is not above his Master Joh. 15.20 and of his Saints who have suffered before us 9. The Certain presence and assistance of God in all cases and chances of this life 1 Cor. 10.13 Psal 19.15 10. The final and full Delivery whereof are three degrees contrary to those of punishment 1. In this life when we have the beginning of eternal life 2. In our Bodily Death when the Soul is carried into Abrahams bosom 3. After the Resurrection when we shall be perfectly blessed both in Body and Soul The way to comfort our selves in trouble 1. It is our duty to acknowledge Gods Mercy to be great who might lay a heavier burthen on us 2. We must with boldness come by Prayer unto the Throne of Grace that we may put him in minde of his Mercies 3. We must thereby be drawn unto Repentance acknowledge our sins to have deserved far greater Judgements then yet we suffer and turn unto God with all our hearts 4. We must praise the goodness of God in sparing us and not pouring out the full Vials of his wrath upon us 5. We must remember That we think not our selves hardly dealt with taking heed that we murmure not nor complain against God 6. We must be patient and not discouraged under the Cross As the hand of Gods particular Providence is in all our Afflictions these three ways 1. He decreeth and fore-appointeth them 2. He effecteth them 3. He ordereth and disposeth them So his presence with us in Affliction hath these three ends or effects viz. 1. To work our deliverance from the Cross so far forth as it shall be for our good 2. To temper and moderate our Afflictions 3. To give us strength and power to bear his Affliction The fruit of Affliction viz. 1. Consideration they make men to see and consider their sins 2. Humiliation they serve to humble men in their Souls before God 3. They serve to work Amendment of life 4. Abnegation they cause men to deny themselves and relie wholly on the Mercy of God 5. Invocation they make us cry heartily and fervently unto God 6. Patience Affliction brings forth Patience Patience Experience 7. Obedience whereof we have an Example even of Christ himself Heb. 5.8 Prosperity worketh in us effects contrary to those of Affliction 1. It maketh us proud and insolent 2. It stirreth us up to serve our own wicked lusts fed by it 3. It hardneth us against the affection of Mercy 4. It maketh us cold negligent and distracted in prayer 5. It provoketh us to impatience wrath and self-confidence 6. It besots us with the love of the world and our selves alienating our thoughts from the heavenly life For what causes God humbleth his servants by Affliction 1. That all glory and praise may be given to him alone 2. That we may put away the vain confidence which naturally is in us and cleave to him alone 3. That we may be the better fitted for Mercy the better prepared to receive his gifts 4. That we may humble our selves pray repent pity others renounce the world and desire life Eternal Why the Lord sometimes defers deliverance from Affliction 1. To humble us throughly and to bring us to an utter denyal of our selves 2. That we may acknowledge from whence our Deliverance comes 3. To make us distrust the World and draw our thoughts to the life to come 4. To prevent greater evils and dangers wherein we might run God is said to deliver us two ways 1. By preservation and keeping us that we shall not come into danger 2. By freeing us from the trouble into which we are faln And this is 1. By taking the misery from us 2. By takingus from the misery Directions to arm us with Patience and to keep us from despising Gods corrections 1. In all Afflictions look as David did 2 Sam. 16.10 unto him that smiteth and know that they come not by chance but by Gods wise-disposing Providence and that purposely to breed in us true remorse 2. Consider that the Lord can adde Cross to Cross till he pull down our proud stomacks break our stiff necks and bring us to utter confusion yea that his Wrath is as his Greatness Infinite 3. Take notice of the Judgements which other men by despising the Lords corrections bring upon themselves 4. Make use of the least Cross and begin speedily to humble thy self if thy heart begin to be touched suffer it not to be presently hardned again but more and more humble
of God for they are his Image differing onely in degrees The sincerity of our love to the Lord may be known these two ways 1. By our even carriage towards him not sometimes for him and sometimes for our lusts 2. By our constant carriage by our continuance and holding out in his service yet daily infirmities break not the Covenant so long as our hearts are sincere and we take not another husband that is love not any lust more then Christ Reasons or Motives perswasive to love the Lord viz. 1. The Commandment of God The Exhortations of the Prophets and Apostles Deut. 6.5 Mat. 22.37 Mark 12.30 2. The Examples of the holy men of God Prophets Apostles Martyrs c. as Abraham Gen. 12. Josh 23. Peter Joh. 21. 3. The Excellency of it for it knitteth and bindeth all other Vertues together yea he that loves is in God and God in him 4. The Profit of it for all things work together for the best to those that love God Rom. 8.28 5. The Necessity of it for without love all other Vertues and rare Perfections profit us nothing 1 Cor. 13. 6. It sets a Price on all we do be it never so small be it but a Cup of cold water given in love 7. We lose not by this love which is contrary to all other loves even in that 8. The Lord is Worthy of our love for all Excellency is in God and he is wholly delectable 9. The consideration of the Greatness of God might command our love yea seeing this great and mighty God is a suiter to us for it 10. The easie Conditions he requires of us for he might have commanded us to offer our children in Sacrifice and our bodies to be burned in being our Soveraign Creator and we his Creatures 11. God hath planted this very Affection of Love in us for this very end and doth he then call for more then his own 12. We have engaged our selves to love the Lord being Baptized in his Name nay he hath bought us too and loves us yea so as he gave even himself for us Doth not this deserve Love O consider this all ye Adulterers that divorce your selves from Heaven to be enamored with Hell and your own Damnation What lieth in the understanding between God and us that hinders Love for Love uniteth 1. Temptations to Atheism 2. Temptations to think that the Scriptures are not true 3. Temptations to think amiss of God in any thing 4. Temptations to doubt of the favor of God The two main Impediments of our love to Christ 1. Strangeness for it dissolveth Love breeding Ignorance and Fearfulness but a truly grounded holy Boldness is the Parent and Nurse of Love 2. Uncircumcision of heart or worldly-mindedness Deut. 30.6 that is worldly Lusts worldly Cares worldly Desires when they abound in the heart The Means to enable us to Love the Lord viz. 1. Labor to know him Beseech the Lord to shew himself to thee for till then thou wilt never love him 2. We must labor to know our selves We must consider our sins what we are what hearts we have what lives we have led 3. We must labor to get the Assurance of Gods special Love to us the two notes whereof are these 1. The Love of our Brethren for then we love God and then he loves us 2. Our love of God for whom God loves to them he gives his grace to love him again 4. Prayer for it is a lovely Suit and think you that if we request to love him he will deny it us surely no Jam. 1.17 5. A careful and diligent Hearing of Gods Word with continual Meditation on the same whereby we attain to Faith which inflames us with Gods love towards us and thereby stirs up again our love towards God 6. We must labor earnestly that the Spirit of God may dwell in our hearts Love is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 7. The continual Meditation of Gods wonderful works and of his infinite benefits which by the death of his onely begotten Son he bestowed so freely on us The love of our Neighbor is said to be like unto our love to God for these Reasons 1. Because that Commandment of loving our Neighbor is opposed unto the Ceremonies 2. Because the Obedience of the First Table is the cause of the Second 3. Because the breach of the Second Table doth as well deserve eternal punishments as the breach of the First 4. Because it appertaineth to the Moral Worship which is described in the First and Second Table 5. Because of the Coherence of both for that neither can be observed without the other 6. Because one is the Author of both 7. Because both of them contain our whole Obedience The maner how we must love men viz. 1. It must be as Christ hath loved us Eph. 5.2 not in equality but resemblance and conformity 2. We must love our Neighbor as our selves Mat. 22.39 3. We must love them as the same Members of the same body love one another Rom. 12.4 5. Our love must be conformable to Christs love The maner whereof was this viz. 1. Christs love was Free without constraint not for any Merit in us 1 Joh. 4.19 2. His love was a right and True love he loved us not to profit or benefit himself but onely us 3. His love was Discreet he loved our persons not our sins 1 Cor. 13.5 6. 4. His love was Vehement he gave himself to the death for us 1 Joh. 3.16 5. His love was Fruitful shewing it self in the effects thereof Jam. 2.15 16. 6. His love was Constant Joh. 13.1 True love doth never fall away 1 Cor. 13.8 7. His love was General to the Poor as to the Rich to his Friends to his Foes Mat. 5.44 That we may know how to love our Neighbor as our selves we must know that Self-love is twofold 1. General which is Natural Love whereby every one seeketh his own good and preservation This kinde of love in it self is not evil the order thereof being rightly observed 2. Special which is 1. Carnal whereby a man preferreth the benefit of his Body and Flesh before the good of his Soul and Spirit 2 Tim. 3.2 This is a mother-Mother-sin 2. Spiritual whereby a man preferreth the good of his Soul before all things in the world That we may know how to love our Neighbors as fellow-members we must know That 1. One Member of the Humane Body doth not envy another which hath not the same office with it 1 Cor. 12. 2. One Member doth not appropriate his Office to it self but communicateth it to the good of all 3. One Member of the Body being hurt of the other doth not revenge it self upon the other Members 4. One Member suffereth with another and rejoyceth with another Rom. 12.15 5. One Member of the Body exposeth it self to danger for the defence of another The Properties of true love to our Brethren 1. It must be in Adversity as well as
seasoned with some taste of his Wrath and Indignation This indeed is the true Tryal of our Faith even when above and against Reason we relie on the Mercy of God in the Apprehension of his Anger In which time of Temptation men are unfit Judges of themselves and of their condition how it stands between God and their Souls even the faithful themselves at such time may cry out and complain as if they were without both Faith and feeling of any favor of God who yet even then is not absent from them neither hath forgotten them The hour of Temptation with the Faithful is the time of winter wherein their Faith and Graces seem as it were benumm'd but when the Rejoycing Beams of the Sun of Righteousness break forth dissipate and chase away from the poor bemisted Soul the thick cloud of false and forged Suggestions his Faith appears the spring of Graces approacheth they shew forth by lively effects That they still retained life and were not dead to the present operation of unspeakable comfort in the late clouded Soul In such Distresses let no man think the Weight of his sins can over-ballance the Merit of his Savior The Celestial Lights may suffer Eclipses and we must walk by Faith not by Feeling Now the true Application of Life Everlasting promised in and by the Blood of Christ is the general Remedy for all Distresses But note That the distressed in minde are not fit for comfort till they be humbled for their sins for till then the Word of God is misapplied and so abused Despair is a sin whereby a man makes shipwrack of all Hope of the Mercy of God in Christ arising from a false consideration of his sins which he hath committed or the good which he hath omitted with a perswasion that God is neither able nor willing to forgive him Thus the Desperate man believeth not that God is either good true faithful or powerful he may indeed have some conceit that he is so in general but that he is so to him in particular and for his good this he will not be perswaded of but with Judas conceits that God is not willing to pardon him or rather that he will not pardon him Mat. 27. or with Cain That he is not able to forgive him Gen. 4.13 Thus Despair impeacheth the most glorious Attributes of God his Power as if he were not able to make good his Promise his Truth as if he were unfaithful his Mercy as if it were dryed up with the heat of mens sins his Omnipresence as if he were not ever by us Thus it stops the currant of Gods Mercy barreth up the gates of Heaven against men and openeth the mouth of Hell for them which if thou wilt avoid beware of Infidelity for that is the Mother of Despair And thus Despair ariseth partly from too deep an apprehension of the power of the Devil as if he were Infinite and he able to do whatsoever his Malice would or unlimited God letting the reins loose and permitting him to do what himself pleased and partly from too light an esteem of that power which is to be had in God as if he were not sufficient to keep us safe and of the Mercy of God as if it were not Infinite Temptations to draw us to doubt of that help we have in God and to Despair are properly termed The fiery darts of the devil which he shoots into our thoughts to poyson the Soul with their venomous heads thereby to draw us into Perdition These Temptations where they light and fasten pierce deep showers of them did the Devil shoot at poor Job David complains much they were let fly at him yea he flung some even at Christ himself in the wilderness Mat. 4.3 in the garden Mat. 26.37 c. and on the Cross 27.46 He that Despairs sucks fiery burning poyson into his Soul hath the Brimstone of Hell sulphering in his very bowels not a drop of the gracious Promises of God to quench it because he thinks the Puddle-pool of his sins greater then the Ocean of Gods Mercy This fire either stupifies the Spiritual Senses and dries up the life of the Soul or torments him like Cain Saul and Judas intolerably without all hope of redress Whosoever therefore by reason of their weakness or through the violence of some Temptation have so let fall their shield of Faith as that Satans fiery darts have touched their Conscience and pierced their Soul let them not thereupon utterly despair and give themselves up to the power of Satan but know That a Renewing of Faith by a speedy recourse to the Promises of God in Christ is a liquid Balsam to quench the flame Virtual to draw out the fire and Soveraign to cure the wound Faith applying the Vertue of Christs Sacrifice to a perplexed and troubled Soul dispelleth the inward anguish thereof but he that after some failings and spiritual wounds puts off all Hope as if Death and Destruction without all Remedy must needs follow thereupon is like him that will rather dye then take Physick murthers his Soul because it was sick hastens his own Damnation and by a Blasphemous prejudice to the unvaluable Merits of Christ through Infidelity becomes the wilful Destroyer of that Soul which might have lived for ever had he had the grace of Faith to apply the Remedy The special distresses of the Minde are five and arise either 1. Of a Divine Temptation 2. From outward Affliction 3. Of the Temptation of Blasphemy 4. From a mans own Sins 5. From a mans own Body Distress in minde is when a man is disquieted and distempered in Conscience and consequently in his Affections touching his estate before God which hath two Degrees 1. The less which is a single fear grief suspence or doubt touching his Salvation 2. The greater which is Despair when a man in his own sense and apprehension is without all hope of Salvation All distresses of the Minde ariseth from Temptation either begun or continued therefore according to the divers kindes of Temptations must the Distresses of the minde be distinguished which as formerly may be all reduced to these two Heads viz. 1. Of Tryal which is twofold 1. Combat of the Conscience directly with the wrath of God called a Divine Temptation 2. Of the Cross whereby God proves and makes tryal of the Faith of his children 2. Of Seducement which is threefold 1. Immediately from the Devil called the Temptation of Blasphemy 2. From a mans own sins both Original and Actual 3. From Imagination corrupted irregulated and depraved Despair is of three sorts of men viz. 1. Of Epicures Prophane men and Atheists who rejecting all Hope and refusing to wait for Mercy their Conscience convicting them that there is nothing to be expected but damnation give themselves over to all maner of wickedness laboring to extinguish out of their hearts That there is a God a Heaven or a Hell Jer. 18.12 2. Of those men who are overcome with
too much sorrow arising from the grief of the punishment 2 Cor. 2.7 7.10 3. Of those who are troubled in minde for sins supposing that their sins are so great and so many that God cannot nor will not forgive them This kinde ariseth from grief for sin and is twofold viz. 1. Temporary onely for a time This is curable and may happen to a childe of God 2. Final and incurable This kinde is onely incident to the Reprobate The causes of Despair are twofold viz. 1. Hidden and secret So Reprobation may be said to be the cause of final Despair 2. Open and more manifest which generally are these four Unbelief Impenitency Hardness of Heart and An absolute Denyal of the known Truth joyned with Blasphemy The more particular open causes of Despair are these viz. 1. The greatness and multitude of sins Gen. 4.13 2. The multitude of Temptations Judg. 3.1 Gen. 21.1 3. The often falling into sin This is incident to the best Prov. 24.24 4. Overmuch grief melancholly and sadness of heart Prov. 15.13 5. Ignorance in mindes not instructed in the Reconciliation by Christ 6. An inveterate custom in sinning whence proceeds hardness of heart 7. The too much consideration of our own unworthiness with the least reflection on Christ and his Merits 8. That compelled Abnegation and denyal of the known Truth through tyrannical Violence and Compulsion too hard for the weakness of the flesh Four Caveats in private Confession convenient in case of Distress of minde Jam. 5.16 1. It must not be urged as a thing simply or absolutely necessary to Salvation 2. It need not be of all sins but of such as trouble the Conscience 3. It is especially to be made to Ministers though it may be made to any man 4. The person to whom it is made must be one of trust and fidelity Helps and Remedies against Despair or that we may the better avoid Desperation and carnal security we are always to have in minde 1. That the Promises of Grace and Favor to Mankinde are universal Mark 11.38 2. The Promises of Mercy how hainous soever ours sins have been Isa 1.18 3. That the Mercy of God is above all sin Rom. 20. 4. That the Doctrine of the Gospel for the free Remission of sins is to be preached not unto a few but universally and generally unto all Mat. 28.19 5. That the Seals of the Covenant are appointed to be given to all men which are members of the Visible Church or desirous to be incorporated thereinto Matth. 28.19 26.26 27. 6. That as the Disobedience of Adam brought Condemnation on all men So the Blood and Obedience of Christ is All-sufficient to wash away all sins and that of all men 1 Cor. 11.24 7. That God delights not in any sinners Death but desires his Conversion Ezek. 33. 