Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n angel_n holy_a zion_n 122 3 9.0481 4 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
A49957 Chara tēs pisteōs The joy of faith, or, A treatise opening the true nature of faith : its lowest stature and distinction from assurance, with a scripture method to attain both, by the influence and aid of divine grace : with a preliminary tract evidencing the being and actings of faith, the deity of Christ, and the divinity of the sacred Sciptures / by Samuel Lee ... Lee, Samuel, 1625-1691. 1687 (1687) Wing L891 136,126 264

There are 10 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

own divine power Whereby he manifested his own Glory that is of his Deity As in turning Water into Wine at Cana and in raising of Lazarus he was glorified to be the Son of God Therefore the Apostle John from that and many other cases of raising the dead Joh 5 17 15 24 10 18. c. might well affirm that he had seen his glory even in the transfiguration as of the only begotten of the Father full of Grace and Truth Till the incarnation or rather the beginning of his Ministry the Father wrought But now sayes he I Work. He laid down the life of his Humanity Heb 1 Rom 1 4 c. rose from the dead ascended into Heaven and sat down at the right hand of God by his own Divine Power Tho t is true that some of these things being sometimes ascribed to God essential and otherwhere predicated or affirmed of Christ personal do therein unite in the confirmation of his Deity who performed all these great signs that we should believe him to be the Son of God. 1 Joh. 5.13 8. Another Testimony of his glorious Deity is the pardon of sin The Pharisees saw the force of this Argument Mat. 9.3 Luk. 5.21 and blasphemously catcht at it as a great crime for arrogating to himself the honour which is alone due to the Majesty of God. But our Lord sufficiently knew the dignity of his own person tho somewhat vailed yet to the comfort of many a poor sinner and to their inestimable joy often as a God pronounced the forgiveness of their sins Nay to shew the union of his humanity with the Deity declares that the Son of Man hath power upon Earth Mat. 9.2 3. Act 5 31 Heb 1.3 as well as in Heaven to forgive sins So the Apostle to the Hebrews confirming his Godhead over and over in the same Chapter asserts that having purged away our sins by himself i. e. by his blood he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high 9. Again since contrite sinners do humbly supplicate to God for the pardon of sin we find him recorded sometimes as the direct and immediate object of Worship both from men and angels Joh 14.13 How often do we find him prayed to and worshipt by his Disciples and himself accepting all as his due Now he that receives prayer and answers it to the people of God and takes into his custody the spirits of dying Saints as he did Stephen's this person must needs be God. Nay all the Angels of God are commanded to Worship him Act 7 59 Heb 1 6 Mat 8 27 Job 38 9 at whose word the raging seas hush into their swadling bands and are quiet like a child sleeping in its cradle the boisterous winds delight to be still that they may without noise hear his delicious and heavenly voice with all silence and subjection and make a halcyon calm from Pole to Pole. 10 But to end He that is declared to be Judg of the World and to raise all persons out of their Graves by h●s own Imperial command to appear at his righteous Bar must not that person be God If he knew not the hearts and thoughts of all and every secret thing from his own Omniscience Eccl. 12 14 which thing is an incommunicable attribute of God he could not be Judg of quick and dead at his appearance and Kingdom To Judge the World was by the Pharisees acknowledged to be the character of a God. 2 Tim. 4 8 The high Priest therefore hearing this rents his clothes and calls it Blasphemy But why the second person having admitted the humanity into union and being head of the Church should perform this glorious work Mat 26 65 Mark 17 64 depends only upon the Oeconomy of the sacred Trinity a secret not to be irreverently peered into but adored Let 's be wise to Sobriety according to what is written and not transcend the limits at the foot of the Mount. Rom 12 3 But to draw to an issue He is also constituted Judg of Angels at that great day they must bow their coelestial knees at his Name and the evil Spirits acknowledg this while our Lord was here below Isa 45 23 Rom 14 10 11 Mat 8.29 beseeching him not to torment them before the time Now it is a work competent alone to a God to torment Spirits All the powers in heaven and earth besides cannot do it of their own vigor and force unless permitted influenced directed and managed by God in it and blessed be God for it that hath reserved the dominion of our spirits to himself alone as well as of Angels But this supremacy was acted by Christ at his pleasure