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A57460 Divine meditations and contemplations upon severall heads of divinity by G.R. compiled for his owne private use, and published for the common good. G. R. 1641 (1641) Wing R17; ESTC R25600 72,461 276

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word is not Reason justly to be suspected in all these things as thinking but too well of her self giving too much liberty to nature and justifying her owne hypocrisies for Gods good service of which it will not bee said as our Saviour of the lesser matters of the Law the tything of Mint and Cummin These things yee should have done but rather this Who required these things at your hands for which yee have left my commandements Now my Soule look to thy selfe how thou dost make thy choyce regard not that antiquity universality succession pompe authority which is not grounded on the truth in the word all these will follow Humane Reason regard the word of the Almighty and unchangeable truth it selfe which is alone sufficient without these and they without it nothing worth Meditation 16. Repentance deferred In Summer wee can provide for Winter in Youth wee lay up for Age but who in health doth prepare for sicknesse As long as wee doe well wee will not live well but put it over to that time when wee have much adoe to live then can wee not remedy what is past neither have we leasure to do better Repentance indeed is never too late and mercy may come on a sudden but repentance in health is the ordinary gift of God in sicknesse extraordinary because he doth not give it him which might and would not thou canst tell mee no cause why thou shouldst not repent when thou art well and I can tell thee many why thou canst not repent when thou art sick thy heart is a stranger to goodnesse and God to thee hardly canst thou heare good counsell but it is the hardest of all to settle thy selfe on it then when all things grow so troublesome and uncertaine Many have said it is too late would I could have followed it in times past neither have wee leasure to doe better Repentance indeed is never too late but sicknesse is the time past yet wilt thou not repent in health Dost thou make but a pastime of repentance take heed lest sicknesse be unto thee the end of a bad life which in health thou wouldst not amend and deliver thee over to endlesse death Oh my soule remember thy owne estate thou didst put over repentance and God did put thee over to sicknesse What discomfort was it to thinke on sinnes past what little hope hadst thou of good to come how unable wast thou to recollect thy selfe what meanes didst thou want to bee raised up if thou hadst any holy desire any feeling at the last thou wert more bound to thy Saviour which sought thee out a wandring sheep Where art thou now my soule what doest thou that which thou didst then promise to close nearer with thy God who hath given life to thy desire and yeares to thy life surely I have escaped a great harme and outlived my selfe good Lord have mercy on mee and graunt that I forget not thy goodnesse nor betray my selfe any more into the hands of danger thou knowest well enough what I am the worse for my abused health and if any thing the better for my sicknesse it is thy favour I like not my amendment halfe so well as I heartily lament my neglected time Meditation 17. Gifts of God and Men. ALl blessings without that one for whose sake they are bestowed are but a curse other blessings are given for a good life which is the chiefest blessing they are good but this makes us good they make us welcome to men as strength makes us welcome to the weake learning to the simple wealth to them which want authority to such as are oppressed but this makes us welcome to our owne consciences which entertaine us with a continuall feast to God which sayes welcome good servant for them wee must make reckoning but for this wee shall receive a crowne of righteousnesse yet see that men altogether admire and desire most the former kind of gifts to them give they a stile they come not without grace excellency majesty holinesse they call those that have them rulers benefactors Lords Princes but a good man is in no note no request and indeed he needs it not for he hath more then all the world can give him and his commendation is not from men but God Christ our Saviour the wisest steward provided not for himselfe or us blessings of the former kind but of the latter Judas had the bagge and Peter the sword but Christ in his heart had righteousnesse even to his lipps outwardly there was no guile found in his mouth and what he did by doctrine miracles passion for us tended to this end that being delivered from the captivity of sinne wee might bee made free men of righteousnesse and shew forth good workes to Gods glory The greatest gifts to this purpose that ever were bestowed on mankind was on that glorious day a white and happy day the Lords day a sunday 50 daies after the resurrection when according to his promise like a Prince new crowned he showred down the gifts of the Holy Ghost on his Church cloven and fiery tongues in terpretatiō of tongues knowledge to open the Scriptures and to apply them prophecy healing discerning of spirits and the like by which gifts Christ hath subdued the world and brought men from Idolatry and wickednesse to true godlinesse and righteousnesse amongst which doe excell Apostles Martyrs Confessors Virgins more famous in christianity then the demi-gods which anciently in the ruder times of the world have stored it with the rare invention of divers things profitable to the life of man Oh my soule how hast thou admired state greatnesse authority possession traine and pompe and if not to be one of them yet to bee neere unto them and though farther of yet that the beames of such glory might shine on thee And now observe whether in the meane while God hath not offered thee and thou by thy neglect hast lost better things and so hast proved to God unthankfull unprofitable to thy selfe Call to mind thy baptisme what intends it that thou following this most honourable profession into which thou hast entered shouldest bee enabled and incouraged to live a new life after the spirit and become a good man to God to this purpose comming to discretion God instructed thee in his word there wast thou made acquainted with the royall law his statutes and ordinances and with all the provisions cautions admonitions drawne from the same by the Prophets hence wert thou led on to the Gospell which met thee with abundant and effectuall grace and for thy better assurance that thou art received into the society and body of Christ he fed thee often in his blessed Sacrament with his owne body and bloud and for thy better guide in this course of salvation he hath afforded thee his owne and the examples of his holy ones which have shined as lights in a darke place What doth want unto thee that in the sight of God thou art above all