8. That if any Believer sin he hath a sufficient Advocate with the Father 1 Joh. 2.2 Heb. 9.24 Rom. 8.34 9. Labor to lay hold upon the Promises by a right-grounded Faith 10. Take heed of too much melancholly and worldly sorrow 11. Consider the grievousness of the sin of Despair 12. Remember the Passion of Christ the Truth and greatness of his Mercy 13. Have in minde the Examples of mercy as to Murther and Adultery in David to Apostacy in Peter to Idolatry in Manasseh to Theft in the Thief on the Cross to Blasphemy in Paul and much Iniquity and Impurity in Mary having many foul Devils in her 14. The Indignity offered unto God by Despair seeing we refuse to trust him upon his most holy Word and the inevitable destruction of our own Souls thereby consider That so long as we despair not we are not shut out from Mercy upon Repentance but while we despair there is no hope we are lost for ever and most worthily Again to avoid Despair it is necessary that we pray to be kept and preserved 1. From presumptuous and notorious sins most chiefly as Murther Apostacy Adultery Blasphemy c. 2. From wicked Company which like a violent stream and torrent doth force men to all kinde of wickedness 3. From the Neglect of Gods Worship whereby we lose our Spiritual Armature and are laid naked to our potent foes 4. From the love of and immoderate affection to the things of this world which having the heart if they fail our heart faileth also and a wide gap is opened to Despair Reader When ere thou meat one in Despair Lock thine Ears his very breath poisons th' Air Nothing but Sulphur from his Lungs proceed Hot enough to make an Adamant bleed Of Gods free Promises discourse the point And thou wilt finde his Soul quite out of joynt His lips foam Blasphemies and who can tell But that his Heart goes to the tune of Hell In this sad case his wound is much the worse In that he holds the Salve his greatest Curse §. 10. Of Pride THe last Vice in opposition to this Commandment which we promised to touch was Pride a sin so obviously condemned even by Heathen Writers as we shall here onely abstract it is as it were from that Pride which is so generally condemned and taking the word in somewhat a more strict sense chiefly as it relates to Inward Spiritual Arrogancy the insensible poison even of a sanctified heart we shall onely glance at it and proceed to the Second Commandment Pride is a puffing up of the heart and minde proceeding from the opinion of some good thing in us more then in other men Pride truly so called is the most pestilent and incompatible Opposite that Grace hath and therefore he that is most sanctified most fights against it For besides that impoisoned tincture our Souls are stained with by this sin in our depraved Nature the subtile Serpent experimentally knows how to manage it with most accurate policy who follows this poison with such eagerness and activity sweetning it with such specious Delusions that after it is expelled by the Antidote of Faith he yet endeavors with all the power and policy of Hell that some spice thereof may remain behinde even in the Soul humbled for sin and devoted unto the service of God For being exactly experienced in all advantages for Spiritual Assaults and tempering the powerful Ingredients of his Temptations with the Reliques of mans proud Nature doth cunningly perswade him to advance above that which is meet within himself in his own opinion the worth of his own Graces and Vertues by reason of the predominancy and delightsomness whereof the undermining Venom and cankering Pestilency of this sin corrodes the Soul and frets out the very heart of Grace undiscernably This Lyon in a Lambs skin ths Devil in an Angels shape this sin of Spiritual Pride is the harder to be expelled because so easie to be entertained and so difficult to be discerned such is the insensibleness of those Meanders wherein she walks invisibly when she haunts the Saints and children of God who with the more circumspection and
holy policy are to fortifie themselves against it because it springs from so fair and unsuspected a Fountain even from Zeal godly Duties and good Actions who are with much Humiliation and fervency of Spirit to pray and strive against it because it singles out the Chosen of God and takes up his seat in the sanctified Soul who are with wonderful care to countermine the sly insinuations wherewith it unavoidably windes it self into their hearts lest when they seem to disclaim Pride they prove proud that they are not proud who cannot be too secure of their Sentinels on the heart-guards because there is no profoundness of Knowledge no measure of Grace no eminency of Zeal can be exempted from hazard of Surprizal by this last and most cunning encounter of Satan by Spiritual Pride Great reason therefore hath the childe of God strongly to fence his heart with a gracious and unfained humility against this sin lest gazing on the dangerous speculations of his own worthiness the eye of his Conscience become blinde to his own Deficiencies Corruptions and Infirmities lest his Self-conceitedness and a vain over-valuing of his own Gifts and Vertues call the Truth of them into question and extinguish the life of Sincerity lest an adulterous self-liking of his own excellency be justly plagued with a scandalous fall into some gross sin lest this Viper nourished in the bosom of his Soul take unseasonable heat and warmth from his Zeal and endanger the whole frame of his New man Now the onely Soveraign means to preserve the life and vigor of Graces in the Soul and to keep thence this pestilent canker-worm of Spiritual Pride is with much earnestness and prayer to labor after and settle surely in the heart a true and undissembled Humility This kinde of Secret or Privy-Pride is not so properly a breach of this Commandment as the outward and more open Pride whose concomitant Companions and Branches are Envy Anger Impatience Indignation Self-will and Obstinacy Presumption Hypocrisie Boasting Ingratitude Contempt Disobedience Ambition and Curiosity as also a fained Modesty or Humility which is a double Pride being to hunt after the praise and commendation of Humility by refusing in shew and apparence and by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man secretly covets and in his minde attributes unto himself either truly or falsly This is Pride under a vail which if Plenty and Prosperity in outward things answer the expectation doth soon appear in its proper Peacockcolours to be nothing else but the very heighth and pinacle of all Pride and Arrogancy whose true Properties follow The properties of the proud man viz. 1. To ascribe his gifts not to God but to his own worthiness and ability and to refer his gifts and counsels principally to his own glory and therefore to stand in admiration of himself and his gifts 2. Not truly to fear God neither to acknowledge and bewail his own defects 3. To be always aspiring to some higher place and calling 4. To attribute to himself those things which he hath not to attempt things above his power and not belonging to his calling 5. To contemn and debase others in respect of himself to believe none but to covet to excel and be eminent above others 6. To be angry with God and Men to fret and fume against God when his desires and counsels are hindred and also to accuse God of Error and Injustice if Gods counsels agree not with the judgements and affections of men Pride is twofold 1. Inward in the soul which consists Partly in the Minde which is a corrupt disposition thereof whereby a man thinks himself to be better then indeed he is This was the proud Pharisees sin Luke 18.11 12. Partly in the Will which is an inward affection whereby a man is not contented with that estate wherein God hath placed him but desires a better This befel Adam and Eve and does most of their Posterity in every Age. 2. Outward which proceeding from the former shews it self in the effects in her proper colours by apparel gestures language actions and most vain phantastick self-conceits Inward Pride must be carefully avoided for these Reasons viz. 1. Because whatsoever outward good works the childe of God can do by Grace the same may a wicked man do through Pride and Hypocrisie as conceive a Prayer Preach the Word and Practice the outward duties of Repentance of Love and such like for Pride is a sin that will counterfeit Grace and man cannot discern it truly but God onely 2. Many other sins prevail in the wicked but Pride is the sin that troubleth the children of God and when other sins dye then will Pride revive yea it will rise as it were out of Grace it self for the childe of God may be proud because he is not proud proud of his Humility therefore Paul must be buffeted by the messenger of Satan lest he should be puffed up with the abundance of Revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 The way to avoid this dangerous sin of Inward Pride viz. 1. We must be careful to know the Pride of our own hearts for every man hath it in him more or less and the more we see it the less it is but the less we see it the more it is indeed for he that is most humbled is not altogether free from this Inward Pride 2. When we see our Pride we must labor to subdue it which may thus be done 1. By considering the Judgements of God upon this sin it poysoned Angelical Perfection and afterward occasioned our Parents casting out of Paradice and remember Herod who for this sin was eaten up of worms Acts 12. 2. We must search into our selves and labor to see our own wants and corruptions as our Blindeness of Minde Unbelief c. The want of feeling our wants occasions Pride 3. We must meditate upon the Death and Passion of Christ and how can a man think that Christ endured that bitter Passion for and yet not be humbled with the sight of his sins which had a part in the cause thereof Reasons taken from the state of the Regenerate Soul why the childe of God should fence his heart against Spiritual Pride viz. 1. The consideration of our deficiencies even in our most religious duties and best performances 2. The consideration of our own forwardness to march under Satans Banners and our base unworthy vassallage therein before our Regeneration 3. The consideration of the bottomless depth of Gods bounty to us which hath raised unto us whatsoever gifts we have 4. The consideration of the danger which may happen to the whole man by giving entertainment to Spiritual Pride for either it may perswade us to embrace some groundless singularity of unwarrantable Opinions or by Gods just Judgement draw upon us a deadness of heart a dulness of zeal an intermission of the operations of Grace or the like inconveniences The three Errors which did deceive the Pharisee does many other proud persons 1. His
Error of Comparison in comparing himself with another person which was to behold his face in a false glass Luke 18.11 2. His freedom from some gross sins forbidden in the Second Table which he judged others to be guilty of 3. His performance of some Duties of Religion doubtless with as much Spiritual Pride as he now makes proclamation of it Motive-Engines to pull down Pride Ambition viz. 1. We must consider the state of our bodies what it is Dust we are and to it we must return yea how speedily we know not 2. We are altogether set upon sin and bring forth the bitter fruits of our Corruption in regard whereof we are more wretched then other creatures so vile a thing so accursed is sin 3. We are not able of our selves to think one good thought neither are we sufficiently furnished of our selves to do the least and smallest duty that God requireth of us we have the spawn and seed of all sin in our Nature 4. Whatever gifts are bestowed upon we must think meanly and humbly of our selves and them for our best gifts are stained with many blemishes 5. Let us set before us the Example of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ we must be ready to learn of him the lesson that he offereth to teach us by Word and Example Mat. 11.29 6. Pride is the preparation of us to a fall and the ready way to destruction Prov. 16.18 Fearful Examples whereof are Nebuchadnezzar Haman and Herod A Bubble in a Storm a falling Star A Cobweb-Helmet in the brunt of War A Flash of Lightning or a Spark that slies By night i' th' Air looks like a Star and dyes Frothy Foam disgorg'd spit on the proud Rocks By Neptune when he combs his curled Locks The Lovers Weathercock a Peacocks Plume A Courtiers Cringe meer Smoke or Chimney-sume A Dream of Treasure or a Scorpions kiss A Tower of Glass Pride is nought else but this The Second Commandment §. 1. Thou shalt make to thee no graven Image nor the likeness of any thing that is in Heaven above or in the Earth beneath or in the water under the Earth Thou shalt not c. IN this Commandment God prescribeth the Rule of true Divine Worship forbidding not onely that Creatures or Images be not reputed or worshipped for God but also that himself be not worshipped by or at Images for if Adoration be given to the true God with a false and erroneous intention it makes him an Idol and to worship him in at or before an Image is Idolatry and Superstition and God so worshipped is made an Idol And in thus forbidding the grossest and the Head and Fountain of all false Worships he forbiddeth all the other kindes Here also we are commanded to perform all outward Duties of Gods Service according to his Will revealed in his Word for the substance thereof So that the sum of this Commandment is That we worship not God after our fancies but according to his own Revealed Will Deut. 29.29 13.18 5.33 Joh. 4.24 Lastly we must take notice That all maner of Images is not here forbidden but onely in matters of Religion This Commandment hath two parts 1. The former forbiddeth Images to be made yet not simply but so as by them to represent and worship God 2. The latter part forbiddeth to worship them with Religious or Divine Honor. They who make this Commandment to consist of three parts divide it thus 1. The forbidding of the things wherein a man may sin in the outward Worship due unto God 2. The forbidding of the things performed in the profession of that Worship done by the outward behavior of the body 3. Threatnings against the Breakers of the Law and a Promise to such as keep it Two things beside the worshipping of Images forbidden in this Commandment 1. The worshipping of Creatures with a Religious Worship 2. Superstition which is a worshipping of God by Rites and Ceremonies devised and commanded by men Of this sort are these viz. 1. To wear a certain kinde of Apparel for Religions sake 2. To hold Difference of place in worshipping of God 3. To observe days and times for that purpose 4. To make a Difference of meats 5. To abstain from Marriage and such like The particulars forbidden in this Commandment viz. 1. To ordain any other Word or Sacrament then that which God hath appointed Gal. 1.8 9. Rom. 16.17 18. 2. To ordain strange Ministeries or to seek secret things of them or by them Lev. 19.31 Deut. 18.10 11. 3. All maner of Ceremonies that are not for comeliness and order Isa 1.11 unto 15. 66.3 4. 4. All Monuments of Idolatry Deut. 12.3 Exod. 23.24 34.13 Judges 22. 5. All means to Idolatry as Marriage and familiar accompanying with Idolaters and Papists Deut. 7.3 Ezra 9.2 10.10 Exod. 25.24 6. To Swear by any false God or Idol as Mass Cross c. Exod. 23.13 Josh 23.7 Psal 16.4 The making of Images to be worshipped is abominable for these Reasons 1. Because it is impossible that God who is an Infinite Spiritual Essence can be represented by an Image Isa 40.22 25. yea every Image of the Godhead is a Doctrine of Vanity and though most curiously polished yet a very stock and teacher of lyes Jer. 10.8 2. Because we have an express Command to the contrary Deut. 4.15 neither can there any toleration be found hereof representing God by the Image of a Man yea the Lord hath not onely forbidden to make Images but straitly charged that they be pulled down and broken in pieces Exod. 23.24 34.13 3. Because the Lord is wonderfully provoked by Images as appears Exod. 32. 4. Because Images have often been occasions of Idolatry Judges 8.27 2 Kings 18.4 5. Because it is a thing scandalous to such as be without the Jews and Turks are hereby hardned against the Christian Religion when they compare Moses his Law with the practice of Romish Catholicks and their temporizing adhering Apes So that all Images are to be abolished in all Christian Churches for these Reasons viz. 1. Because of the Commandment of God for this abolishing of Idols is it that Jehu Hezekiah and Josias are so praised in Scripture 2. In respect of our Confession of our Profession of the sincere Worship of God and of our hatred against Idolatry which consists not in words onely but also in actions and in outward shew and signs 3. For avoiding of offence and Superstition lest by retaining of ancient Images the same danger come to the Church and ignorant people thereby which in times past we see to have issued hence In abolishing of Images two things are to be observed 1. That the Doctrine concerning the true Worship of God be preached before the abolishing of Idols So did Josias Let the Word go before and the Idols will fall to the ground 2. The Images and their Altars and the like Instruments must be taken away not by private men but by publike
out Hypocrites have no sound hearts and therefore they must needs at length be made manifest 2. Because a lyar will one time or other miserably forget himself and every Hypocrite is a lyar because he speaks one thing with his mouth and entertains another in his heart therefore doth the Apostle joyn them together They speak lyes in hypocrisie 1 Tim. 4.2 Moral Honesty being of near relation to Hypocrisie observe the difference betwixt the Righteousness of faith and the Righteousness thereof 1. The Fountain or Original of the Righteousness of Faith is the sanctifying Spirit but the cause of the Righteousness of Moral Honesty may be goodness of Constitution and Ingeniousness 2. The Righteousness of Civil Honesty in outward actions may make a colourable pretence of Piety but hath many secret relations to by-respects but that of Faith hath in all actions for the main scope and principal end onely the glory of God 3. That of Faith doth labor religiously and conscionably in that particular Calling wherein Gods Providence hath placed a man and in all the parts and special Duties of Godliness and Obedience but Civil Honesty wanders in the generalities of Religion 4. That of Faith doth strive with most earnest contention of Spirit for Spiritual comfort and a good Conscience before God but Civil Honesty is fully satisfied with Credit and Plausibleness among men 5. Civil Honesty makes no great conscience of small sins but the other makes resistance to all known sins 6. Civil Honesty doth not use to make opposition against the sins of the time but the other doth stand out for the honor of God unto the death The degrees of saving Faith which are peculiar to the children of God distinguish the Regenerate man from the state of the formal Hypocrite 1. A feeling and special approbation of the Word of Life and Promises of Salvation that with it he holds himself an heir of Heaven without it a childe of endless Perdition 2. A most fervent thirsting for the enjoyment of them enforced with groans unutterable and a gasping for it as the dry and thirsty ground for the refreshing drops of rain 3. An effectual Apprehension of them with a fast and everlasting hold 4. A particular Application of them closely and particularly to his own Soul 5. A full Perswasion of them being fully and truly perswaded by Gods good Spirit out of a consideration of his universal change that they are his own for ever 6. A Delight and Joy thence rising sound and unconquerable he lies down in peace that passeth all understanding he is filled with joy that no man can take from him he delights in the Grace apprehended as in a treasure far more dear then the glory of infinite Worlds yea or Life it self And from the power and working of this inward grace spring out Actions outward both in his general Calling of Christianity and his particular Vocation which by the Mercies of God are Faithful Constant Uniform Impartial Resolute Universal and Comfortable The Degrees of that Temporary Faith which the Formal Hypocrite may have viz. 1. He may be endewed with understanding and knowledge in the Word of God 2. He may be perswaded that it is divinely inspired and that it is most true 3. He may see clearly by the Law of God the grievous intolerableness of his sins and the heavy Judgements due unto them 4. He may be amazed and terrified with fearful horror and remorse of Conscience for his sins 5. He may give assent unto the Covenant of Grace in Christ as most certain and sure and may conceive That Christs Merits are of an invaluable price and a most precious Restorative to a languishing Soul 6. He may be perswaded in a generality and confused maner that the Lord will make good his Covenant of Grace unto the Members of his Church 7. He may be troubled in minde with grudgings and distractions with reluctation and scruples before the Commission of sin Like Pilate before his Judgement on Christ and Herod before his beheading of John Baptist 8. After a sin committed beside the outward forms of Humiliation by the power of this Temporary Faith he may be inwardly touched and affected with some kinde and degree of Repentance and Sorrow which may sometimes prevent temporal Judgements as in Achab and with a slumbering and superficial quiet secure the Conscience for a time The causes whereby Hypocrisie is many times by the world unjustly laid unto the charge of the children of God 1. Suspiciousness an Argument ever of worthlesness and impotency for insufficiency is most suspitious That suspition by which a man doth cast the worth actions and affections 〈…〉 in his own mould and thinks every man obno●●●●● to all the infirmities he findes in himself 2. Disability and blindeness in the natural man of discerning and acknowledging the operations of grace For no man can see the actions of grace in another without the experience of the power of godliness upon his own Soul We may know whether we have sincerity or not by these signs 1. If we approve our selves to God in all things not to man 1 Thess 2.4 and seek to have the Testimony of a good Conscience 2. If we are ready to yield simple and absolute obedience to Gods Word though our reason be often ready to cross the same even to all Gods Commands Psal 119.6 3. If we Repent of all sin and not retain any one but hate sin unfainedly in our selves and others 4. If we truly humble our selves in the sight of God casting our selves down in his presence confessing our own vileness and unworthiness to appear before him Mic. 6.8 5. If we be confident in good Causes and couragious especially in time of peril Prov. 10.9 6. If we be constant and persevere unto the end in well-doing and be resolved never to give over a continued course of Piety till we have finished the course of our Life the pilgrimage of our Misery The infallible Marks whereby to discern the hollowest hearted hypocrite 1. His chiefest care is to seek the pomp and glory of the World to be highly esteemed of others and never regarding the glory of God or what he esteems of him 1 Sam. 15.30 2. Hypocrites are sharp-sighted and have Eagles eyes to observe the behavior and look into the lives of other men but are as blinde in regarding as backward in reforming their own Luke 18.11 Matth. 