from the innate power of his Deity when he cast them out as evil and unclean spirits sore against their wills and at their supplication gave them leave to go hither or thither For they are in adamantine chains and those chains in his own hand 2 Pet 2 4. and casts them into hell and looses them when he pleases There fore he who by his own power and authority in communion with the essential Godhead doth these great things Rev 20 1 2 7 must be God blessed for ever Amen I know the Socinians talk of their created God and so would sain evade the dint of Scriptures but that 's most perfect nonsence to assert two Gods and one a created God. For Infinite can be but one or else hold one to be titular as Angels and Magistrates tho in a higher Orb and Order which yet is inconsistent with the precedent Scriptural Arguments that prove our blessed Lord to be God in essence coequal with the Father and Holy Spirit to whom be glory and dominion for ever and ever Now then since this most excellent person by vertue of his sufferings in communion with his infinite Deity tho in it self impassible hath given full satisfaction to his Father for all the sins of Believers and by whom we receive the attonement Rom 3 21 5 21 Act 20 2 even through the merit of his precious blood and that hereby he is become a personal particular and immediate Object of our Faith and that by him we do believe in God the justifier of the ungodly through his righteousness and his alone Rev 22 17 Heb 9 12 Eph 5 26 Tit 2 14 1 Joh 1 7 1 Pet 1 2 Rev 8 5 Heb 9 16 and that this glorious person so graciously invites all thirsty sinners to take the water of life freely and to believe in his Name for the remission of Sins let us come boldly to the Throne of Grace that we may obtain mercy and find Grace to help in time of need Now let this suffice to have written about the two great Foundations of Faith. In the first Chapter concerning the Divinity of the Scriptures And in the second in reference to the Deity of our blessed Lord which I hope
will so satisfie comfort and erect the Spirits of feeble and staggering Believers that they may the more sweetly and firmly lay the stress of their fears in life and death upon this Rock in Zion and if they will be but careful and vigilant as to holy walking and be earnest in Praver to enjoy the beautiful and Soul-refreshing influences of the Holy Spirit They may then walk safely and joyfully through the valley of the shadow of death till they arrive at the mountain of Glory And so I proceed to the second part of this Treatise about the nature and actings of Faith it self more immediate and particular PART II. Of the Nature of Faith in particular Having in the first part of this Treatise laid the precious foundation upon those two marble r●cks the D●ctrine of the Divinity of the Scriptures and the Deity of Christ which may be likened to those vast and stately fulciments which Solomon built on the sides of Mount Moriah to sustain the grandeur of the Temple I should now proceed to erect the strong hold of confidence the pleasant Palace of assurance wherein that beautiful Daughter of Zion the grace of faith sits as upon a throne of every within the Curtains of our second Solomon And this I shall endeavour in the Ten Apartiments or Chapters following Chap. 1. Of the Name and Nature of Faith. Chap. 2. The various Expressions setting out its nature Chap. 3. The lowest or least degree of saving Faith. Chap. 4. Of Justification the immediate effect of Faith. Chap. 5. Of entring into Covenant with God by Faith. Chap. 6. Of the necessary and inseparable connexion between Sanctification or holiness and Faith. Chap. 7. Of the Infirmities of Believers Chap. 8. Of assurance or joy of Eaith how attained with some clear signs Chap. 9. The danger of Vnbelief Chap. 10. The happy Fruits and benefits of Faith. And so conclude the whole with some Corollaries by the blessed leave and help of our gracious God. I intend not to enlarge very much on any but to be briefest on those where others have been copious On the second third sixth and eighth I would insist a little liberally it being my primary design to strengthen the weak believer and in courage sinking spirits beseeching them to meditate seriously on the directions for understanding the nature of Faith in the first and second and to be consciencious in their holy care of walking with God in the points pr●scribed in the 6th chapter That so they may live more comfortably dye more sweetly and reign victoriously And now let us walk together into the first chapter by the gracious assistance of our holy and ever-blessed God. CHAP I. Of the name and nature of Faith THe Rise or Origen of this word is from the Italian Fede and that from the Latine Fides and that as some conceit from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to perswade and that from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cicero in his Offices