Selected quad for the lemma: soul_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
soul_n believe_v faith_n know_v 4,869 5 4.2588 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A95867 Tvvo sermons preached: one before the Right Honorable House of Lords, on their publick fast, May 26. 1647. The other, before the Honorable House of Commons, on their publick fast, in Margarets Church in Westminster, Septemb. 29. 1647. / By Thomas Valentine one of the Assembly of Divines, and minister in Chalfort in the county of Bucks. Valentine, Thomas, 1585 or 6-1665? 1647 (1647) Wing V27; Thomason E409_13; ESTC R204423 15,835 24

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

buyer in these particulars First find thy need of these Commodities let thy soule say to God give mee Christ and Faith or else I dye you must not so thinke or speake of any thing else Secondly See the goodnesse of them you cannot know the excellency of them till you be instructed and have experience you cannot see till you have this eye-salve and therefore no wonder if the Lord Christ offer his Commodities and put off but little because men know not the worth of them Thirdly No deceit in this bargaine you shall not be over-reached faire and plaine dealing to them that will buy the truth Rome sells you sophisticated and adulterated Wares and her Tradesmen have darke Shops and false Lights and will not have the people to know or be able to judge of these Commodities they must not looke into the Scriptures nor understand the Doctrine of Faith but take all upon their word and beleeve as the Church doth but the Text offers tryed gold And wee must try all things and hold that which is good Mat. 6. ●0 〈…〉 Domi●us 〈…〉 quo s●●● vel 〈…〉 ad 〈…〉 debeant pe●petuò 〈◊〉 Mus● Quia minus ratione co●se●ta●●● est quam 〈◊〉 su● locare ubi vel sp●●te 〈…〉 ab ho●●●ibus Fourthly Theeves cannot breake through and steale these Commodities As there is a greater excellency so more certaintie in them In all the troubles and persecutions in the world if you keepe your courage and resolutions and would not part with your riches neither Devills nor men can rob you of them you may have the gold and silver in your Chests taken from you by violence and your estates wrung out of your hands but your graces cannot be lost unlesse you consent to lose them and they being of so high a nature and so great worth get them whatever they cost you and keepe them carefully as you doe your gold First The more to perswade you to this consider further of this two-fold Simile of tryed gold and white raiment He that hath gold hath all things vendible he may have House Lands an Office Honour and Preferment and whatever of this nature he can desire for gold will procure it and gold vertually includes all things that are to be sold 1 Cor. 3 22. So he that hath Christ and Faith and other graces hath all things Heavenly all are yours none can speake such Language as Beleevers other men may have a great deale Esau may have enough Ge●●3 9. but Jacob hath all None so rich as the people of God they have in their possession all the fine gold and rich raiment they are well clad and richly furnished and they should live answerably they have got such a bargaine at the hands of Jesus Christ as hath made them for ever and they should rejoyce in their condition rich men please themselves in telling their gold and thinking of their wealth let the Christian looke upon his graces and priviledges with delight and take great contentment in them Secondly He that hath tryed gold needs not feare the touch-stone he that hath tryed graces needs not feare further tryalls It ought to be the care of every one to see that his graces be of a right kind that he have gold not brasse Many Protestants in the Church of England have too much pleased themselves with Copper Faith or they have taken a guilded glistering piece of wood for gold there is that which lookes like faith and zeale and love but is not so indeed Wee should try all things wee take not a piece of gold or silver but weigh and ring it because wee would not be deceived and it were a shame for a man to put off his Commodities and thinke he hath made a good bargaine when the money that he receives is false and counterfeit Coine It is an evill thing to rest in a shew or forme of godlinesse all that comes of it is to be thought by our selves and others that wee are Religious The Pharisees had a name they were esteemed by the ignorant people to be devoute but what will that availe in the day when our workes must be tryed by fire It is onely gold a solid metall that will indure the fire hay and stubble and all light stuffe will burne and consume away Luther speakes of one Arsenius that had eminent gifts and made a profession of Religion and was more forward then others who being sick his friends and acquaintance visited him and for his comfort told him that he could not but have a great deale of joy and peace that was farre before many others in Religion he answered them That he had not so much comfort as they imagined and he now found it to be with his soule not according to what they thought of him but according to the judgement that God passed upon him and God judgeth said he not after an outward appearance but with a righteous judgement It were a vain thing in a man that being Arrested and going to Prison should charge the Officers with doing him wrong because he was esteemed by all his nighbours a rich man and worth many thousand pounds in such a case the name of a rich man will neither free from danger nor pay debts But he that hath this tryed gold hath enough to pay his debts and a stock to live upon besides he feares no danger no trouble no persecution not death no not the fiery tryall for his tryed gold will hold out and passe for currant when all gilding will wash off and waste away Great then may be the comfort of such as looke after truth and the realitie of graces they are happy both in life and death they are rich and shall carry their wealth with them into Heaven You must part with your friends when you dye and you must leave your riches behind you but your graces shall goe with you Vincent in Specul Mora. To set out the dignitie of them above your materiall gold One tells you a Story of a man that had a Suit and when his Cause was to be heard he applyed himselfe to three friends to see what they would doe with him one answered him he would bring him as farre on his journey as he could the second promised him to go with him to his journeys end the third ingaged himselfe to goe with him before the Judge and to speak for him and not to leave him till his Cause was heard and determined These three are a mans Riches his friends and his graces his riches will helpe him to comfortable accommodations while they stay with him but they may take their wings and flye away from him before he dye His friends and kindred they will goe with him to his journeys end bring him to the grave and interre his body then they leave him to his graces Misericordia comes defunctorum It is true of that and all other graces Rev. 14.13 they go further accompany the