7.3 4 5. We ought to begin with our selves and end with others 3. They are more curious in the observation of the ancient Traditions of men of the Customs of their Fore-fathers and of Devices of their own then of the holy Statutes and Commandments of Almighty God like the Pharisees Mat. 15. who charge not Christs Disciples with breaking the Laws of God but with transgressing the Ordinances of men which themselves made as Necessary to the Worship of God 4. They are precise in Trisles and loose in Weighty Affairs they binde and lay such
Revenge when a man hath carried a grudge in his heart long before 2. Without Deliberation when a man without all former malice is suddenly carried by fury and anger to slay another This kind is distinguish'd from the other by the name of Manslaughter 2. Casual killing commonly called Chance Medley when a man killeth another having no purpose to hurt him Now this Commandment is not to be understood of Casual but Voluntary killing And the Presumptions of this Casual killing may by these viz. 1. If a man kill another having no ill-will or anger towards him nor to any other for his sake neither is moved thereto by Covetousness or any Affection 2. If he be doing the lawful duties of his particular Calling 3. If he be well occupied doing some lawful work beside his Calling 4. If he be doing a thing which he ordinarily practiseth keeping his usual place and time Killing is not always Murther for God gives a man power to kill three ways viz. 1. By the written Word Thus Princes and Governors and under them Executioners are allowed to kill Malefactors that deserve death and thus Soldiers are warranted to kill in a lawful War 2. By an extraordinary Commandment and so Abraham might lawfully have killed his Son if the Angel of the Lord had not staid his hand Gen. 22. 3. By an extraordinary instinct which is answerable to a special Commandment and so Phineas slew Zimri and Cozbi without guilt of Murther Psal 106.30 31. Murther is either 1. In the Minde onely as Anger Hatred Envying Malice c. 2. By Action 1. In the Gestures onely by our outward Members 2. In the Deed it self And this may be either By the Tongue in speech By the hand or otherwise Murther is a most grievous sin for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is the Destruction of a Little World as Man is rightly called wherein the wonderful Wildom Power Providence and Mercy of God doth as much appear 2. Because it is the Defacing of Gods Image which is in every man This Reason is rendred in the first Law against Murther Gen. 9.6 David might not build the Temple because he had shed blood 3. Because it is an Encroaching upon Gods Office to whom alone it belongeth to call men when it pleaseth him out of this world And God hath not made man with such offensive parts as he hath done other Creatures 4. Because it is the greatest breach of Love and Peace and so the greatest sin against man Joh. 8.44 Therefore the sin of Murther singularly is said to desile the Land Numb 35.37 To avoid this horrible sin of Murther let us sly these sins especially 1. Pride the very Fountain of Contention which Murther followeth for Pride will endure nothing and is so wasteful upon it self that the Poor may starve and perish without relief 2. Covetousness for he that is greedy of gain will hunt after the precious life of man Prov. 1. 3. Riotness Drunkenness and Whoredom whereon much bloodshed hath followed and Self-murther 4. Hard heartedness when we have objects of pity for we make our selves accessary of their death who perish whom our relief might have preserved Prov. 21.13 Cruelty is one main Breach of this Commandment The Properties whereof are these viz. 1. In the very look and countenance Such was Cains towards Abel Gen. 4. and Labans against Jacob Gen. 31.2 2. In the behavior when it is harsh and churlish Such was Nabals 1 Sam. 23.3 3. When any way too much severity is used by the Rich towards the Poor by Officers towards Malefactors or by Governors towards such as are under them expressing a hateful minde towards them 4. In the unmerciful usage of the dumb Creatures working them without Reason pinching them in things necessary beating or killing them without mercy or otherwise using them so as they grow diseased thereby All these shew a cruel minde Prov. 12.10 5. In revenging Injuries for we must not revenge our own wrongs but leave that to God to whom it properly belongeth Rom. 12.19 Motives to perswade us to lay aside all private Revenge viz. 1. Let us lay before us the Example of Christ the Author and Finisher of our Salvation 1 Pet. 2.21 2. Let us set before us the Example of the faithful Servants that have lived in all Ages in the time of the Law and under the Gospel 3. It is Gods proper Right Office and Royalty it belongeth to him peculiarly to take vengeance and therefore is called The Lord God the Avenger Psal 94.1 4. God hath graciously passed his Promise to us That himself will take our cases into his hands and pay them home that do oppress us Rom. 12.29 It were now a fruit of infidelity to revenge our selves and not believe him at his Word 5. The consideration of the forgiveness that our selves receive at the hands of God Col. 3.13 6. It is against all good Law Right Reason and common Sense that any one man should be both Accuser Witness Judge and Executioner but every one that taketh upon him to right his own cause and to revenge himself doth all these Murther may be committed as wel against the Soul 1 Cor. 8.11 as the body of a man even when he is an occasion of his stumbling and falling into sin As thus 1. Ministers murther or at least make themselves guilty of murthering the Souls of the people committed to their charge when as through their default any of them perish Ezek. 3. 2. Parents and Masters and all private Governors are Murtherers if by their neglect or bad example their Children Servants or Pupils perish by Ignorance Prophaneness or any other sinful course of life which they might have amended in them by teaching charging reproving requiring and by good example 3. Every one that maketh his Neighbor drunk Hab. 2.15 stirreth him up to strife inticeth him to any sin or doth countenance favor and defend it to the heartening of a man on therein to his destruction shall answer as a Soul-murtherer As the very act of murther is a most odious sin so also are the degrees thereof as Railing Anger and the like For 1. The heart and tongue is hereby set on fire of the fire of Hell Jam. 3. 2. To sin thus is to be a Murtherer before God for He that hateth his brother is a Man-slayer 1 Joh. 3.15 3. It is the proper Brand of the Wicked His throat is an open Sepulchre the poison of Asps is under his lips his mouth is full of cursing and bitterness Helps to avoid Rash Anger and all such murtherous Affections may be such as these viz. 1. To consider our own weaknesses and sins Gal. 6.1 2. Tit. 3.2 2. To consider wisely the Providence of God in all indignities that are by any man offered to us as David did when Shimei cursed him 2 Sam. 16.10 3. To avoid the company of froward and hasty persons by whom thou mightest be provoked Prov. 22.24 even as a man keepeth Gunpowder
from the fire 4. To observe the countenance and behavior or a man in fury 5. To consider that all such are fools Eccl. 7.11 Prov. 12.16 6. To take into consideration the heavy Judgement belonging to this Anger Mat. 5.22 Three differences betwixt Hatred and Anger 1. Hatred is more general or of generals a man hates all Drunkards if he hate Drunkenness it hates every thing that is under the notion of sin 2. Hatred is more cruel it desires the utter destruction of the thing it hates 3. Hatred is implacable it comes from the Judgement it continues Hatred is not a Passion but an Affection and if we return to Amity it was not Hatred but Anger Anger is unlawful in these regards 1. When we conceive it without counsel and deliberation Mat. 5.22 2. When it is conceived for no cause or for a trifling cause Prov. 10.12 3. When though upon just occasion the measure of Anger is immoderate Eph. 4.26 4. When it maketh us to forget our duty towards God or man by brawling cursing or banning Eph. 4.31 5. When we are angry for private respects concerning our person and not for the Cause of God The Remedies of unjust Anger are twofold viz. 1. Some consist in Meditation and they are of three sorts concerning 1. God 2. Our Neighbor 3. Our selves 2. Other consist in Practice Meditations concerning God as Remedies of unjust Anger viz. 1. That God expresly forbiddeth it and commandeth the contrary Mat. 5.21 22. 2. That all Injuries which befal us come by Gods Providence whereby they tend to good 2 Sam. 16.10 3. That God is long-suffering even towards wicked men Exod. 3.46 4. That the goodness of God daily forgives us more then we can forgive men 5. That all Revenge is Gods Right and he hath not given it unto man Rom. 12.19 6. That Christ suffered for us the first Death and the sorrows of the second Death Meditations concerning Man as Remedies of unjust Anger viz. 1. The Condition of him with whom we are angry namely that he is a Brother Gen. 13.8 Again that he is created in the Image of God 2. Concerning that Equity which we look for at the hands of all men knowing our selves are infirm and may offend others Mat. 7.12 Meditations concerning our selves as Remedies of unjust Anger viz. 1. He that conceiveth Rash Anger makes himself subject to Gods wrath if he cherish the same without relenting Mat. 6.15 2. We are commanded to love one another as Christ hath loved us Eph. 5.2 3. We are ignorant of mens mindes in speaking and doing of the maner and circumstance of their actions 4. In Rash Anger we can do no part of Gods Worship that is pleasing to him Jam. 1.20 21. 5. We must consider what are the fruits and consequents of unjust Anger Eph. 4.27 6. We must consider the causes of unjust Anger for they are not good The Remedies of unjust Anger which stand in Practice are especially five 1. In the time of Anger to conclude the same both in word and deed Prov. 12.16 2. We must depart from them with whom we are angry 1 Sam. 20.34 3. We must avoid the occasions thereof as Contentions and contentious persons Phil. 2.3 Prov. 22.26 4. The course of our Anger must be turned against our own selves for our sins 2 Cor. 7.11 5. We must daily pray for the mortification of this evil Affection Motives to abhor Wrath and unjust Anger 1. The Example of Bruits who though never so fierce are yet gentle to each other of their own kinde 2. Consider that we came into the world weak naked and unarmed 3. The consideration of Christs Sufferings for us whereof if we will share we must suffer also 4. All our Actions are abominable to God so long as we continue in wrath 5. The wrathful man lives in a continual vexation of Conscience 6. We must not let the Sun go down upon our wrath There is an Anger which is no breach of this Commandment but is commanded Eph. 4.26 and is an holy Anger The properties whereof are these viz. 1. It is against sin and not against that which is a private displeasure Thus was Moses angry when he broke the two Tables at the sight of the peoples Idolatry 2. It is onely because God is offended for the same sin may be to the offending of God and of our selves also because it is some injury to us 3. It is not sudden but upon deliberation according to that Precept Be slow to wrath Jam. 1.19 4. It doth not continue long but is soon over again where there is Repentance Eph. 4.26 5. It ariseth from Love and is guided by Love the Love of God and the Love of our Neighbor that hath offended for whatsoever is without this is sin In just and lawful Anger there are three things viz. 1. A right Beginning or Motive 2. A right Object 3. A right Maner of being angry To the right Beginning of Anger three things are required viz. 1. That the occasion be just and weighty as manifest offence against God Exod. 32.19 16.20 2. That it be conceived upon counsel and deliberation Prov. 20.18 3. That it be kindled and stirred up by good and holy affections as by desire to maintain Gods Honor by the love of Justice and Vertue by the hatred and detestation of Vice and all that 's evil The right Object of just Anger is twofold 1. The sin of the person not the person himself but by reason of the sin Psal 119.139 2. The cause and offence of God properly not any private offence of man Three Cautions to be observed in the right maner of conceiving anger viz. 1. That our Anger be mixed and tempered with Charity and Love Hab. 3.2 2. Anger against any offence must be mixed with sorrow for the same offence Mark 3.5 3. It must be contained within the bounds of our particular Calling and Civil Decency Gen. 31.36 And must like poison be with all speed purged out of the body and veins lest it destroy the whole Likewise Envy is a Breach of this Commandment but it is twofold 1. Good when beholding the perfections of other men we are angry with our own imperfections and seriously labor to be equal at least to imitate the good qualities which we see to flourish more in others then in our selves This is called Emulation 2. Bad Envy when we grieve that the like good qualities are not in us or not as well in us as in another yet labor not for them And this produceth Detraction Discord Disdain Murmuring Hatred and the like All Gods people must beware of Envy and that for these special Reasons viz. 1. Because it is a fruit of the flesh Gal. 5.21 2. Because it procureth the wrath of God and is never left without punishment Numb 12.10 3. It transforms us into the Image of Satan whose Envy sadly appears Gen. 3.5 4. It often presumes to cross and control the Providence of God
became obedient to the death even that ignominious death of the Cross and shall not we suffer an ignominious life by Poverty without making it more ignominious by Theft Usury is a main breach of this Commandment as being a Gain exacted by Covenant above the Principal onely in lieu and recompence of lending it and being thus considered it is quite contrary to Gods Word yet is it lawful sometimes to take above the Principal but with these conditions viz. 1. If a man take heed that he exact nothing but that which his Debter can get by good and lawful means 2. He may not take more then the gain nay not all the gain nor that part of the gain which drinks up the living of him which useth the Money 3. He must sometimes be so far from taking gain that he must not require the Principal if his Debter be by inevitable and just casualties impoverished and it be also plain that he could not make no not by great diligence any commodity of the Money borrowed Reasons why a man may sometimes take above the Principal viz. 1. That which the Debter may give having himself an honest gain besides and no man any ways endamaged that the Creditor may safely receive 2. It is convenient that he which hath money lent him and gaineth by it should shew all possible gratitude to him by whose goods he is enriched 3. It is often for the benefit of the Creditor to have the goods in his own hands which he lent whereby he is prejudiced by the forbearance and therefore may justly expect not exact reparation from the Rich not the Poor Lending is twofold viz. 1. Of Due which is the Loan of the Rich to the Poor when his Necessity compels him to borrow and for this a man cannot with good conscience take any encrease 2. Of Courtesie when one rich friend lends unto another this is left to a mans own liberty and discretion and hath not any particular Promise of Reward not in this case is all taking of Encrease simply condemned even for these Reasons in these cases 1. When the encrease is given onely in way of thankfulness for ingratitude is abhorred of all and the Law of Natures requires to do good for good and all Divines allow this kinde of encrease 2. When a man sustaineth damage by his lending he may receive encrease by way of Satisfaction for his loss 3. When a man is contented to adventure his Principal in the hand of him that borroweth it like as a man may receive hire for his Horse or other goods standing to the loss Exod. 22.14 Three general Rules set down by Paul Rom. 14. to direct us in all our actions that we commit not this or any other sin viz. 1. He is happy that condemneth not himself in the use of those things which he knoweth to be lawful This concerneth those that be strong 2. No man must do any thing with a doubtful Conscience for such a one woundeth his own Conscience and offendeth God though perhaps the thing be in it self good which he doth Rom. 14.23 Such a one doth many good things that do displease God which would please him if they were well and rightly done This Rule belongeth to the weak 3. Whatsoever proceedeth not from Faith is a sin committed against God and condemneth him that doth it forasmuch as without Faith its impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 And this Rule engendereth two others viz. 1. Whatsoever proceedeth from meer Naturals whatsoever cometh from the force of any free will in us is sin in the sight of God 2. All the Vertues and actions of the Infidels and Unbelievers though in the substance of the works and as they are the gifts of God they are not evil but good yet in the Judgement of God they are sins Corruption of judgement being also another main breach of this Commandment See to it ye Great Ones and know That Judgement is corrupted four ways viz. 1. Through Fear when we dread to pronounce Truth for fear of offending great persons So did Pilate wrest the Law and sin against his own Conscience for fear of Herod 2. Through Covetousness when we are corrupted by Bribes and hired for Money which blinde the eyes of the wise So did Felix gape after gain and look for Rewards Acts 24.26 3. Through Hatred and Malice for as Naboths Vineyard was Ahabs Sickness so he dealt corruptly with Michaiah because he hated him and could not abide him 1 Kings 22.8 27. 4. Through Favor and Affection when we seek to gratifie or pleasure our Kinsmen or Acquaintance as Pilate did to please Herod In this sense it is that the Lord will not have even the poor man countenanced in his cause Exod. 23.3 The sins forbidden in this Commandment viz. 1. Inordinate living whether it be in no set Calling or idly wherein by neglecting their duties such persons mis-spend their time goods and revenues 2 Thess 3.11 Gen. 3.19 1 Tim. 5.8 2. Unjust dealing in heart which is called Covetousness Mat. 15.19 3. Unjust dealing in deed which is either in bargaining or out of bargaining Unjust dealing in bargaining hath many branches viz. 1. To sell and bargain for that which is not saleable 2. All coloured forgery and deceit in bargaining as using forged cavillation Luke 19.8 or when men sell that which is counterfeit for good as Copper for Gold and mingle any ways bad with good making shew onely of the good Amos 8.4 5 6. by mixture of base things of little or no value with things of price in the sale thereof or by setting a counterfeit gloss on imperfect Ware by sophisticating any Wares or using false lights or slights 3. By false Weights and Measures This is an abomination to the Lord Deut. 25.13 14 16. Lev. 19.35 36. Amos 8.4 4. By over-reaching the Buyer by dissembling lying and extolling speeches when the Ware is unworthy or when the Buyer concealeth the goodness of the thing or the Seller the faults of it and blindefoldeth the Truth with counterfeit speeches Mat. 7.12 Prov. 20.14 5. By Factions when as two or three compact together by offering to buy what they intend not to deceive him that intendeth to buy indeed 6. When in buying and selling the people are oppressed as by raising the just price of things by inhancing the price by reason of a set day for payment by Ingrossing or Monopolizing any Commodity by becoming Bankrupt to be enriched by the damages and goods of other men 7. By not restoring that which was lent pledg'd or found Ezek. 18.7 by delaying any kinde of Restitution from one day to another Prov. 3.18 Psal 37.21 or by practising Usury Psal 15.5 Exod. 22.25 or by detaining the laborers wages Jam. 5.4 4. Unjust dealing out of bargaining is likewise manifold viz. 1. To pronounce false Sentence or Judgement for a Reward either proffer'd or promised Isa 1.23 This is the Lawyers and the Judges sin 2. To feed or clothe stout