descants on the word Fides as if so term'd quia fit quod di●tum because we believed what is spoken or promised shall be done Our English Saxon word Believe comes from the Dutch lieven and that as 't is thought from the old provincial Latine among the Roman Colonies in those quarters Libeo Libet to list or consent to a thing with love or liking and that the word Love comes from a Teutonick word of the same extract Verloff which signifies to assent Now as one of the Ancients says consensio est volentis consent is the act of a person that is willing so to believe is to consent freely and with love to the truth of what is spoken which breeds conviction and satisfaction on the mind of man. Now the inclination of the will to believe is wrought by God and if any question why one is perswaded by God and not another Psal 119.36 Let him take his answer from holy Paul that 't is God that maketh to differ and O man who art thou that repliest against God and if that please not let the bold fellow go look another 1 Cor 4.7 Rom. 9 20. But as Austin treats him caveat presumptores c. Let him take heed of presuming in curious searches and determining the mysteries of grace and the counsels of God. Is it not abundantly enough that thy heart is softned melted inclined to cast thy self wholly on the free-grace of the New-covenant when others repelling the glorious light of the Gospel run back again to the Old Covenant of works and split themselves upon the rock of presumption expecting divine mercy without the merits of Christ and so rush upon the pikes and spears of divine justice and vengeance to their eternal ruine But to prosecute our work To Believe is to be perswaded and satisfied in our hearts and consciences of what God hath spoken and promised in the holy Scriptures On the other side to beget a confidence and trust as to what any man speaks or asserts among several Nations according to their civil municipal Laws there must intervene a proof or an ascertainment made by the instrument of a publick Notary or by trusty witnesses of the vicinage as among the Northern Nations recited in Lindebrogius c. or else by sound arguments that cannot be refelled without incurring gross absurdities as in cases of unknown Murders the wonderful providence of God doth shine forth in their discovery by such methods and probable arguments which procure an acquiescence and quietation of spirit as to the truth of the things delivered But in divine cases 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am sufficiently satisfied and perswaded by the meer word of God Rom. 8.38 When I am sure that God has said it I believe it for in things Divine there can be no sublimer proof then the testimony of God himself For the very being of an infinite God determines his verity and when our imperfect and lapsed reason and many times misguided by education and the secret impressions of converse from designing persons that are apostates from the truth doth thr'u pride and envy and delight in contention study to contradict and invalidate the texts of sacred Scripture Let 's remember that infinite Wisdome had it so pleased him could have amazed us with such potent arguments that might strike us dumb and muzle and astonish us as our Lord did the Pharisees at every turn God is Truth and Truth Essential the fountain of all Truth and in him is no darkness at all Not one Iota or tittle of any of his sacred words can be infringed by the least or greatest of Errors John 1.5 Whence it comes that the truths of Gods revelation are the grounds of all the firmitude and stability of our spirits which otherwise might waver Isa 7.9 2 Chron. 20.1 and wander from their constancy per avia eserti through the gloomy by-paths of error to all Eternity In the significant language of the Hebrews
no delusion Answ In answer to this I must first in all manner of humble modesty declare that I would not dare to meddle too far with such deep and mysterious workings and influences only professing with all thankfulness to the Majesty of divine mercy that having had some glimpses of hope a little sometimes and thirsting after some further and clearer helps from heaven we faint not utterly but striving after to attain towards the resurrection of the dead crave leave to set down somewhat that hope may be a clue to conduct us out 〈◊〉 the Labrinth and maze of delusion The first and best token that these a●● no deceits can only arise from the spirt himself According to that saying of ●oy Iohn It is the Spirit that beareth witness that the Spirit is truth 1 John 5.6 Whitak de sacramentis p. As I remember th●● learned Whitaker in his book of the Sacraments says it should be translated I have forgot the page my books being laid up●● But this is a great truth as no better light to see the Sun by Psal 36.9.34.5 than his own light So 't is of the Spirit as David expresses In thy light we shall see light and they looked to him