of thy uprightnesse if thou have not Patience thou prayest and God heareth not thou askest he giveth not thou wouldest have plenty and behold want thou wouldest have health and strength and behold weaknesse thou wouldest have peace and behold warre thou wouldest have credit and behold slander thou wouldest be some and art no body and what will become of thy prayers if thou have not Patience To keepe Patience wee must be beholding to experience Try once how much profit Patience doth bring thee and thou shalt never bee weary of it thou shalt sinde succour feele comfort unexpected observe Gods providence forget not his love this will direct to the end where wee shall finde contentment when nothing shall make us more happy then that wee have suffered with Patience they that will not bee patient shall suffer more then wee but wee only which are patient shall receive the reward of suffering Meditation 6. Of Liberty VVEe love to take liberty and fare all the worse because our choice is of such as is agreeable to a nature sick and not sound God is necessarily good and yet doth good most freely man since his fall is necessarily evill and doth evill most freely but alas what a freedome is this so to bee overlookt by sinne that we cannot doe any thing to please God or to ease our selves Christ by his Gospell calleth us to a Liberty not of the flesh to live according to the lusts thereof not an outward liberty to discharge us from duties fit for our callings or prescribed by lawes not repugnant to the word of God but to a Liberty of the spirit first from the curse of the Morall Law by which we are subject to the wrath of God And this Liberty comes from the free remission of our sinnes in his bloud who is become our Saviour so that all the evills which befall us in this life even unto death it selfe turne unto our good and are sent not from an angry Judge but from a mercifull Father as it is said Wee are afflicted but not convicted we doubt but wee despaire not wee are persecuted but not forsaken wee are cast downe but wee perish not Secondly from the tyranny of sinne so that we doe not only begin to strive but doe also prevaile against it more and more and shall at last utterly overcome it even to the breaking of the Serpents head Thirdly from observation of ceremonies and judicialls of Moses as touch not tast not handle not and wee may freely use the creatures of God with sobriety and thanksgiving which are given for meat drink and apparell and use likewise or not use all things indifferent according to charity Fourthly from all Lawes and constitutions of men that they binde not the conscience as matters of salvation though for outward order and policy wee are in cōscience bound to observe them if they bee not contrary to Gods word but agreeable to the generall rules thereof this is true Liberty agreeable to the state of our first Creation and abounding more in grace it wee seeke for it for the which wee are continually to praise God the author thereof It is great Liberty to be out of bondage but it a greater to be the freeman of Christ it is a great Liberty to be taken out of the hands of a Tyrant but a greater to be rescued out of the power of sinne and Satan it is a great Liberty which Nobility doth challenge but a greater which a good conscience What a Liberty is it to doe that which is good to speake that which is wholesome and for edification to wrong no man not to wrong himselse to live without shame and to die without feare Let us detest the youths Liberty to have no Tutor the Theefes to escape the halter the fooles to scoffe at his Brother the blasphemers to sweare the wantons to bee unseene the drunkards to pledge healths and use much quaffing the malecontents to have no state the unthrifts to turn himselfe out of house and home Meditation 7. Humane frailty O Father Adam thy Children are all too much like thee would I were a Pillar of Marble in the House of my God that no tentation might shake mee no sinne displace mee or as the two Pillars of Solomons Temple Jatui and Boa that there might be certainty in my resolution and constancy in my courses A Christian is a man but I am more a man then a Christian nay rather a child then a man I weep for vanities and toies and cast hehind mee the Law of God more worth then the Gold of Ophir I would stand but I fall downe flat I would be better but prove worse I would sinne no more I did not to my knowledge sinne so much before Oh hell in this world to hate sinne yet to entertaine it to beare the shame the sorrow the smart of sinne and yet to shake hands withit Where shall I have teares enough to bewaile my sinnes my heart is broken with sighing and my braines dried up with weeping Would to God my head were a fountaine of teares and mine eyes rivers of waters to bewaile the desolation that sinne hath wrought within mee If I bee not able to match sinne in his strength why give I it time and not rather kill it while it is young If jealous thoughts and occasions not cut off doe increase his band why doe I suffer him to muster Souldiers in mine owne dominions Oh that wee could renew our fight when wee are put to flight as I have read of some people and take our pursuers at a disadvantage but when wee begin once to slie nothing can stay us and though no enemy follow wee run our selves out of breath The comforts wee might lawfully use are ten thousand times more then the pleasures wee unlawfully steale the devotion which Gods law asketh is free noble full of reward the tax which sinne imposeth base slavish beggerly yet how proud are wee in such poverty if wee compare our selves then are wee farre more circumspect more holy then others if any duty required of us then presuming of our owne strength wee follow Christ to the death and a little after deny him Peter did once I would wee did not often for lesse cause How necessary for us then is humility and prayer humility to value our selves as wee are and wee cannot indeed thinke worse of our selves then wee are wandring weake unconstant wilfull wicked and prayer that wee may find in God what wee want in our selves for surely he would never have sent his sonne amongst us had he not had care to redresse our miseries and to aske of the Father in the name of the Sonne is the way to bee gratious in obtaining our suits Let not thy unworthinesse discourage thee to come unto God nor let his mercy make thee forget thy vilenesse that keeping a hard hand on thy corruptions thou maist the better prevaile with God as Jacob did Meditation 8. 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