worse sense 24. To defend an evil Cause and impugn the contrary 25. To write or spread abroad infamous Libels 26. To raze Deeds or any Testimonial Evidences 27. To counterfeit another mans hand or to forge any thing 28. To suppress the Truth whether by fraud violence favor or by any other means 29. By delivering our judgement of any person or thing in words of a double sense 30. To refuse to give Testimony when we can and ought being lawfully thereto required by the Magistrate 31. To deny to give an account of our Faith when Error stands in competition with Truth 32. To lye though it be for never so good an end Zech. 13.3 The Vertues required in this Commandment viz. 1. A Rejoycing for the Credit and good Estimation of our Neighbor Gal. 5.22 2. Willingly to acknowledge that goodness we see in any man whatsoever and onely to speak of the same Tit. 3.2 Moreover we must withal desire receive and believe Reports of our Neighbors good Acts 16.1 2 3. Notwithstanding this must be so performed by us that in no wise we approve or allow of the vices and faults of men 2 Chron. 25.2 27.2 3. Fairness of Minde being a vertue taking well things well or doubtfully spoken or done and interpreting them in the better part as far as there are any reasonable causes to induce thereto and doth not easily conceive suspitions neither sticketh upon suspitions though they be such as are just and have reasonable causes nor determineth ought by them unless the Honor of God be interested therein yea to interpret a doubtful evil to the better part 1 Cor. 13.5 7. Gen. 37.31 32 33. 4. Not to believe an evil Report running abroad amongst the Common People by the whispering of Talebearers as it were by Conduit-pipes Psal 15.3 Jer. 40.14 16. Prov. 25.23 5. Taciturnity or Silentness which withholdeth in silence things secret and unnecessary to be spoken where when and as far as is needful and avoiding overmuch babling and talkativeness to keep secret the offence of our Neighbor except it must of necessity be revealed Prov. 10.12 Mat 1.19 18.16 Contrary hereto is prating and foolish pratling also Peevishness and Morosity 6. To get a good Name and Estimation among men and to keep the same when we have gotten it Phil. 4.8 Now a good Name is gotten thus viz. 1. If we seek the Kingdom of God before all things repenting us of our sins and with an earnest desire embrace and follow after Righteousness Prov. 10.7 Mark 14.9 2. We must have a care both to judge and speak well of others Mat. 7.2 Eccl. 7.13 3. We must abstain from all kinde of wickedness for one onely vice or sin doth obscure and darken a mans good Name Eccl. 10.1 4. We must in all things earnestly seek for the Glory of God onely and not our own Mat. 6.5 6. 7. Truth which is a firm Election in the Will whereby we constantly embrace true Sentences and Opinions speak that which is true keep Covenants and Promises and avoid all deceitful dissembling both in speech and outward gesture and all to the Glory of God and the Safety of our Neighbor Repugnant to this vertue are all Lyes as well Lyes of courtesie called Officious Lyes as others also vanity or levity and the like 8. Simplicity which is open Truth without wrinkles or circumlocutions a vertue which doth properly and plainly speak and do such things as are true right and honest with a single heart To this is repugnant Doubleness in Maners and Conversation 9. Constancy being a vertue not departing from the known Truth neither altering purpose without good and necessary causes but constantly speaking and doing such things as are True Just and Necessary Contrary whereto is Lightness and Pertinacy 10. Affability or Readiness of speaking which is a vertue gladly and with signification of good will hearing answering speaking where need is upon a necessary cause Rash Censure of men being a high breach of this Commandment may be committed these many ways viz. 1. When things are well done to carp and cavil at them without cause that is just 2. When actions and speeches indifferent are taken in the worse sense 3. When upon light occasion and uncertain Reports we suspect and surmise evil of our Neighbor 4. When we see any want in our Neighbors speech or behavior to make it worse then it was or indeed it is 5. When we spread abroad and publish the wants of men to defame them which might better be concealed and in Conscience and Charity ought so to be 6. When we speak nothing but the Truth of another yet withal do insinuate thereby some evil of the party in the hearts of the hearers This is a pestilent practice and too much used 7. When in hearing the Word Preached and sins reproved in the Congregation some misapply the same with spight against the Ministers person or his Ministery Reasons against Rash Judgement viz. 1. The practice of it cannot stand with Christian Charity for Charity bindes us to walk in Love and Love suspecteth not evil but thinks the best always 2. When thou seest a man erre consider thy self art or may be guilty of the like or worse 3. Consider That God the Father hath committed all Judgement unto his Son who now judgeth by his Ministers 4. Consider That thou art unable to judge aright of other mens actions being ignorant of many circumstances thereof for thou knowest not haply with what minde or to what end the action was done nor the cause why he did it nor the state of his person nor the maner of his temptation thereto 5. He that gives rash Judgement of another is worse then a Thief that steals away a mans goods for he robs him of his good Name which Solomon saith is to be chosen above great riches Prov. 22.1 Three things Required in judging of others aright viz. 1. We must have recourse to the cause of our Judgement for if the Cause be insufficient then our Judgement is Rash and unlawful 2. We must have Authority and Warrant by lawful calling to give Judgement or else some thing which is answerable thereto though the Judgement be private for private men in private Judgement though they want this Authority by a lawful calling yet if they have that which is answerable thereto that is the Affection of Christian Love then they may judge 3. We must alway have a good end of our Judgement that is the Reformation and amendment not the defarning of our Brother Since Truth is the chief and principal thing required in this Commandment consider in the last place that there is a fourfold Truth viz. 1. Of Judgement when a mans Judgement agreeth with Gods Word which is the Touchstone of Truth So as the Principles of that Religion which he professeth and his opinion concerning the same are ground thereon and may be warranted thereby This is the ground of all the rest to which must
whereof are not quite extinct in us by sin for every man thinks reverently of God by Nature 3. At the first conceiving of them the party is smitten with an extraordinary fear his flesh is troubled and oftentimes sickness and faintings do follow Unclean thoughts which have their residence in the minde of man are of two sorts viz. 1. Inward and such as have their Original from the flesh and arise of the corruption of mans Nature though stirred up by the Devil These at the very first conceiving are our sins though they have no long abode in the heart 2. Outward and are such as have relation to an outward cause or beginning Of which sort are those evil thoughts that are conveyed into the minde by the Devil and if we take no pleasure in them nor yield consent unto them they are not to be accounted our sins but the Devils by whom they were suggested Divers are the kindes of wicked Thoughts These three are the most common viz. 1. Voluptuous set upon Vanities Pleasures Delights Sports and such like 2. Ambitious set upon Pride aspiring after Honor who shall be greatest 3. Malicious enviously bent towards others seeking to do Mischief The Conditions required in Wishing Evil against others that our Thoughts may not be evil viz. 1. All Imprecations or evil Wishings which are made absolutely without some Prophesie or special Revelation are Sins 2. They must be done without private hatred and desire of Revenge 3. They must be done in respect of Gods glory onely and the preservation of the true Church 4. We must not imprecate or wish evil as it is an evil as it is the Destruction of them against whom we wish it Two special Rules to guard and keep the heart safe from evil thoughts 1. That the Word of God dwell plentifully in us by daily meditation of the Commandments Promises and Threatnings revealed in the same 2. To establish our Thoughts by counsel Prov. 20.18 that is not once to think or conceive so much as a thought but upon advice and direction taken at God and his Word This Rule we must practice in the use of our Senses Speeches and Actions Can man be when the Heart gives not consent Guilly the Breach of this Commandment 'T is so for since our Parents fell we all Are subject to this Sin Original ●et so as first we must take pleasure in This new conceived Embryo of Sin ●r if we hate the Thought strive to reject The Motions that do on our Hearts reflect The Sin is Satans and not ours for we Not tickled with this thought of Sin are free CHAP. VI. Of Gods Love to Man of Election Creation Redemption Vocation Justification Sanctification Adoption Regeneration Conversion from Sin to Good Works Repentance and New-Obedience I. THe greatest Evidence of Gods Love that could be given consisteth in the Forgiveness of Sin which is well known to all that know the end of Christs coming which was to save Sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 and the extent of this Love of God reacheth to all Sins except that against the Holy Ghost which neither is unremissable in its own nature as it is sin but as the party so sinning is uncapable of Repentance and consequently of Mercy so that there is no sin that excepted but cometh within the compass of Gods Mercy and Pardon upon Repentance The Reason is because the Mercy of God is greater then all sins whatsoever and the Sacrifice of Christ is a sufficient Price of Redemption for all his blood cleanseth from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 From this extent of Gods Love it may be well inferred That Mans destruction is of himself either because he maliciously despights the Spirit of Grace or wilfully rejects the offer of Pardon In the order of Redemption God hath made mans sin pardonable but man by his impenitency makes it not to be pardoned for God excludeth none from the participation of his Mercy his Pardon being offered to all which yet must be understood of Gods outward Dispensation and Manifestation of his Mercy by the Ministery of the Word wherein no difference is made betwixt persons nor exemption of any So as it calleth not into question the Secret Counsel and Eternal Decree of God Again it must be known That it is to be referred to the several degrees sorts and conditions of men betwixt which God maketh no difference as Honorable Mean Rich Poor Learned Unlearned Old Yong Free Bond Male Female Magistrate Subject c. Lastly it is to be applied to the All sufficiency of Christs Sacrifice which is available to take away the sins of the most notorious sinners that can be as well as any other sinners Gods love to Man appears both 1. In this life 1. Before the Fall in making us after his own Image 2. After the Fall by repairing his Image again in us which we had lost 2. In the World to come by crowning us with Immortality for the Goodness of God endureth for ever Psal 103.17 Gods love to Man opened in the Scripture by these degrees viz. 1. God hath no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live Ezek. 33.11 2. That he deferreth mitigateth and taketh away punishments inviting all men to Repentance 3. That he debaseth himself to relieve our infirmities by his Spirit Word Sacraments and Miracles 4. That he embraceth with singular love his Chosen so that he saveth and delivereth them for ever from sin and all Evils and comforteth all in Afflictions Rev. 7.21 5. That he chose rather to bring to pass this our Delivery even by the Incarnation and Death of his onely begotten Son then that all Mankinde should perish Joh. 3. 6. That he promiseth and performeth all those things of his own free goodness Exod. 34.19 7. That he doth those things towards sinners not onely unworthy of them but even his Enemies Rom. 5.10 Two things which highly commend Gods love viz. 1. The Freeness of his Grace which is every way so free that the Goodness which he sheweth to his creature is altogether of himself and from himself Joh. 3.16 Rom. 5.10 when there was none to mediate for us Gen. 3.15 God offered Grace and freely gave his Son to be a Mediator This is to be opposed against mans unworthiness 2. The Riches of his Mercy which are unutterable unconceiveable according to Gods Greatness so is his Mercy Infinite and reacheth above the Heavens so as he may be said to be Rich in Mercy Eph. 2.4 Abundant in Goodness Exod. 34.6 This is to be opposed to the Multitude and the Heinousness of our Sins God is Rich in Love and Mercy to Man divers ways viz. 1. Because he doth perform more effects of his Love in regard of himself then we have need of or our misery require for to the Remission of sins a simple Pardon had been sufficient but hereto he addes the gift of his Son by his death to satisfie for us by his
Spirit to Regenerate and Sanctifie us c. 2. He doth never cease to communicate his Love unto us it is never dry 3. He Loves us for our own good having no need of us he gets nought by it 4. He Redeems us from all sins gives us Faith and Repentance freely we deserve it not 5. He Dyed for us even when we were his very Enemies the Children of wrath 6. He Prevents us with his Grace when we sought not to him for it 7. He Bestows Temporal Favors and withholds present Afflictions from the Reprobate 8. He Prosecutes us with his Love unto the end and in the end gives us the Salvation of our Souls the end of our Faith The consideration of Gods Love must Teach us these Duties viz. 1. To beware of all sin whereby we do offend and displease our God who is so gracious unto us 2. To trust God with our Lives Healths Bodies Estates and all we have for Food Raiment and Protection in the sober use of all lawful means 3. To seek for help and succor from God in all distresses and want 4. To love so bountiful a God yea to enforce our hearts to all duties of love to him 5. To be thankful to God for all good things we enjoy for whatever good we have comes from him 6. We must labor continually in heart and life to walk worthy of the Lord and to please him in all things being fruitful in all good works Col. 1.10 The Duties required of such of us to whom Gods Love hath been specially manifested in raising us who before were weak and contemptible in the world to be Instruments of his Glory viz. 1. We must confess our selves miserable by Nature and no good thing in us to raise up our selves above others being no way better then others 2. We must consider That whatsoever we have it is Gods gift we have received at his hands it cometh down from above and therefore let us not glory as if we had not received it 1 Cor. 4.7 3. We must walk worthy of our Calling even of those Mercies which we have tasted and acknowledge our selves to be unworthy of them 4. We must be humble in our own eyes and not boast of any thing in our selves or in our own merits nor think our selves worthy to be regarded of him 5. If we be thankful for lesser Mercies we may be assured of greater and of fatter blessings 6. We must keep a Register of his blessings and so settle them in our hearts that we forget them not but may thereby be provoked to set forth his praise II. ELection is a Decree in which God according to the good pleasure of his Will hath certainly Chosen some men to Life Eternal in Christ and that for the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 1.4 5. God Decree is that by which God hath necessarily and yet freely from all Eternity Isa 46.10 determined all things Howbeit the Decree of God is the first and Principal Cause of all things yet it doth not take away the nature and property of second Causes Eph. 1.12 Mat. 10.29 Rom. 9.2 but brings them into a certain order that is directeth them unto the determinate end whereupon the effect of things are contingent or necessary as the nature of the second Cause is When Christ was offered freely to every man and one received him and another rejected him then the Mystery of Election and Reprobation was Revealed The Reason why some received him being Because God gave them a heart which to the rest he gave not but in point of offering of Christ we must be general without having respect to Election So that Predestination is the Decree of God in as much as it concerns man by which God hath ordained all men to a certain and everlasting estate that is some to Salvation in his Son 1 Thess 5.9 others to condemnation for his own glory and their sins Rom. 9.22 Reprobation is Gods Decree in the which because it so pleased him he hath purposed to resuse some men by means of Adams Fall and their own Corruptions for the manifestation of his Justice Prov. 16.4 2 Cor. 13.5 Again Election is the eternal unchangeable free and most just Decree of God whereby he hath decreed to convert some to Christ to preserve and keep them in Faith and Repentance and by him to give them Eternal Life So Predestination is an Eternal Decree or Purpose of God in time causing effectual Grace in all those whom he hath Chosen and by this effectual Grace bringing them infallibly unto Glory Predestination being thus an immanent and eternal Act of Divine Understanding and Will cannot be conceived as dependent upon any foreseen Temporal Acts of mans Free-will for Election findeth or considereth all meer men in one and the self-same condition and it is the Grace prepared for them in Predestination which maketh the predestinate become holy and happy men They who will have God in his Divine Predestination to behold all men and elect those men consequently whom he considereth as believing and persevering in Faith and Holiness unto the last gasp are in an Error for our Election is not grounded upon any foreseen acts in us of Obeying Believing Persevering and the like but these acts are grounded upon our Election for whoever is predestinated to Salvation is also predestinated to the Grace of Believing Obeying and the like otherwise it were a conditional Predestination but there is none such for whoever is elected to Salvation is predestinated also to the means of Salvation God in his most gracious Decree of Election is as absolutely and certainly ordaining men unto Saving Grace as unto Everlasting Life and Glory And this Grace prepared for the Elect in Gods Eternal Predestination and bestowed upon them in the Temporal Dispensations so causeth their Belief Repentance Perseverance as that it imposeth no necessity or violent coaction upon the Wills of men but causeth their free and voluntary Endeavors All that are inwardly and effectually called are Elected but many are called onely outwardly few such are chosen Now that God hath chosen some and passed by others he is not at all cruel for he owed not his Grace to any but justly might have suffered all Mankinde to have perished That some are Elect and some Reprobate is known unto us in general but not in special whether this or that man be but of our own Election every of us not onely may but ought to be in special certain and assured whereof he may be by the effect which is Conversion that is true Faith and true Repentance Now if any one shall think that the Election of some before others in regard of Gods special Mercy came from this That God foresaw something in them which was not in the others let him hear what Moses saith to the Jews The Lord did not set his love upon you nor chuse you for your multitude but because the Lord loved you and would keep the