and their faces were enlightened This is the apprehension of learned gracious persons that the spirit of God never speaks by this his inward heavenly voice but that he graciously helps them to know that it is no delusion but that it is he even the spirit himself that speaketh to them This phrase of speaking to the heart and in and upon the heart is more visible in the Original Hebrew of the Old Testament and was well known to the Prophets of old and is much treated upon among Jewish Antiquiaries Out of whom I must not here stand to enlarge but call to mind what the Apostle Peter mentions of the Day-star arising in our hearts 2 Pet. 1.19 so that it is as clear when the spirit of God does thus shine and testifie yea and more radiant than the Sun at Noon-day without clouds I shall say no more to this but what our Lord to the Angel at Pergamus of them that have a new name written in the white stone Rev. 2.17 which none knoweth saving he that receiveth it 2. I need say little more but that wherever the Spirit doth so illustriously speak and shine it is concomitant with growing in holiness For this most holy Spirit of God is still a building and increasing in such the works of holiness they are of a heavenly frame rivers of holy discourse flow from their lips in prudent seasons they are not vain and trifling spirits but grave and serious and yet chearful For the joy of the Lord is their strength and they have inward delights and value not the cracklings of fools Divine joy is a weighty thing and yet greatly upholds the spirits and sustains their griefs and infirmities If you come into their company by a blessed accident as they say of the Adepti in Philosophy there 's a glittering star shines from their converse society 3. They are the most humble persons living For the humble he will teach his way and shew his Covenant Psal 25.9 I know they may fall sometimes and othertimes have need of a little holy courage against despisers But the main of their conversation is like them of whom the spirit of God says they took notice of them that they had conversed with Jesus Acts 4 13. who was meek and lowly if we imitate him we shall find this rest and remember that Moses the meekest man had the greatest interviews with God in the Mountain Such as are given to much prate and length of idle impertinent discourses are seldom and little or never acquainted with the Spirit of God. 4. They are also the sweetest persons and fullest of love though sometimes provokt by fierce evil spirits about them but if their natural tempers had been before somewhat eager and sharp yet now they are washed purged whitened and sweetned by the Spirit of God. Tender to the Tempted kind to the afflicted pitiful to all bear every ones burden with a gracious frame onely they are taught by the holy Spirit 1 cor 23 4.5 as to such as prate with malicious words against them to imitate hole John not to succumbe under a prou●● Diotrephes 3 John 9. but loves a child of God as such with the full stream of his Spirit And this love to the brethren is much more to Christ himself being filled with the love of the Spirit which by degrees casts out the torments of fear 1 John. 4.18 and gives a blessed confidence as to the Appearing of the Day of Judgment To end this we must remember that the holy Spirit of God doth never witness or illustrate apart from the Word Isa 8 20. 〈◊〉 any light in you try it by the Word and Testimony and hence that as Tentations and afflictions sanctified so the manifestations and communions of the Spirit help us to understand holy Scriptures and promises by experience Let us then be sure as far as possible that the person that pretends to be thus illustrated prove himself to be an holy person in heart and deed or else all 's like a puft and swoln delusion and such an on● must lie down in sorrow For the Spirit of God is a most holy spirit and never seals but as he is the holy Spirit of Promise upon the holy heart of an holy child of God. Well then to end this second part of the Spirits illustration Eph 1 3. Rom. 8.16 1 John 4.13 I say it is not meant of the Spirit of God concurring or witnessing with our spirits in the point of assurance clearing up our doubts dispelling the mists and clouds uponour spirits But it is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or like an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a bright shining Ray a most illustrious beam streaming down from heaven into the inmost chambers of our hearts and is an act distinct and apart from his former blessed concurse with our spirits in time of argumentation or the gracious application of the promises for our peace and comfort it is an irresistable evidence of divine love See Dr Owen of the spirit 167. scattering all the clouds of diffidence and distrust in that very moment and when this immediate irradiation flows in though it may be a distinct act from that upon argumentation yet it cannot be totally severed from it because in this glorious light though we may see further yet cannot but see any argument we think meet to touch upon to be also illustrated by it as the Moon in her increases may be seen in the heavens like a cloud in the day time which also has its light from the Sun while he is yet shining bright within our hemisphere at the same time and when these come together they make heavenly work indeed That these blessed