more need and if we follow our owne counsells we perish Prov. 11.14 Where no counsell is the people fall but in the multitude of counsellers there is safetie Prov. 20.18 Every purpose is established by counsell and with good advice make warre If in other things we take advice and not this it shewes we are more carelesse of Heaven then our affaires on earth 1. Use Take counsell of him that is wise and reject it not leane not to your owne wisedome for that will destroy you A man that followes his owne thoughts in matters of Religion is sure to misse his way and lose his hope The counsell of God is good we cannot say so of the wisest man but his counsell is good at all times for he knowes all things and all events which no man doth Prov. 19.20 Heare counsell and receive instruction that thou mayest be wise in thy latter end 2. If we doe not we set up our owne thoughts and wisedome above Gods and we oppose Christs Propheticall and Kingly Offices 3. Grace makes us teachable and men should inquire what they ought to doe Act. 2.37 Men and brethren what shall we doe Act. 9.6 Lord what will thou have me to doe And they obeyed and followed the directions of the Apostles David did blesse God for Abigails counsell 1 Sam. 25.22 32. And if we receive not the counsell of God we shall in the end bewaile our folly and read our misery arising from our own rebellious and desperate denyalls of grace and as the Pharisees reiected the counsell of God against themselves so doe many in these dayes I counsell thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire and white raiment 2. Observ It is the wisedome of men to buy grace and the meanes of grace whatever they cost them Qualis emptio absque pretio Quomodo hoc convenit magnificentiae Dei si emenda est illius gratia parum laudis habet ●●ns cujus aquae venales habentur Obj. But how can wee buy What shall wee give to God for these rich Commodities And how can it stand with the bountie of God to sell them to us And how doth it under-value the grace of God when it is offered to sale Solut. For answer to this objection and for opening of the point propounded wee must know That the grace or favour of God cannot be bought at all And wee must distinguish between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the free grace of God his good will and pleasure which is from all eternitie and the fruits thereof the gifts of the Spirit together with all the meanes by which the Spirit workes in the hearts of Gods Elect These latter are here offered to you to be sold not the former We cannot properly buy so as to give a valuable consideration for these Heavenly Commodities to buy is to give a price to the seller for which he makes over his right to you and puts you in possession of that which was his But properly we cannot buy so as to give a valuable consideration And that because First All things are Gods already unlesse it be your sinnes the Cattell upon a thousand Hills are mine saith God Job 41.11 Whatsoever is under the whole heavens is mine So that you cannot pay God with his owne for if I buy of a man I give him somewhat that is mine and receive of him somewhat that is his Secondly All things that we have are inferiour to grace and the meanes of grace they are but transitory and fading but Heavenly things are lasting and durable and there is no proportion betweene the largest offer of thousands of Rams and ten thousand Rivers of Oile and the least dram of saving-grace and we must not thinke that mony or mony-worth can purchase Heaven or grace nay to take off our thoughts the Lord tells us his mind Isa 55.1 Buy wine and milke without money But what must be done First Buy it with thy prayers and teares and tell the Lord thou hast need of them and cannot live without them Rome teacheth her children to buy grace with the improvement of parts of nature and to buy Heaven with their good workes and tell us of such perfection in some workes that there is no sinne in them but when they offer so largely God must trust them for they have no ready money but we teach our Chap-men to turne poore beggers and you may get more by begging at the hands of God then by working and yet we beg a stock of grace that we may goe to worke Secondly Buy it with thy labour and toile travell for it if thou hast it not at home the sonnes of Jacob goe into Egypt if there be no Corne in their owne Countrey and what paines men take to get the Commodities of the world they should doe more for Heaven in former times before this Parliament sate there was a great scarcitie the markets did rise there is now more plentie but the evill of the present times is that there is a price in mens hands and they have not hearts Thirdly It may be it will cost thy purse if with the Merchant in the Gospell thou hast found the Pearle buy it though thou sell all Mat. 13.46 and it would further your accounts if your Bills of expence for Building for Purchases for Portions nay for Sports and Recreations which rises to great summes you could bring in somewhat answerable for the Gospell and Religious uses Whatsoever it will cost thee breake not for price buy it at any Rate First It will inrich thee you may buy Land too deare and Gold too deare but grace and the meanes of grace cannot be bought too deare nay the dearer bought the better you will keepe it the better and esteeme it the more The more it costs a Christian to get Christ and obtain assurance of Gods love the better it is Prov. 3.14 The merchandise of wisedome is better then the merchandise of silver and the gaine thereof then fine gold more precious then the rubies and all the things thou canst desire are not to be compared to her Secondly It is of generall use for all persons and at all times when you shall throw away your gold and silver a dram of grace shall be in great esteeme and will comfort your soules Religion is not like a Souldier in time of Peace or a Chimney in Summer but of good necessary use at all times in prosperitie to teach you moderation in adversity to beare up your spirits in life in death it is a Crowne to you Thirdly This Bargaine proves better then was conceived temporall things seeme better then they prove and no man finds that in them which he imagined but spirituall riches afford more to the soule then at first was beleeved here that 's true It is naught it is naught saith the buyer but when he goeth apart he boasteth namely of his great pennyworth Prov. 20.14 Therefore be as the