Cor. 1.30 Col. 1.19 in whom are hid all the treasures of it of whose fulness we receive Grace for Grace Joh. 1.16 Christs Holiness as he is Man being the Root of our Sanctification as Adams Unrighteousness was of our corruption Thus Sanctification is nothing else but the repairing of the Image of God in us which was lost in Adam which Image of God was when the understanding was enlightned with the true knowledge of God and of his Worship instead whereof by the Fall came the Ignorance of God and his Service Wickedness hating Vertue and loving Sin and weakness to every thing that is good Now Sanctification amendeth the corruption planted in our mindes and repaireth the decay of the Soul otherwise cast away and undone by Original Sin for man by Nature is an enemy to God full of wickedness and a servant of Sin This Natural corruption of the Minde Will and Affections which is amended by Sanctification we call the Flesh the created Qualities of Holiness wrought in the said Faculties by the Holy Ghost we call Spirit and Grace is the effectual working of the Truth of the Gospel to the making of us indeed partakers of the Grace whereby we are justified before God Now no man can see the Riches of Christ so as to be affected with them without the help of the Spirit for there is a maner of seeing proper onely to the Saints and that is the work of the Spirit in them otherwise we may reade the Scriptures a thousand times over we may understand them yet we shall not be affected with them till the Holy Ghost shew them unto us This is the secret of God which he revealeth to those whom he meaneth to save Now as the evidence of our Justification is a sound and true Faith so the evidence of our Sanctification is a good and clear conscience which Sanctification ever presupposeth Justification it being a fruit and evidence thereof in which respect we are said to be justified by Works Jam. 2.24 that is declared or manifested to be justified by Works which are the fruits of Sanctification and that the fruits of Justification And we must likewise know That the Gifts of Sanctification that are simply necessary to Salvation without which no man of years of discretion can enter into the Kingdom of Heaven as Faith and Repentance considered in themselves may both wholly and finally be lost for there is nothing in them or their Nature in us or our Nature to make them or us unchangeable Angels fell when left unto themselves and nothing in its own Nature is unchangeable but God by whose Grace of corroboration unless those Graces of absolute necessity be confirmed in us they may perish fully and finally So that the Reason why the Elect after their calling do not fall from Grace is not in the nature of Faith or the constancy of Grace it self but proceedeth wholly from the merciful Promise of God made unto the Faithful The parts of Sanctification viz. 1. Mortification whereby the power tyranny and strength of Original sin is weakned and also by little and little abolished 2. Vivification or Quickning which is when Christ dwells and reigns in our hearts by his Spirit so as we can say We henceforth live not but Christ in us Another division of Sanctification is taken from the Faculties of Man as the Sanctification 1. Of the Minde being that part of man which frameth the Reason this Paul calleth Eph. 4.5 The Spirit of the minde which must be renewed the Sanctification whereof is called Rev. 3. The Eye-salve for it is a Grace clearing the dark Minde and dim Understanding enlightning it with the true knowledge of Gods Word 2. Of the Memory which is an aptness by Grace to keep good things specially the Doctrine of Salvation when it can retain what is good and agreeable to Gods Will whereby David was preserved from sinning Psal 119.11 3. Of the Conscience which is an aptness to testifie always truly that a mans sins are pardoned and that he preserveth in his heart a care to please God 2 Cor. 1.12 This Testimony was Pauls rejoycing and Hezekiahs comfort on his death-bed and this is when the conscience checks for the least sins before actual Repentance 4. Of the Will when God gives Grace truly to will good as to Believe Fear and Obey God when it can chuse that which is acceptable to God and resist that which is evil when a man can say That though he sinde not to perform that which is good yet to will good is present with him Rom. 1.18 5. Of the Affections which chiefly are Zeal of Gods Glory The Fear of God Hatred of Sin Joy of heart for the approach of the second coming of Christ A regard of Gods Commandments A contentment and quietness of minde in all conditions of life Love to God in Christ and to Christ in Man 2 Cor. 5.14 Rom. 9.3 An high Estimation of Christ and his Blood above all things in the world Phil. 3.8 To love our Neighbor and to have a base Estimation of our selves in regard of our sins and corruptions 6. Of the Appetite which is a holy ordering of our desires in Meat Drink Apparel Riches c. And the practice of Sobriety Chastity and Contentation by which the Appetite must be governed 7. Of the Body when all the Members of it are carefully kept and preserved from being the means to execute any sin and are made the Instruments of Righteousness 8. Of the Life which stands principally in three things 1. In an Endeavor to do the Will of God that herein we may testifie our Thankfulness 2. In Testifying our love to God in man 3. In Denial of our selves and resigning our selves up wholly to the Lord. The first Beginnings and Motions of Sanctification are these 1. To feel our inward corruptions and to be displeased with our selves for them 2. To begin to hate sin and to grieve so oft as we offend God 3. To avoid the occasions of sin and to endeavor to do our duty using good means 4. To desire to sin no more and to pray to God for his Grace That we may not deceive our selves in this point of Sanctification consider That the Gifts and Graces of Gods Spirit are of two sorts viz. 1. General and common Graces whereby the corruption of mans Nature is onely restrained and limited for the maintaining of civil Societies that man with man may live in some order and quietness These and such like evil men may have for they are not sanctifying Vertues but rather shadows thereof which may be utterly taken away and quite lost as if they had never been given never had been received 2. More special and particular Graces whereby the corruption of mans Nature is mortified and in some part abolished and the Graces of Gods Image are renewed in man which in the Regenerate are true Christian vertues indeed These are of an higher nature and of greater importance then
the former and are proper onely to the sanctified Servants of God such are Faith Repentance Regeneration and other fruits of Election These shall never be quite lost The gifts pertaining to salvation are also of two sorts viz. 1. Simply Necessary without which a man cannot be saved such are Faith and Sanctification which is begun in this life where though it come not to full perfection contrary to the Anabaptists Dream yet can never be wholly lost 2. Others less Necessary not always going with Faith but sometimes onely and sometimes are separated for a time from it of this sort are a plentiful feeling of Gods favor boldness in Prayer joy in the Holy Ghost and a full assurance of Salvation these being not absolutely necessary nor always found in them though onely proper to them may for a time be wholly lost in the best and most approved Servants of God The outward familiar general and easily discernable marks of Difference betwixt the state of saving Grace and formal Hypocrisie viz. 1. The power of Grace doth beget in a Regenerate man a watchfulness care and conscience of smaller offences of secret sins of sinful thoughts of appearances of evil of all occasions of sin of prophane company of giving just offence in indifferent actions and the like The unregenerate Hypocrite takes not these things much to heart 2. The power of Saving Grace doth subdue and sanctifie our affections with a conscionable and holy moderation so that they become serviceable to the Glory of God and for a more resolute carriage of good causes and zealous discharge of all Christian duties but the bridling of Passions in the Formal Hypocrite is not so much of Conscience as of artificial Policy for advantage and by the guidance of Moral discretion 3. Every childe of God by the power of Saving Grace doth hunger and thirst after all those means God hath appointed or offers for his furtherance in the way to Heaven and doth make a holy use of whatsoever is publikely or privately laid upon him for his amendment therefore he continually profits and proceeds in Sanctification by his Word his Judgements and his Mercies by the exercise observation and sense whereof he grows sensible in heavenly knowledge Faith Humiliation Repentance Thankfulness and all other Spiritual Graces But the Hypocrite so far onely regards them as they further his Temporal Happiness or as his neglect of them may by consequence threaten danger to his worldly estate As the gifts of Gods Spirit are twofold so the Grace of God in Man is also twofold viz. 1. Restraining which bridleth the corruptions of mens hearts from breaking forth into outward actions for the common good that Societies may be preserved and one man may live orderly with another 2. Renewing which doth not onely restrain the corruption but also mortifieth sin and renews the heart daily more and more and the least beginnings of Grace be they never so weak are accepted of God provided they be not fleeting but constant and setled How God saveth men viz. 1. By giving of the first Grace which hath nine several actions or God gives this first Grace by nine operations but the first four are indeed no infallible fruits of Grace for so far a Reprobate may go 1. The outward means of Salvation as the Ministery Crosses c. 2. A consideration of the Law of God 3. A consideration of our particular peculiar sins 4. A smiting of the heart with legal fear 5. A stirring up of the minde after the Promises of Salvation in the Gospel 6. A kindling in the heart some sparks of Faith 7. Faiths victory by invocation over Doubting Distrust and Despair 8. A quieting of the Conscience touching the Souls Salvation 9. Grace to endeavor to obey Gods Commandments by New-Obedience 2. By giving of the second Grace which is nothing else but the continuance of the first Grace given as God doth by his Providence in preserving what he created at the beginning Among all the Graces of God which are many the principal the most special and necessary to Salvation are Knowledge Faith Repentance Hope and Charity and when God begins to kindle any seeds or sparks of Grace in the heart that is a will and desire to believe and grace to strive against Doubting and Despair at the same instant he justifieth the sinner and withal begins the work of Sanctification in him Again there are two ways or Covenants whereby God offereth Salvation to men viz. 1. Of Works by which Adam had been saved had he stood in his Innocency 2. Of Grace which is a Board given us against Shipwrack This Covenant of Grace is twofold viz. 1. Absolute and peculiar as onely to the Elect Jer. 31. Ezek. 36. the choycest of all the gifts of Grace being to have Grace to accept of Christ for though Christ be offered to all yet God intends him onely to the Elect and such as to whom he gives power grace and ability by Faith and Repentance to accept him Though the Papists say but most falsly That his intention is the same to all to Judas as to Peter and that all have sufficient grace to receive him 2. Conditional that is to all men as if you believe you shall be saved All they who are sanctified have the true Testimony of the Spirit known from carnal Presumption 1. By the Means whereby the true Testimony of the Holy Ghost is wrought ordinarily as Reading Hearing Prayer Meditation use of the Sacraments c. 2. By the Effects and Fruits of the Spirit as Prayer Invocation c. The Testimony of the Spirit is wrought two ways viz. 1. By clearing the Promises shining into our hearts by such a light as makes us able To Discern them To Believe them To Assent unto them 2. By an immediate voyce by which he speaketh immediately to our Spirits so that a man shall never be so perswaded as to have any sure or sound comfort by the Ministery of the Word be it never so powerful till there be a work of the Spirit which having done its work upon us our understandings are presently enlightned our desires ravish'd and our conversations reformed for sanctified Knowledge holy Affections and good Actions are never disjoyned The Properties whereby the joy of Spirit differeth from carnal joy 1. The joy of Spirit is brought forth of sorrow for sin and for the want of Christ 2. It is the fruit of Righteousness that is flowing from Christ believed to be made unto us by God Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption 3. It is founded in the holy use of the Word Sacraments Prayer and in the practice of Christian Duties 4. It is so fixed and rooted in the heart that it cannot be removed 5. It is eternal abiding in the minde not onely now but for ever The Battel of the Flesh and Spirit 1. The Flesh is puffed up with Ignorance and love of the World but the Spirit is endued with the Knowledge Love and Fear
conscionable dealing in all our actions amongst men Reasons that may enforce us to labor for this Sanctification viz. 1. It is the Will of God that we should be holy all impurity being contrary to his Will 1 Thess 4.3 2. It is the end of our Vocation and Calling not to live in filthy lusts and uncleanness 1 Thess 4.7 3. It is the end of our Election Eph. 1.4 we are not elected to live as we list 4. Because hereby we like obedient Children resemble our heavenly Father who is Holiness it self 1 Pet. 1.15 16. 5. Without this Holiness we have no part in the New-Birth Rev. 20.6 6. Without this Holiness we shall never see the Lord Heb. 12.14 VIII A Doption ariseth from our Union with Christ and is that whereby they which are justified are accounted of God as his own children it is annexed to Justification and thereby all such as are predestinate to be Adopted receive power to be actually accounted the Sons of God by Christ Eph. 1.5 from whose Obedience whereby he stood in subjection to the Law this Adoption springs Hence it is that we are freed from under the Law and have given unto us even the Adoption of Sons And this alone is that whereby we stand before the Tribunal Seat of God which also we are to oppose to the Judgement of God to Hell Death and Condemnation In this Grace of Adoption there be two Actions of God the one is Acceptation whereby God accepts men for his children the other is Regeneration whereby men are born of God when the Image of God is restored in them in Righteousness and true Holiness The outward means of Adoption is Baptism not Baptism alone but Baptism joyned with Faith for the Scripture speaking of Baptism comprehends both the outward and the inward Baptism which is the inward Baptism of the Spirit Mat. 3.11 1 Pet. 3.21 Now this Adoption gives us Assurance of Salvation for he that is the Adopted Son of God shall undoubtedly be saved Rom. 3.2 Moses had an higher esteem of this Grace of Adoption when he chose rather to be the Childe of God then the Heir of an Earthly Prince Heb. 11.25 So did David who though a King yet regardless of his Royalty setteth it at nought in regard of the Blessing of Adoption who otherwise could never have said That the Lord not the Kingdom of Israel was his Portion Psal 16. And so also must we have an high esteem thereof if we hope to have Heaven thereby Two Testimonies of our Adoption whereby we may know that we are Adopted viz. 1. The Spirit of God dwelling in us and testifying to our Spirit that we are the children of God 2. Our Spirit that is our Conscience sanctified and renewed by the Holy Ghost Six Notes of our Adoption out of the six Petitions of the Lords-Prayer viz. 1. An earnest and hearty desire in all things to further the glory of God 2. A care and readiness to resign our selves in subjection to God to be ruled by his Word and Spirit in thought word and deed 3. A sincere endeavor to do his Will in all things making conscience of every evil 4. Upright walking in a mans lawful Calling yet still by Faith relying on Gods Providence 5. Every day to humble a mans self before God for his offences seeking his favor in Christ 6. A continual Combat between the Flesh and the Spirit for otherwise Corruption would prevail over the whole man The Benefit the Children of God have by Adoption viz. 1. The Elect childe of God is hereby made a Brother of Christ 2. He is a King and the Kingdom of Heaven is his Inheritance 3. He is Lord over all the Creatures except the Angels 4. The holy Angels minister unto him for his good they guard him and watch about him 5. All things yea grievous afflictions and sin it self turn to his good though in its own nature it be never so hurtful 6. Being thus Adopted he may look for comfort at Gods hand answerable to the measure of his afflictions as God hath promised 7. God will provide all things necessary for the Souls and Bodies of his Adopted ones Mat. 6.26 So that they who drown themselves in worldly cares distrusting the Providence of God live like fatherless children 8. In that we are children we have liberty to come into the presence of God and to pray unto him Eph. 3.12 9. Nothing shall hurt them that are the children of God Psal 91.13 10. God will bear with the infirmities and frailties of them that be his children if there be in them a care to please him with a purpose of not sinning Mal. 3.17 Let not any man hence sin ' cause Grace doth abound Duties from Adoption viz. 1. If ye be the children of God then walk worthy your Profession and Calling for if we live according to the lusts of our flesh as the men of the world do whatsoever we profess we are in truth the children of the Devil Joh. 8.44 1 Joh. 3. 2. We must use every day to bring our selves into the presence of God and we must do all things as in his sight and presence presenting our selves unto him as Instruments of his Glory in doing of his Will This is the honor the childe of God owes unto him Mal. 1.6 3. Our care must be according to the measure of Grace to resemble Christ in all good Vertues and holy Conversation for he is our eldest Brother and therefore we should be like unto him 1 Joh. 3.2 3. 4. We must have a desire and love to the Word of God that we may grow thereby in Knowledge Grace c. This is the food whereby God feeds his children 1 Pet. 2.2 5. When we are under the Rod of Correction for God corrects all his children we must resign our selves to the will and good pleasure of God This is childe-like obedience and herewith God is well pleased IX REgeneration is a renewing and repairing of the decayed estates of our Souls or an Act of the Holy Ghost in Gods Elect whereby they are entred into a constant and faithful exercise of a godly life No general Preventing Grace in us which we have in our own power to use or refuse but the special Grace of the Spirit onely worketh in us Conversion the want whereof causeth in us our continuance in sin for it is God alone who worketh in us both to will and to do yet there is not one Effect ascribed to the Holy Ghost another to mans Will but the same to both unto the Holy Ghost the Principal Cause unto Mans Will as a Secondary and Instrumental Cause Like that vertue proceeding from that Art in the Artificers minde which guides the Instrument to frame this or that the which without it could not be done which invisible passage or secret influence we see not otherwise then in the Effect or like the vertue that directs the Arrow just to such a Mark so far and