Christ Then may we safely and comfortably proceed to the main subject of this Discourse the nature of true saving Faith which I have divided into ten Chapters but shall inlarge principally on three or four being the drift and scope of my writing to help the Joy of FAITH in those poor hearts who tho truly gracious yet like young Samuel cannot well discern the voice and presence of Christ And this my undertaking I beg the divine help and Grace to assist and prosper extending my time and health after my late sickness according to his blessed will affording the savourable influence of his loving countenance This Tract divides into two parts The first containing the Foundation the second the more visible superstructure about the nature of Faith. The first concluding with two Chapters and the second with ten But whereas some may question what need any further on this Subject wherein several have already travelled I may rejoyne that Holy Luke thought meet in his pure Greek as to his handling that heavenly Subject of our Lords Life Luk. 1.1 that though many had taken it in hand before yet he would set forth some things not mentioned by other Evangelists Yea how many in almost all ages have prosecuted the same points in Divinity with benefit and use to the Church both in Commentaries and Controversies This consideration incouraged these Lines to appear having observed some further need of these Chapters on which I mainly insist and were the great motive of my writing and are but little toucht heretofore and yet are very useful to chosen Vessels yea the far greater number of the truly gracious Servants of God. To whom if you draw near and can have the happiness to come within them for their good for they are shy aware of every approach you may find their lives to hang in an anxious suspence between fear and hope and feed only upon some few gracious glimpses like the Beams from between April Clouds let down out of Heaven into their hearts to sustain their Spirits from sinking and to preserve from dying under grievous Fits of the palpitation of their hearts To these I chiefly bend my Souls desire and humbly beg the dewes of Zion upon these Meditations and Labours that neither they nor I may saint under lost expectations of Mercy And so I finish the Preface and come to the Treatise it self S. L. The JOY of FAITH PART I. Of the Fundamental points necessary to build a sound and vigorous Faith laid down in two Chapters The first referring to the Divine Authority of the Holy Scriptures The second demonstrating the Deity of our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ CHAPTER I. The Authority of the Sacred Scriptures THat the Holy Scriptures wherein we daily read and meditate for our instruction in order to Eternal Life are the very words of God there are many weighty arguments to evince it upon the hearts of all sober and well-inclined persons nay which by the good conduct of Gods Spirit may influence the minds of Heathen and Atheists would they but improve the common light of reason that Candle of the Lord. Prov. 20.27 James 2.19 Mat. 8.29 Mat. 4 2 4. Mark 5.7 Nay Devils themselves who believe and tremble at the Judgment to come and desire of our Lord not to torment them before that time do quot● them in argument against our blessed Saviour in his tentations and acknowledge his Deity as being the Son of God. But I shall not dwell upon the several Heads to clear this truth so often insisted upon by th● Pious and Learned in their Systemes and Bodies of Divinity but I shall only touch some of them and inlarge upon one or two which are the chief design of this Chapter 1. One Argument that some mention is their venerable Antiquity which though it be no cogent proof yet allowing that of an ancient quo quid antiquius co verius that Truth is elder than Error I would not lay aside the pains of Clemens Alexandrinus and others who prove that the writings of Moses are ancienter than any the Heathen world can pretend to To which I would annex their stupendious preservation through the fury of all ages especially the raging flames of Antiochus and Dioclesian those cruel Persecutors of the Church of God neither would I be silent as to the invincible pains ●uxtorfji ●iberias and toile which the Jewish Masorites underwent to preserve the Hebrew Original With such exactness did they manage that Affair that they had in numerato punctually set down every word and every letter in the whole Bible and did also set down which