no farther Such is the Secret Vertue Divine Power and inexpressible Efficacy of Christ that works by his Spirit on the hearts of the Regenerate being made New Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 The will and ability to do a work pleasing and acceptable to God is no mo●e in the unregenerates power then their Creation Now by our Regeneration we are assured of our Justification not as by the cause of the Effect but as by the effect of the Cause and though Regeneration be not perfect in this life yet if it be indeed begun it sufficeth for the confirmation and proving of the Truth of our Faith And though the Faithful fail in the measure of those Graces they have yet is it not such as can justly impeach the Truth of Grace It is true though it may be weak and their Sanctification is sound though imperfect the Perfecting is not a work so powerful as the Beginning of it for the very New-Birth and first act of Conversion is the most powerful work of Gods Spirit for then a Sinner is anew created of nothing in regard of Spiritual Being he is made something of a man dead in sin he is quickned and hath Spiritual life put into him As a Childe born of a Woman hath all the parts of Soul and Body so he that is born again of God hath all the parts of a New-man All the Faithful have all such Graces as are absolutely necessary to Salvation actually wrought in them no Saint wanteth any Grace that may hinder his Salvation though he should instantly dye the perfection of Sanctification is but the highest degree of that which was begun before and without Regeneration there is no attaining to this perfection Except a man be born again by Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Joh. 3.5 Hereby a man of a limb of the Devil is made a member of Christ and of a childe of Satan the childe of God Now the work of Regeneration in man is a proper and immediate work of the Godhead for to regenerate is to create and man in that he is regenerated is created again Nothing then can actively regenerate but God though Sacraments are said to regenerate as Moral Instruments because when they are rightly used God himself confers Grace by them We receive not new and Spiritual life from the Son but by the means of his Flesh apprehended by our Faith yet the power and efficacy of quickning or reviving is not in the Flesh as in a proper subject but in the Godhead And we are not in this Regeneration perfectly sanctified but onely in part not perfectly till death whence it is that a regenerate man restored by Grace is not by his Regeneration enabled to fulfil the Law perfectly yet of a meer natural man is made a new man in regard of Gods Image restored and renewed by Christ Eph. 4.24 This is the restoring of that new quality of Righteousness and Holiness lost in Adam which is as it were a new Soul for in a regenerate man there is a Body-Soul and besides the Spirit which is the Grace of Sanctification opposed to Flesh and Corruption of Nature Rom. 8.10 This is as it were the Soul of a Soul renewed without which we cannot see the Kingdom of God Joh. 3.5 And lastly he that is indeed regenerate hath this priviledge That the Corruption of Nature is no part of him neither doth it belong to his person in respect of Divine Imputation Rom. 7.17 In the work of our Regeneration these three Graces be required viz. 1. The Preventing Grace which is when God of his Mercy sets and imprints in the Minde a new light in the Will a new quality or inclination in the Heart new affections 2. The Working Grace which is when God gives to the Will the act of well-willing namely the will to Believe the will to Repent the will to Obey God in his Word 3. The Co-working Grace when God giveth the Deed to the Will that is the exercise and practice of Faith and Repentance The first of these gives the power of doing good the second the Will the third the Deed and all three together make up the work of Regeneration The Regerate man cannot do the evil he would for these Reasons viz. 1. Because he cannot commit sin at what time soever he would 1 Joh. 3.9 Thus was it with Joseph when he was assaulted by Potiphars wife to Adultery and with Lot when his righteous Soul was so vexed with the abominations of the Sodomites 2. Because the man regenerate cannot sin in that maner he would whereof there be two Reasons viz. 1. He cannot sin with full consent of Will or with all his heart because the Will so far forth as it is regenerate resisteth and dreweth back It is a Rule That sin doth not reign in the Regenerate for how much Grace is wrought in the Minde Will and Affections so much is abated proportionably of the strength of the Flesh 2. Though he fall into any sin yet he doth not lie long in it but speedily recovers himself by reason of Grace in his heart Two contrary Grounds or Beginnings of actions in man after his Regeneration 1. Natural Corruption of the Minde Will and Affections to that which is against the Law called the Flesh 2. A created Quality of Holiness wrought in the said faculties by the Holy Ghost called the Spirit These two are not severed but joyned and mingled together in all the faculties of the Soul Why the Wills of the Regenerate are enclined not onely to good but to evil also viz. 1. In this life the renewing of our Nature is not perfect neither as concerning our knowledge of God or our inclinations to obey him Rom. 7.18 2. The Regenerate be not always ruled by the Spirit but sometimes are for a time as it were left to themselves as if they were forsaken of God either for to try or to chastise or to humble them but yet are called to Repentance that they perish not Isa 63.17 for as the beginning so the continuance of our Conversion dependeth on God The work of our Regeneration is distinctly attributed in Scripture to each person in the Trinity To the Father 1 Pet. 1.3 To the Son Jam. 1.18 To the Holy Ghost Joh. 3.5 It is also attributed to the Ministery of the Word As thus 1. The Father as it were the Beginner of this work of his own will begat he us for this end he sent his Son into the world 2. The Son put in execution the Will of his Father Joh. 6.13 he took flesh upon him that we might be of his flesh being born anew Christ is not onely the Author but the Matter also of our New-Birth the new Spiritual Being which the Saints have encreaseth with the encrease of God Col. 2.19 Eph. 1.3 This cometh to pass by his Incarnation Zech. 13.1 Joh. 1.16 3. The Spirit applieth unto us the vertue and efficacy of Christs slesh
Joh. 6.63 4. The Word and the Ministery of the Word are as instruments which the Lord is pleased to use in this blessed work Jam. 1.18 The Difference betwixt Regeneration and Creation viz. 1. In our Creation Christ was onely a Worker but he is the very Matter of our Regeneration we are of his Flesh Eph. 5.30 2. The Relation that then was betwixt Christ and Man was Creator and Creature but here the Relation is Head and Body We are members of his Body Eph. 5.3 so that the Bond is now much nearer 3. The Being which then we had was from Adam but the Being which now we have is from Christ being flesh of his flesh Eph. 5.30 4. That Being was but Natural this is Spiritual for that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit Joh. 3.6 5. Man might then wholly fall from that estate wherein he was as indeed he did and yet Christ remain as he was Now it cannot be so for the Saints fall not totally and finally O the Riches of Gods Mercy who might justly have left fain Man as he did the evil Angels The Difference between one and the same work in the Regenerate and Unregenerate being sin in the one not in the other and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the Regenerate are reconciled to God the Unregenerate are not 2. The Regenerate work to the Glory of God the other quite contrary 3. In both of them the work is imperfect but the one is covered by Christs Righteousness the other not 4. The work of the godly is joyned with a beginning of Obedience but the work of the ungodly with Sin reigning Of Regeneration or the New-Birth there be four degrees viz. 1. The birth of a pure and holy Minde hating Sin and loving the Law Rom. 7.16 2. A stirring and moving in holy Duties which is a ceasing to do evil and a learning to do well doing the Duties of Piety towards God and of Love towards Man Psal 34.12 3. An earnest desire of Food whereby this new life may be maintained 1 Pet. 2.2 4. A growing up towards mans estate in Knowledge and Holiness 2 Pet. 3.18 The purifying of the Heart in the Regenerate is by a twofold action of the Holy Ghost 1. By creating in the Minde a Saving Faith which unites a man unto Christ and as a hand applieth Christs Purity that is his Obedience to the Heart Acts 15.9 2. When a man is in Christ the Holy Ghost purgeth and purifieth the Heart inwardly by mortifying all the Corruptions in the Minde Will and Affections and by putting into it inward Holiness whereby the Image of Christ is renewed Joh. 15.2 We may know whether our selves be Regenerated by the signs thereof or these fruits of the Spirit 1. A true touch of Conscience for our sins both Original and Actual 2. A godly sorrow and grief of Heart for offending and displeasing God by our Transgressions 3. An earnest desire or true Spiritual hunger and thirst after Christ and his Righteousness testified by our constant and diligent use of those means the Word Prayer and Sacraments wherein God gives Grace and assurance of Mercy 4. An unfeigned turning unto God from all sin by new Obedience having a constant purpose of heart not to sin and a godly deavor in life to please God in all things X. COnversion is a change or mutation of a corrupt Minde Life and Will into a good stirred up by the Holy Ghost through the Preaching of the Gospel in the Chosen on which ensue Good Works or a life directed according to all the Commandments of God This Conversion of a sinner is not the change of the Substance of a man or of the Faculties of the Soul but a renewing and restoring of that Purity and Holiness which was lost by Mans Fall with the abolishment of that Natural Corruption that is in all the powers of the Soul This is the work of God and of him alone who doth it not first in one part then in another but the work both for the beginning continuance and accomplishment is in the whole man and in every part at once specially in the Minde Conscience Will and Affections yet this Conversion is not wrought all at one instant but in continuance of time and that by certain measures and degrees though in the very first act and degree of Conversion the sinner is both justified adopted and incorporated into the Mystical Body of Christ Now we must know That man willeth not his own Conversion of himself by Nature either in whole or in part but by Grace wholly and alone because of the want of that Original Righteousness which was in man by Creation as also now by reason of his proneness and inclination to that which is evil and to nothing that is truly good Gen. 8.21 Rom. 8.7 for all Natural Free-will of man in things Spiritual is directly excluded Phil. 2.13 yet mans Will hath a work in doing that which is good not by Nature but by Grace for when God gives man power to will good things then he can will them and when he giveth him a power to do good then he can do good and he doth it for though there be not in mans Conversion a Natural co-operation of his Will with Gods Spirit yet is there a Supernatural co-operation by Grace enabling man when he is to be converted to will his Conversion 1 Cor. 15.10 Thus we see that man willeth his Conversion in the act thereof but yet it is God that worketh that will in him it is not of himself as the blasphemous Idolaters affirm which here offering it self to our consideration may not be thought any great digression to speak a word or two thereof This liberty of the Will is a Power Right or Ability proper unto a reasonable Nature to will any thing to chuse or refuse any object represented unto it by the Understanding and to move it self by her own proper motion without any constraint or violent compulsion from any external cause Free-will before the Fall was a fitness or aptitude in man to chuse good or evil after the Fall in man unregenerate a proneness onely to chuse evil in the Regenerate a mixt aptitude partly to do good partly evil in the Glorified to will good onely Now the state of the principal Question about Free-will is this Whether as man averted himself from God and corrupted himself so on the other side he be able of his own strength to return to God and to receive Grace offered by God and to amend himself And further Whether the Will of man be the first and principal Cause why some are converted others persist in their sins as well of the converted as not converted others are more others less good or evil some after one maner some after another doing good or evil Now the erroneous Adversaries to this Question answer it thus That so much Grace is both given of God and left by Nature to all men that
they are able to return unto God and obey him Neither that we ought to seek any other cause before or above mans Will for which others receive or retain others refuse or cast away Divine Succor and Aid in a voiding Sin and do after this or that maner order and institute their Counsels and Actions Contrary to this Opinion do we learn out of the Sacred Scripture That although by Nature so much of God and his Will be known to all as may suffice for taking away all excuse from them of sin and although it be manifest That many Works morally good may be done even of the Unregenerate and the Will doth freely in them make choyce either of good or evil yet no work pleasing to God can be undertaken or performed by any man without Regeneration and the especial Grace of the Holy Spirit Neither can more or less good be in any mans Counsels or Actions then God of his free and purposed goodness doth cause in them Neither any other way can the Will of any Creature be inclined then whither it shall seem good to the Eternal and good Counsel of God and yet all the actions of the created Will are wrought freely whether they be good or bad Now Free-will to outward good actions without an inward Faith and Obedience is not Free-will to good for outward actions good in themselves are made evil by want of inward Faith and Obedience which is onely in the Regenerate whose Wills are not taken away but corrected as which before would onely that which is evil will now that which is good Eph. 2.10 which being inclined moved and governed by Gods Spirit will themselves of their own accord and are able to work do well and work well that is because God worketh good things not onely in them but also by them as joynt-workers with him Phil. 1.6 and in them both the will and the deed even of his good pleasure Phil. 2.13 To do any thing with free arbitrement and will is to do any thing upon a fore-deliberation according to the Will of God sometimes simply and sometimes in some respect onely yea and against it also sometimes in some respect but never simply against it for the liberty of working is not taken away in any creature when God is said so to rule and bend their Wills that they be not inclined any other way then whither God will have them inclined either simply or in some sort And there is no such will of free working as excludeth all action and working of the first Cause guiding inviting and bending the Creatures Wills whither it self listeth The Wills of Angels and Men are so the causers of their actions that nevertheless they are carried by the Secret Counsel of God and his Power and Efficacy which is every where present to the chusing or refusing of any object and that immediately by God or mediately by Instruments some good some bad as it seemeth good unto God to use so that it is impossible for them to do any thing beside the Eternal Decree and Counsel of God therefore God is said to be absolutely perfectly and simply his own and at his own Will but man onely voluntary and free in some respects The Will is able notwithstanding not onely to withstand God moving it but also of its own proper motion to assent and obey him it self exercising and moving her own actions and yet this is to be understood of the actions of the Will not of the new Qualities or Inclinations which it hath to obey God for these the Will receiveth not by her own operation but by the working of the Holy Ghost And the Will of man withstanding the Revealed Will of God is yet guided by his Secret Will and therefore resisting doth not resist for the Secret Decrees of Gods Will and Providence are ever ratified and performed in those even in those who most of all withstand Gods Commandments Neither yet are there contrary Wills in God for nothing is found in his Secret Purposes which disagreeth with his Nature revealed in his Word and God openeth unto us in his Law what he approveth and liketh and what agreeth with his Nature and the order of his Minde but he doth not promise or reveal how much Grace he will or purposeth to give to every one to obey his Commandments And though God be chiefly the Mover of wicked Wills yet is he not the Mover of the Wickedness of the Wills for they disagree from the Law not as they are any way ordained by the Will of God but as they are done by Men or Devils by reason of this defect that either they do not know the Will of God when they do them or are not moved by the sight or knowledge thereof to do it that is they do it not to that end that they may obey God who will so have it For this Reason God cannot be the Author of the wickedness of the Will Besides though now since the Corruption of our Nature by the Fall we have not Free-will to convert our selves nor to turn unto God of our selves without the operation of his holy Spirit yet our inclinations bent by his Spirit the Will works freely though God works by it as an Instrument otherwise the Will were idle which cannot be And albeit God was able to have wrought what he would without the Will yet because he will work by the Will the working of the Will is not in vain nor can God hence be said to will the actions of sinners as they are sins but he wills them as they are Punishments of sins and the execution of his just Judgement And we must know That what liberty of Will we have to do good or to will it is onely but in part viz. as we are regenerated by his holy Spirit but not in whole and full neither in that degree in which before the Fall we had it and shall have in the life to come And although the Unregenerate are able to will onely those things which are evil yet they will them without constraint even by their own proper and inward motion and therefore freely but the will and ability to do good Works is no more in their power then the Creation for the liberty which is in man now after the Fall and not yet regenerated and recovered is the very bondage of sin yet God had made man such a one as was able to perform that Obedience which he requireth of him Wherefore man by his own fault and folly losing and of his own accord casting away this ability God nevertheless hath not therefore lost his Right to require Obedience from him Six things concur to constitute and make the liberty of the will viz. 1. An Object whether it be any end proposed which still is considered as good or the means whereby the end is attained 2. The Minde knowing and understanding the Object 3. The Will alike and equally apt to chuse and refuse the