was the middle word and middle letter of the whole and I think of every individual Book which was indeed a high providence of God towards the conservation of those happy leaves and I could heartily wish the New Testament had been so guarded by industrious and holy persons in the primitive times Nay it were well if yet at this day some pious Rectors of Vniversities and Schools of Learning would take up the ancientest and purest Copies and perform it at this time The Masorites did the work long after the first penning of them on purpose to preserve it in their dispersions But I proceed to other Arguments As 2. The Majesty of their Stile that might justly make the Vniverse tremble and all the powers of darkness to hide their heads in the dark Chaos of confusion 3. The Heavenly Harmony of their distinct parts tho written in various Ages and distinct places 4. The self-denial of the Pen-men discovering their own sins and heart corruptions with the follies and weakness of their nearest and dearest relations which is not done by other Writers as Thucydides Xenophon or Plutarch or Livy but especially by Law-givers which might disparage their Government as the compilers of the twelve Tables or Theodosius in his Codex or Justinian in his Pandects or other his Sanctions of the Civil Law. 5. The Sublimity and Spirituality of the Mysteries therein discovered far beyond the invention or comprehension of men or Angels They may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if they please and pry towards them 1 Pet. 1.12 but none except the Lion of Judah can 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both open the Seals and expound the mystical depths of this admirable Volumne So far is it beyond the brains of the most fine spun Philosopher that Amelius the Platonick in Clem of Alexandria confessed of the first verses of the Apostle Johns Gospel This Barbarian saith he hath comprized more stupendious matters in three lines than we in all our Volumns I might adjoyn to this the purity and holiness of its subject matter and the glorious scope and design for our everlasting communion with God in heaven 6. In the sixth place a principal argument may be deduced from the Imperial Power and Efficacy on the Souls and Consciences of men both as to conviction of sin sustentation
Son of God he required of all his Disciples and it must be understood of his eternal Being and not as Adam is called a Son of God because he urges the Jews with his works and such as none can produce but a God such as the Father performed whereof more by and by Mark 1.24.5 7. Luk. 4.34.8 28. ●ert in Thalete The Devils themselves do own this point and yet how many blind nominal Christians are there who have not attained the knowledg of Thales who calls him the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if cited right And yet our dayes find some who bear the Name of Christ but blaspheme his nature and speak boldly against this grand Fundamental of Christianity such as the Socinians and many Quakers poor wretches perverted by cunning sophisters that plead against the only true means of their own salvation and return again to the Old Covenant of works Whereas the scripture is both evident and copious in the case Pr●v 8.23 As that of Wisdom I was set up from Everlasting c. which must be expounded of a person from that of verse 30. I was by him as one brought up with him I was daily his delight Psal 110.1 Mat 22.44 Ioh. 1.18 Deut. 30.12 Rom. 10.7 Eph 4.10 Ioh. 8 58. Rev 1.8 Ioh. 1.2 rejoycing alwayes before him This Probl●me confounded th● Pharisees How can the Lord of David be his Son He it is that lay in the bosom of God and came down from Heaven being the same that ascended up again He it is that was before Abraham That was and is and is to come the Almighty That was in the beginning and had his glorious Being before ever the World was Isai 57.15 1 Tim. 3 16 as the Ancients truly expound that phrase Now what can be before the World began but Eternity wherein God inhabits Ioh 1.14 This person was God manifest in the flesh and therefore God before his manifestation on Earth Heb. 1.8 when he vailed his glory within the Tabernacle of his sacred flesh Moreover if God the Father call Christ God as he does Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever His Glory then must be coequal with the Fathers before the World began Phil. 2.6 he esteeming it no robbery to be equal with God. Yea as God in unity of Essence he is stiled the blessed and only Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Which Name and Stile is applied to him by the Apostle Iohn 1 Tim. 6.15 and seen by him as written in his vesture upon his thigh adding that he was the Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end the first and last Rev. 19.16 22 23 3. Hence flows the Doctrine of the unity of Christ the Son oi God with the Father in the same Divine Essence therefore the Father