VVorking Grace whereby we are delivered from the Dominion of Sin and are renewed in Minde VVill and Affections having received power to obey God 4. Co-working Grace whereby God conferreth and perfecteth the Grace of Renewing being received And without this Grace following the first is unprofitable 5. Persevering Grace whereby after that we have received the Grace of Renovation we do also receive a will to persevere and continue constantly in that good which we can do even by this gift of Perseverance The Object of Conversion is 1. Sin or Disobedience from whence we are converted 2. Righteousness or New-Obedience whereunto we are converted The subject or matter of conversion viz. 1. In the Minde and Understanding a right judgement concerning God his VVill and VVorks 2. In the VVill an earnest and ready desire purposing to obey God in all his Commandments 3. A good and reformed Affection Mans Conversion consists of these two parts viz. 1. In mortifying the Old Man that is to be truly and heartily sorry that thou hast offended God by thy sins and daily more and more to hate and eschew them 2. By quickning the New Man that is to live to God through Christ and an earnest and ready desire to order thy life according to Gods will and to do all good works The Causes of Conversion viz. 1. The Principal Efficient Cause of Conversion is the Holy Ghost 2. The Instrumental Causes or Means are first the Law then the Gospel the next Instrumental Cause is Faith 3. The Furthering Causes are the Cross and Chastisements as also Punishments Benefits Acts of Providence and Examples of others 4. The Formal Cause is the Conversion it self and the Properties thereof 5. The chief Final Cause is Gods Glory the next and subordinate end is our own good and the Conversion of others When thou art converted confirm thy Brethren How the true Conversion of the godly differs from the false Repentance of the wicked 1. In their Grief the wicked are grieved onely for the punishment ensuing not for that they offend and displease God the godly are specially grieved that God is offended 2. In the Cause the wicked repent by reason of a despair and distrust so that they more and more offend God but the godly repent by reason of Faith and a confidence they have of the Grace of God and Reconciliation in the Mediator 3. In the Effect for in the wicked New-Obedience doth not follow Repentance which always accompanieth the Repentance of the godly so that the Repentance of the wicked is no true no sound no saving Repentance The former part of Conversion is called Mortification and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because as dead men cannot shew forth the actions of one that is living so our Nature the Corruption thereof being abolished doth no more in such sort shew forth or exercise her evil actions For Mortification is by the grace and operation of the Spirit a decay and perishing of the deeds of the flesh which are evil Actions and carnal Affections 2. Because Mortification is not wrought without grief and lamenting and for this cause Mortification is called a Crucifying consisting in the subduing by a holy Discipline our inordinate lusts which rebel against God and in a patient bearing of the Cross of Christ The latter part of Conversion is called Quickning viz. 1. Because as a living man doth the actions of one that is living so Quickning is a kindling of new Faculties and Qualities in us 2. In respect of that joy which the converted have in God which indeed is such as words are not able to express nor any heart conceive but his who hath it Quickning comprehendeth those things which are contrary to Mortification 1. A Knowledge of Gods Mercy and the applying thereof in Christ 2. A Joyfulness thence arising for that God is pleased and New-Obedience is begun 3. An ardent or earnest endeavor or purpose to sin no more arising from Thankfulness and because we rejoyce that we have God appeased or pacified towards us a desire also of Righteousness and of retaining Gods love and favor being now converted from sin which next comes to be spoken of XI SIN in its proper nature is an Anomy that is a want of Conformity to the Law of God The nature of sin lies not in the action but in the maner of doing the action and sin properly is nothing formally subsisting or existing for then God should be the Author of it but it is an Ataxy or Absence of goodness in the thing that subsisteth whereupon it is truly said in Schools In peccato nihil positivum whatsoever a man doth whereof he is not certainly perswaded in judgement and conscience out of Gods Word that it may be done is sin Original Sin is the Corruption of the whole man and chiefly of the Soul of man and is not onely an absence of goodness but also a real presence of an evil property and disposition and this infection of Nature doth remain yea in them that are Regenerated For the Principle of Flesh that is in holy men may sometimes prevail mightily upon them yea so as to make them do as evil actions as the worst of men for this is a true Rule A man that excelleth in Grace may sometimes excel in ill-doing but he allows not himself therein nor is it properly he that does it but sin that dwelleth in him as the good that evil men do it cannot be said that they do it Gods Spirit may be there to help them to do much but the Spirit dwelleth not there so a man may do good and not be good On the other side things though commanded yet in the unregenerate become sins it is sin when a wicked man giveth Alms because it proceeds not from Faith and Love yet the Moral actions of the unregenerate are not to be omitted by us because in them they are sin but we must avoid the sin and perform the action avoid not the works of Hypocrites but the hypocrisie of their works Thus is sin the Corruption of a Nature created good of God but not any Creature made of God in man for it is onely an accidental Quality or natural Property of man corrupted but no substantial Property nor of the nature of man simply as he was first created Solomon hath drawn the picture of Sin to the life in the Description of an Harlot the Fawns Flatters Pleases Delights but in the end Destroys it speaks to us in Joabs language to Amasa 2 Sam. 20.10 and his kisses are as mortal or in Jaels language to Sisera Judg. 4.18 5.26 27. but the Butter in the lordly Dish will not balsum the wound it gives All sin is like the painted Harlot or the beautiful forbidden Fruit he that sucks the Honey-comb of sin sucks the Poison of Asps it is a golden Hook baited with all the Glory of the World All sin is foul filthy unclean infectious contagious and loathsom in the sight of
By Consent or Assistance so Saul in keeping the garments of them that stoned Stephen 4. By Provocation this Paul forbids Eph. 6.4 5. By Negligence or Silence of this too many Ministers are guilty 6. By Flattery when men sooth up others in Sin 7. By Connivance or slight Reproof so Eli in rebuking his Son 8. By Participation so such as are Receivers of Thieves are guilty of Theft 9. By Defending another in his Sin Why the Infirmities of the Saints are recorded in Scripture viz. 1. Not to disgrace them but to keep us from a vain opinion of our selves that we presume not on our own strength 2. To make us the more careful to look to our steps that we slip not as they did for fear we cannot rise as they did it is easie to fall but hard to rise 3. Having faln as they did we should by their Example learn to rise as they did having like Sins we should have like Repentance that we may have like Forgiveness Now the Sin against the Holy Ghost whereof he is the object not in regard of his Essence or Person but in regard of his Office or Operation consisteth of these Degrees viz. 1. A rejecting of the Gospel Heb. 8.29 2. A spightful rejecting thereof under which are comprised Malice and Hatred of Heart Blasphemy of the Tongue and Persecution 3. A spightful rejecting of the Gospel against Knowledge Heb. 10.26 4. A spightful rejecting thereof after Knowledge against Conscience 5. A wilful Gainsaying and Opposition against the inward Operation and supernatural Revelation of the holy Ghost 6. A despighting of the Spirit in such things as he revealeth to them for their own good This unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost is distinguished differeth from many other sins which come very near unto it viz. 1. From many things against Knowledge yea and against Conscience also for they may be without malice of heart which this cannot be the Elect may fall into them but not into this David and Peter sinned against Knowledge and also against Conscience 2 Sam. 11. Matth. 26.70 2. From many sins committed on Malice against Christ and his Gospel which may be done out of Ignorance 1 Tim. 1.13 As Paul did before his Conversion 3. From Blasphemy and Persecution which may be done also in Ignorance or in Passion 2 Cor. 16.10 4. From Denial of Christ which may be done out of Fear like Peter or other like Temptations 5. From Apostacy from the Faith and Profession of Religion which also may be done not out of Malice but through the Violence of some Temptation like Solomon 1 Kings 11.4 5 6. And the Levites in Captivity who though barred from the Holy Things yet were admitted to do other Services in the Temple Ezek. 44.10 c. whereby it is manifest they fell not into this unpardonable Sin 6. From Presumption and Sinning with an high hand as Manasseh did 2 Chro. 33.13 7. From Hardness of Heart from Impudency and committing Sin with Greediness for so did the Gentiles which had not the Gospel Supernaturally revealed to them 8. From Infidelity and Impenitency yea from final Infidelity and Impenitency whereinto all the Reprobate fall which is not perfectly committed till Death but the Sin against the Holy Ghost is sooner otherwise in vain had Saint Johns Caveat been concerning the not praying for them 1 John 5.16 This Sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable not simply in regard of the Greatness and Hainousness of it as if it were greater then the Mercy of God and Sacrifice of Christ but rather in regard of that Order which God hath set down and that fixed Decree and Doom which he hath both established and revealed And though God is not bound to render man a Reason of his Orders and Decrees yet it hath pleased him to make known some reasons thereof in his Word for the better satisfaction of mens mindes and justification of his own proceedings 1. Because it is impossible that they who sin against the Holy Ghost should be renued again unto Repentance Heb. 6.4 5. 2. Because they utterly renounce and quite reject the onely Means of Pardon which is Christ Jesus offered in the Gospel Heb. 10.29 3. Because they have wittingly so wholly cast themselves into Satans power and utterly renounced to have to do with God having as it were subscribed to be Satans and ever to be with him and on his side being certified in their hearts that they are wholly forsaken of God and shall be damned And thereupon they like the damned in Hell blaspheme God whom they have renounced and with spight oppugn the Gospel through an inward hatred of God the Author of Christ the Matter and of the Holy Ghost the Revealer thereof Seeing this Sin against the Holy Ghost is not committed without malice of the Will we must know that of this malice of the Will there be two Degrees viz. 1. Particular when a man wittingly and willingly sinneth against some particular Commandment as Acts 7.51 The Jews were stiff-necked and always resisted the Holy Ghost that is the Ministery of the Prophets in some things not in all 2. General Malice when a man is carried wittingly and willingly to oppugn all the Law of God yea Christ himself true Religion and Salvation by Christ and so reverseth all the Commandments This is the sin against the Holy Ghost And this being a general and universal Apostacy of this degree the Apostle saith If we sin willingly after we have received the Knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for Sins Heb. 10.26 The chief Points considerable in this Sin against the holy Ghost viz. 1. The Name it is called a Sin against the Holy Ghost not because it is done against the Person or Deity of the Holy Ghost for so he that sinneth sinneth also against both the Father and the Son but it is so called because it is done contrary to the immediate Action namely The Illumination of the Holy Ghost 2. The Efficient Cause of it which is a purposed and obstinate Malice against God and against his Christ 3. The Object namely God himself and the Mediator Christ Jesus for the Malice of this Sin is directed against the very Majesty of God himself and against Christ Heb. 10.29 4. The Subject in which it is This Sin is found in none at all but such as have been enlightned by the Holy Ghost and have tasted of the Gift of God Heb. 6.5 6. 5. The Elect cannot commit this Sin and therefore they who feel in themselves a sure Testimony of their Election need never to despair 6. This Sin cannot be forgiven not because it is greater then Christs Merit but because after the Commission thereof it is impossible for a man to repent 7. It is very hard to know when this Sin is committed because the Root thereof lurketh inwardly in the Heart That we may ever abhor the very thought of sin consider feriously these two most cursed
proceed not from Faith Yet shall the common actions of our Calling be reckoned Good Works if they come from Faith and Love if they be done as to the Lord and so he will accept them and for this cause the good purposes in many are naught because they have not Faith for their ground Good Works are the Fruit of Sanctification they go not before Justification but they follow after a man is justified For first by Grace we are justified and being justified we perform Good Works for man cannot do any work that is good and godly being not yet Regenerate but when he is prevented by the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit by the Holy Ghost then he may do good Works and the best Works before the Grace of Christ and the Inspiration of his Spirit are not pleasing to God forasmuch as they spring not of Faith yea before Justification they have the Nature of Sin Now here we must know that good Works are in a kinde necessary to Salvation yet not as Causes thereof either efficient or helping any way but onely as an evidence whereby we may know that we are in the way to Salvation For Faith is necessary and good Works are the Tokens and Fruits of Faith and so are necessary also In a Good Work 1. The End thereof must be the glory of God which chiefly consists in Fear Obedience Thankfulness 2. The Action it self in its own Nature must be just and warrantable 3. The Circumstances honest and seasonable proportioned to the justness of the Work it self 4. The Means direct and lawful and approveable in the sight of God 5. The Fountain the Heart sincere and sanctified In the doing of every good Work acceptable to God these Rules are to be observed viz. 1. The person of the Doer must be acceptable to God by a justifying Faith 2. The Word of God must be thy warrant for the doing of the Work 3. The Actions end must be Gods glory 4. The Work must be done in Faith because in wel-doing a man must testifie his Fidelity to God we must be sure perswaded out of Gods Word that the things we do are approved of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin 5. Love is necessary in every good Work we go about for Faith worketh by Love 6. Service to man is required in our good Works for the end of mans Life is in his Calling to serve man and by that to serve God Col. 3.24 7. Our good Works must be done within the compass of Callings 8. Patience is necessary in every good Work that we faint not in wel-doing In every good Work there must beatwofold Faith viz. 1. Justifying Faith whereby the person doing the Work must be reconciled to God and stand before God a true Member of Christ without which it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 and therefore is chiefly necessary 2. General Faith whereby a man believes that the Work he doth is pleasing unto God Whatsoever is not of Faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Whereunto are required both the Word of God commanding the Work and prescribing the maner of doing it and also a promise of Blessing upon the doing of it As things may be said to be good in a double respect 1. Good in themselves alone as Almsdeeds done by a wicked man 2. Good in themselves and the Doer as the Prayers of any true Believers So there are two sorts of good Works viz. 1. Those which God in his Word hath directly commanded as parts of his Worship such as are Prayer Thanksgiving receiving the Sacraments hearing the Word c. 2. Actions indifferent sanctified by the Word and Prayer and done to Gods glory being performed after the maner and to the end God hath commanded them The Ends of a good Work are manifold viz. 1. The honor and glory of God the Work being done in Humility whereby a man esteemeth himself to be but a voluntary and reasonable Instrument of God therein and also done in simplicity or singleness of Heart whereby a man in doing a good Work intendeth simply and directly to honor and please God without all by-respects to his own praise or the pleasing of men 2. The testification of our Thankfulness to God who hath redeemed us by Christ 3. To edifie our Brethren thereby and that they also may glorifie God 4. To exercise and increase our Faith and Repentance 5. To escape the destruction of the wicked and to obtain the reward of the Righteous 6. To be answerable to our Calling in doing the duties thereof 7. To pay the Debt which we owe unto God for we are his Debtors as we are his Creatures his Servants his Children and his Redeemed by Christ God accepts of good works in us divers ways 1. In that he pardons the faults thereof 2. In that he approves his own good Work in us 3. In that he doth give unto us the Doers of them a Crown of Righteousness Provided 1. That before the Work go Reconciliation of the Person to God in Christ 2. That in doing the Work the right Matter and Maner be observed 3. That after the Work is done we beg pardon for the defects thereof There be three Opinions touching the Necessity of good Works viz. 1. Of the Papists who hold them necessary as causes of our Salvation and Justification This is most false and a preposterous Opinion 2. Of some Protestants who hold them necessary though not as principal causes yet as conservant causes of our Salvation but the truth is they are no causes of Salvation neither Efficient Principal nor Conservant nor yet Material Formal or Final 3. That good Works are necessary not as causes of Salvation or Justification but as inseparable consequents of saving Faith in Christ whereby we are justified and saved or as a way is necessary to the going to a place And this Opinion is the truth for Works any way made causes of Salvation or Justification do nullifie Grace The Motives which cause wicked men sometimes to do Works fair in shew and outwardly good and to abstain from evil Actions viz. 1. Because some naturally be not given to the vices which they leave 2. Others because they be restrained by a slavish fear of Gods Justice or else for that they dream to deserve something at the hands of God 3. Others for fear of Laws or lest they should hinder thereby their prosperity 4. Because their Lusts do sometimes strive as the winds so as that which is the stronger prevaileth over the rest and bridleth them from breaking into action No man can do a work properly meritorious as the bold Papists affirm and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the doer of a Work that may be meritorious must do it by himself and not by another for the praise is his by whom he doth it and not his own but man in himself hath not power to will that which is good much less to do it least of