calls him his Fellow in Zechary and some observe concerning that passage in Isaiah Smitten of God and afflicted that OF the note of the Genitive Zech 13.7 Isai 53 4. is not in the Hebrew and therefore construed from the Hebrew A smitten God equivalent to that in the New Testament where the precious blood of Christ is called the blood of God Act. 20.28 as abovesaid yet others affecting not this reading in Isaiah I shall not contest it at present but as to his unity there be many plain places wherein our Lord determines it that he and the Father are one and had the same essential glory together from eternity For speaking of the manutenency and protection of his sheep from perishing Ioh. 10.30 17.11 21 22 23. he declares himself one with the Father that gave them to him whereupon the Jews being clear in the Argument took up stones again to destroy him as a Blasphemer in that he made himself one with God. 4. Again He that is Omniscient and knows our thoughts by his own discerning eye and power must needs be God. As Solomon spake to the Lord in Prayer Thou only knowest the heart of the Children of men 2 Chron. 6.30 Rev. 2.23 Mat. 9.4.12 25. Luk. 5.22 6 8. 9.47 11.17 Now our Saviour expresly assumes it to himself that he searcheth the Reins and the heart and t is often expressed that our Lord knew the thoughts both of his Disciples and his enemies as may be observed in the Scripture Nay he perceived when thoughts did but arise in their hearts much like that of David Thou understandest my thoughts afar off which demonstrates an Omniscient Deity Luk. 24.38 Psal 139.2 Heb. 4.12 13. this our Lord did not discern as to one of his Disciples only but of several at once So that this essential word of God is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart and all things are naked and open before him and no creature but is manifest in his sight which must needs follow because he is the Creator of all which brings in the fifth 5. Another conviction of this glorious Truth of Christs Deity is drawn from his Omnipotency Joh. 1.3 For all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made which action of creating must needs be invested in the infinite power of his Essence whom we have before proved to be the Eternal God had the same glory with God the Father before the World was praying further that his humanity now assumed into unity with the second person might be dignified with the same glory John 17.5 Col. 1.16 This great truth is confirmed by the great Apostle By him were all things created in Heaven and Earth even the Angels those glorious Spirits were formed by him and for him that is for his glory and service and to sing his praises Rev. 4.11 Heb 1.10 But to end it s spoken by God the Father to Christ Thou Lord in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the Earth and the Heavens are the work of thy hands Yet further 6. As Christ made the World it must needs follow that he also governs it sometimes immediately by himself sometimes by the ministration of Angels and as to the Church by his own Spirit Thence is he stiled King or Kings King of Nations and King of Saints The Apostle Paul asserts him to be before all things in his eternal Essence Col 1.17 and that by him all things do consist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 1.3 have the continuation of their Beings Lives and Motions Yea it is he that beareth supporteth and upholdeth all things by the word of his power He spake the word and they were made and he speaks and ordains the time method and means of their continuance 7. Besides as he maintains and preserves the world in its being Luk. 24.19 Joh. 2.11 11.4 6.54 5 21. 1 14 so likewise beyond the ordinary course of nature in the time of his Incarnation he wrought all those mighty Miracles by his
without great mercy to the innocent party For the truth is Sanc●ior copul● cordis quam corporis it can be no less than an original cheat and a wicked action when a Woman accepts a Husband meerly for gain or honour when her heart was never honestly and truly towards him It was the false act of a strange or whorish heart in the sight of God when others whose spirits were right might have stood sincere and faithful being filld with candor and sweetness in conjugal Relations Even so it is as to outward hypocritical and feigned Professors who take Christ in the Sun-shine of the Gospel and in hope of a great inheritance when the will in its personal adherence to Christ for his righteousness and holiness never came to a true and real union Whereas the Will is the main point in Marriage according to the determinate rule of the civil Law Consensus non concubitus efficit matrimonium Cod. Justin T is consent and not the bed that makes it So in all moral actions contracts and agreements neither is it otherwise in this grand spiritual concernment of the soul when the Judgment has declared the undone and ruined estate of any out of