all to do it meritoriously 2. A Work that it may be meritorious must not be a Debt or Duty for then the doer deserves nothing but man when he hath done his best hath done no more then what by duty he was bound to do and having done all is but an unprofitable Servant 3. To make the work meritorious there must be a proportion betwixt the Work and Life Eternal the reward of the Work but man cannot do a work proportionable to Eternal glory for he takes all of God and can give nothing to him besides man is a Creature and therefore whatsoever he hath or can do is no more then what he oweth to God Again the End of good works is threefold especially viz. 1. In respect of God that his Commandment may be obeyed 1 John 3.22 That his will may be done 1 Thes 4.3 That we may shew our selves to be obedient children to God our Father 1 Pet. 1.14 That we may shew our selves thankful for our Redemption by Christ Tit. 2.14 That we may not grieve the Spirit of God Eph. 4.30 But walk according to the same Gal. 5.22 That God by our good works may be glorified Matth. 5.16 That we may be good followers of God Eph. 5.1 2. In regard of our Neighbor that he may be helped in worldly things Luke 6.38 That he may be won by our example to Godliness 1 Pet. 3.14 That we may stop our adversaries mouths 3. In respect of our selves that we may shew our selves new Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 That we may walk as the children of Light Eph. 5.8 That we may have some assurance of our Faith and of our Salvation 2 Pet. 1.8 10. That the punishments of sin may be prevented Psal 89.32 And the promised reward obtained Gal. 6.9 Again more particularly thus we are bound to do good works in respect of God for these Reasons 1. Because of the Commandment of God who requires them at our hands 2. For the glory of God which is hereby in others also exalted 3. Because of that thankfulness which the regenerate owe to God as well for his Mercies temporal as his Blessings spiritual We are bound to do good works in respect of our selves for these Reasons viz. 1. That by our good works we may be assured of our Faith Matth. 7.17 2. That we may be assured that we have obtained remission of sins through Christ and are for Christs sake justified before God 3. That we may be assured of our Election and Salvation 2 Pet. 1.10 4. That thereby our Faith may be exercised cherished strengthned and advanced 5. That thereby we may shew forth an honest Life and Calling Ephes 4.1 6. That we may escape Temporal and Eternal punishments Matth. 7.19 7. That we may obtain Corporal and Spiritual rewards 1 Tim 4.8 We are bound to do good Works in respect of our Neighbor for these Reasons viz. 1. That we may be profitable unto them by our good Example and so edifie them 2. That Offences may be avoided Mat. 18.7 3. That we may win Unbelievers and by our words and deeds and example convert them unto Christ Luke 22.32 A more large explication of the Proofs of this Assertion That Good Works cannot Merit viz. 1. Our best works are imperfect Gal. 5.17 Works indeed good neither are nor can be performed of us without our renewing by the Holy Ghost neither proceed they from our selves but are the Gifts and Effects of God in us and we his Instruments unto whom he communicateth his Blessings in us as in the Subject by us as the Instruments The purity of which actions are supposed to be no farther pure then the purity and light of their Mindes may be supposed to be Thus on the light of Nature may follow actions morally good upon Spiritual light follow actions also Spiritually good or Good Works upon imperfect illightning imperfect Obedience on perfect illightning perfect Obedience also followeth which though in this life is not but deferred till the life to come 1 Cor. 13. yet are the godly in whose hearts the life of Faith is kindled pure in the sight of God when he beholdeth them in Christ though their good Works cannot be perfect so long as themselves who work joyntly with the Spirit are not perfect yet shall not their Imperfections nor the Imperfections of their works be imputed to them but the Perfection of their Saviors Satisfaction 2. The Good Works whatsoever we are able to do are all due Luke 17.10 therefore no man ought to be beguiled to slacken his strictness in avoiding any sin or his Conscionableness in performing any bounden Duty by a Suggestion of Satans that he may be over-just Eccl. 7.18 For in true Righteousness a man cannot be over-just but for a man to make a Righteousness unto himself which is not grounded on Gods VVord and therein to be strict is to be over-just and to perform more then is due unto God To count such things to be sin which by Gods Law are not made sin is to be over-just and to be censorious without just ground is to be over-just but we regulating our selves by Gods VVord when we shall have done all those things which are commanded us must say We are unprofitable servants and have done but that which is our duty to do and therefore far from meriting 3. Our VVorks are impure and vicious however they seem most good Isa 64.6 for if any works proceed good from us they are not ours but Gods good works in us as the Subject and by us as the Instruments neither are they good works which are imagined by us as seeming by us to be right and good or which are commanded by men but such onely which are done by a true Faith according to Gods Law and are referred onely to his Glory yet though the Righteousness of the holiest Saints considered in it self and compared with the perfect Rule of the Law be exceeding defective or opposed to the Righteousness of Christ be as nothing yet as it is a work of Gods holy Spirit in us proceeding from an heart purified by Faith all the imperfections thereof being covered with the perfect Righteousness of Christ it is acceptable to God and such a thing as we may receive much comfort by but not glory in or think to merit ought thereby 4. If we do any good VVorks they are not ours but are belonging to God onely who worketh in us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.13 and therefore good VVorks in us can merit nought unless it be a Curse for those imperfections and defilements which are inseparably in them by reason of that staining quality which remains in our depraved Nature 5. No Creature whatever he do can merit of God by order of Justice even because the Creature can never do sufficient to merit the work and benefit of his Creation at the hands of his Creator 6. There can be no proportion betwixt our Works and the
and turn unto God Ezek. 18.13 4. Our Repentance must be speedy and always so long as we live Matth. 24.13 Revel 2.10 No man ought to defer his Repentance on this ground That Christ was merciful to the Thief at his death Luk. 23.43 For 1. That one example is recorded that none should utterly despair 2. Onely that one that none should presume 3. It cannot be proved that he put off his Repentance to that day 4. It is not safe to make an extraordinary Action as this was a patern For Christ did miraculously work on that thief to give in that moment of his Humiliation an evidence of his divine Power Reasons why we ought to hasten our Repentance viz. 1. Because we are uncertain of the means not knowing whether God will offer the same to morrow or no. 2. Because we are most uncertain of our lives 3. Because the longer we live having not repented we get the greater measure of sin Sin by custom becometh stronger and our selves the weaker thereby to repent thereof 4. Otherwise we provoke Gods wrath against us and cause him to remove the means from us We must witness our Repentance by acknowledging our particular sins and trespasses for these Reasons viz. 1. Because Repentance onely made generally and confusedly is never true but a common and hypocritical Repentance of one resolved and setled to continue in sin and not yet touched with a true feeling thereof Indeed for unknown sins which we in weakness and ignorance commit the Lord accepteth a general confession and acknowledgement which no doubt may be said of the poligamy or marrying of many Wives and other daily infirmities provided we daily renew our Repentance for all known sins and lead the whole course of our lives penitentially 2. Because we must make a particular account to God at the hour of death not a general one of gross sins onely but a particular one of all specials also The true signs of sound Repentance viz. 1. Care to avoid all sin as well as any one not for fear but love not because man but God commandeth a diligent care study and endeavor to amend what is amiss and to labor to practice the contrary Vertue 2. Impatience till we have cleared our selves and made our peace with God for committed sins and a purging of our selves of other mens sins with a clear Conscience in all things 3. A holy Indignation or Anger against our selves and the sins we before took pleasure in either in our selves or others 4. Fear because it is sin fearing to offend God because of his Mercy a filial fear to sin to displease God or to hazard his favor 5. Desire or fervent affection to God to Spiritual things a longing after the Grace of God a thirsting after Christs Righteousness and the sincere Milk of the Word 6. Zeal for God and his Worship which makes us not to perform it perfunctorily a knowing Zeal after Gods Glory a holy Contention or Emulation to exceed in Piety 7. Revenge when we are holily revenged of our selves for our sins by the contrary Vertues a holy Revenge judging and condemning of our selves for our sins in our selves or others by our occasion Motives to true sound Repentance viz. 1. The Commandment of God himself so often urged and repeated Jer. 13.12 8.6 18.11 This was Johns Proclamation in the Wilderness Mat. 3.8 This Doctrine was preached to our Parents in paradice was afterward figured out by Circumcision before the Law and by Purification after the Law Isa 1.16 2. Such as Repent not lie under the bondage of Satan they are as Captives and Prisoners bound to obey his Will and to do him Service 2 Tim. 2.26 3. Such as dye without Repentance remain for ever without Remission and Forgiveness they are lost and must needs perish if they repent not before 2 Pet. 3.9 Luke 13.3 4. The Threatnings denounced and executed upon the Rebellious and Disobedient are made Examples and Admonitions unto us Gods Vengeance justly faln upon others should serve to amend us 1 Cor. 10.6 5. The Certainty and Suddenness of the last and general Judgement What maner of persons ought we therefore to be in holy Conversation and Godliness 6. We must be all led to Repentance by the unspeakable Fruits that follow it as Pardon of Sins Reconciliation with God Peace of Conscience Hearing of our Prayers and in the end Blessedness in the Heavens Ezek. 33.11 7. The Exellency of it which appeareth 1. In the Antiquity of it being the first Sermon in Paradice 2. In the Continuance of it having always been in the Church and shall be to the end 8. The Profit of it which may appear in these five things viz. 1. It freeth us from the Snares and Subtilties of Satan 2 Tim. 2.25 26. 2. It preventeth the Judgement of God in this Temporal life Jonah 3.4 10. 3. It procureth the Mercies of God Temporal Spiritual and Eternal Mal. 3.7 Ezek. 18. 4. It freeth us from Death Spiritual and Eternal 5. It saves our Souls from Death and hides a multitude of Sins Jam. 5.20 9. The Necessity of it because without it we may perish for ever Luke 13.5 3. The means to attain unto repentance viz. 1. A careful diligent profitable and constant Hearing of Gods Word Acts 2.38 41. 2. To beg it at the hands of God by Prayer for it is the gift of God onely Ezek. 36.26 Duties required of us after we have repented viz. 1. We must pray to God to uphold us that we may not fall again into our former Sins and Transgressions 2. We must labor to convert others and be a means for the beating down of Sin in them and for the raising of them up to Newness of Life XIV OBedience is that whereby a man being endued with Faith and Repentance doth accordingly to the measure of Grace received endeavor himself to yield Obedience to all Gods Commandments from all the powers and parts both of his Soul and his Body And this is called New-Obedience because it is a Renewing of that in man whereto he was perfectly enabled by Creation This Obedience much consisteth in observing the Works of Christ which we must not understand of doing them according to the rigor of the Law but of a purpose and endeavor to keep them For this is a Priviledge belonging to all that are in Christ That God accepteth their wills and endeavors of Obedience for perfect Obedience it self whereupon they who have but little knowledge if they have care to get more knowledge make conscience to obey that which they know shall also have the Reward promised for true Religion stands not in Knowledge but in Obedience and this is true Obedience to make Conscience of every sin in our own persons to take heed of the infection of sin in others and to abstain from the appearance of evil and all this not for a day or a year but from time to time in all I say all our
thoughts words and works through the whole course of our life to the end of our days And this our Obedience must not onely be in doing this or that but also in suffering the Miserie 's laid upon us to the Death neither in keeping this or that Commandment but impartially keeping them all yea and it must be ready and chearful without any deliberation or consultation with flesh and blood True Obedience which proceedeth from true faith hath these Heads Branches viz. 1. It must be a Fruit of the Spirit in Christ 2. It must be the keeping of every Commandment of God 3. The whole man must endeavor to keep the whole Law in his Minde Will and Affections and all the Faculties of Soul and Body 4. He must deny himself and take up the Cross Luke 9.23 5. He must believe all things that are written in the Law and Prophets Acts 24.14 6. He must have and keep a good Conscience for which these means are very requisite viz. 1. In the course of his life he must practise the duties of the general Calling in his particular Calling 2. In all events that come to pass in patience and silence he must submit himself to the good will and pleasure of God 3. If at any time he fall he must humble himself before God labor to break off his Sin and recover himself by Repentance 7. He must prove what is the good will of God Rom. 12.2 8. He must restrain his life from outward offences which tend to the dishonor of God and Scandal of the Church 1 Thess 5.22 1 Pet. 2.11 12. 9. He must mortifie the inward Corruptions of his own heart 10. He must labor to conceive new motions agreeable to the Will of God and thence bring forth and practise good Duties so performing both outward and inward Obedience unto God Rules of ordering directing our Obedience viz. 1. We must be assured that we do those things that are warranted in the Word of God and that they be done according to his Will Isa 29.14 2. We must perform our Obedience heartily not for outward shew and fashion to be seen of men but as in the sight of him that looketh upon the heart Prov. 23.26 3. It must be done with all our power chearfully and willingly which dependeth upon the former but distinguished from it 2 Cor. 8.12 4. It must be done freely out of love to him that commands it and purely and simply for his sake not mercinarily for the Reward yet in hope thereof 5. We must perform tht fruits of our Obedience entirely not by halfs sincerely not parting stakes between God and the Devil and our selves Jer. 7.9 10. 6. It must be a constant Obedience not by fits for a day or a short and set time there is no promise made but to such as persevere unto the end Mat. 10.22 7. Our Obedience must not be delayed from time to time Heb. 3.7 8. Mat. 25.10 God requireth a full and entire Obedience and it is our Duty to yield Obedience to all the Commandments of God for these Reasons viz. 1. God in his own nature is perfect in himself and perfect in all goodness towards us we must therefore answer him in Duty and Obedience 2. Christ Jesus is a perfect Savior a perfect Redeemer a perfect Mediator it followeth therefore that we should follow after all Righteousness and make Conscience of all sin 3. In respect of the Commandments themselves which are so knit together that the knot cannot be loosed but all are dissolved 4. There is nothing done in this flesh but God will bring it into Judgement Eccl. 12.14 5. All things commanded of God from the greatest to the least are most just and equal and therefore to be observed diligently without all parting or partiality That our Obedience may be in some good degree towards Perfection 1. We must labor to have pure and upright hearts which giveth life to all our actions and is very much accepted of God who looks especially to the heart 2. We must be free from any purpose to live in any known sin and must be enclined to every thing that is good lest we be unawares ensnared by the contrary 3. We must all take notice of our own wants and imperfections and earnestly bewail and mourn for them striving with all our power against them 4. We must make Conscience of the least sin that we may be afraid of the greatest 5. We must still go forward from good to better evermore growing in Grace 6. It is our duty to pray unto God to give us upright hearts which in themselves are crooked and corrupt prone to nothing but what is evil This Doctrine of Obedience is useful to Reprove 1. Those that waste themselves and spend their strength chiefly about the things of this world and never labor after Regeneration and the things of the Lord. 2. Such as content themselves with a small measure of Knowledge and Obedience of Faith and Repentance 3. Those that do halt with God and yield a maimed Obedience unto him 4. Such as think it sufficient to serve God outwardly to be seen of men and worship him through Hypocrisie Obedience is most lovely in Gods eyes Obedience better is then Sacrifice It makes us welcom to the Lord when we In Faith in Love and true Humility Petitions send and our Addresses make In JESUS Name and all for JESUS sake Without this Grace all other Graces are But as a Glo-worm-light or falling Star Who knows his Masters will and not obey Shall for his knowledge smart another day CHAP. VII Of Fasting and Holy Feasting A Religious Fast is an extraordinary abstinence taken up for a Religious end it is an abstinence from all Commodities of this life so far as comeliness will allow and necessity suffer to make us the more humble and meet for Prayer Isa 1.16 17. Matth. 6.16 17 18. It is an abstinence from all Meats and Drinks 2 Sam. 3.35 Jon. 3.7 The Israelites were commanded to put away their best Raiment Exod. 33.5 6. To abstain from Mirth and Musick from Pleasures and all Recreations Joel 2.16 1 Chro. 7.5 Dan. 6.18 And in stead of these to give themselves to Weeping Mourning and Lamentation Neh. 1.4 For this case they had their Sackcloth and Ashes to signifie they were no better themselves This was to continue one whole day 2 Sam. 3.35 Judg. 20.26 1 Sam. 14.24 2 Sam. 1.12 Sometimes indeed they continued their Fast longer as occasion served and upon extraordinary causes Hest 4.16 Acts 9.9 Neh. 1.1 2. Dan. 10.1 2. And when the Evening came they did not eat either in quantity or quality to recover with advantage what they had abstained from before but fed upon the Bread of Tears and mingled their Drink with Weeping So must we take heed that we make not our Fasts Popish Fasts or rather Feasts and think if we abstain from Flesh we may feed on other Restoratives or Fast to take the more