Christ and proclaimed the rare excellencies that are in him and how appropriate a Saviour to scatter all our fears root out all despondencies and to supply all its wants and indigencies Then comes in the Will and chooses his person as the most lovely in Heaven and Earth consents to all his gracious offers and sincerely embraces his love and mercy with unspeakable joy and thankfulness and delightful resolutions of new and constant Obedience The soul then being invited by Christ in such sweet alluring terms Rev 24 17 Isa 551 Song 1 3 as these Whosoever will let him come and take of the water of life freely and ho every one that thirsteth c. it finds a sweet inclination smelling fragrantly of the precious anointings of the Spirit when this powerful faculty is turned about renewed and filled with the balsome of heaven and thereby through infinite grace and irresistable power allured to look and run after him to accept him and close with him on the terms of the New Covenant of grace In Scripture therefore the Will is often phrased and signified by the bea rt Thus Solomon prayes at the Dedication that the Lord would incline their hearts that is 1 King 8 58 Psal 119 36 112. sweetly bend their wills to keep his laws and David thus incline my bea rt unto thy testimonies and to perform thy Statutes To incline the will is when divine light has set before the understanding the knowledge of the true good this divine power inwardly moves the will to it Lactant. de Orig c 3 de fals sap l. 3. c. 10 de ira Dei c 7. Bp Wilkins in a set discourse 8. Lond. 1678. not by any force or coaction but by a sweet melting and moulding it into the Will of God. Man is a rational creature and a religious as Lactantius seems to make the last his specifick difference from bruits So that when the stony heart is by infinite power changed into golden oar then 't is melted by the fire of divine love in the furnace of godly repentance and by degrees cast into the mould of the divine will and effigiated or shaped into the exact image of his Son. After this great work the renewed soul finds its will determina ely carried to blessed objects and turned quite about to delight in heavenly persons and things There 's no compulsion in the point but natura renovata fertur the soul being changed is now by its own spontaneous freedom carried with a spiritual naturality to that which is coadequate to its essence and hath received from God a blessed recovery to an enjoyment of and a complacency in this supreame and everlasting good Now though the soul can do no otherwise as far as 't is renewed yet it is no way compelled but acts according to its own delight and pleasure For the whole soul whole heart whole will so far as renewed is carried out with all the Sails of its desires and satiated with the sense and comfort of this most happy change and when come to heaven will be fully concentred in those enjoyments and bathed in that Ocean of bliss no otherwise in their though minute proportion than God himself the humane nature of our Lord then holy Angels and the Saints in glory After which manner some of the Ancients and several of the Moderns express themselves I shall a little touch upon what Strangius declares to this point Libertas naturae est ab omni necessitate Strangig de Voluntate Dei amstel 1657. p. 683. l 3 c. 14 p. 686. quae repugnat naturae voluntatis Liberty of nature is when free from all necessity which is a thing repugnant to the nature of the Will. Again Necessity doth not overthrow our Liberty Again p. 687. Indifferency lies then in the nature of Liberty when it can act or not act about the same object when it may choose either that or another and afterward instances in God in Angels and in the blessed Saints 690. and so Pemble p. 87. Ant Burges of sin p. 312. whose will is determined to true Good c. This powerful and sweet motion and inclination of the will of a believer by the spirit of God may be happily shadowed forth by the inclination of the mind in persons carried towards union in the Marriage-covenant It is of God and generally little or no reason to be given of many of their choices but an influence or impulse from heaven in those that out of pure and honest affection give mutual consent to that relation and not for any base and sinister ends but for personal delight in each other wherein that unspotted intaminated love in rational beings so vastly differs from bruitish lusts and draws nigh to an Angelical Excellency like that of an honourable Lady to a Philosopher in Scotland mentioned by Burton in his book of Melancholly How much more and transcendently excellent is that joyful and heavenly love moving in the heart by the finger of God in a soul that thirsts after spiritual espousals to the Lord of Life There is no adumbration of our union to the Lord Jesus more proper or pertinent than this wherein the Scripture doth so greatly delight To the accomplishment whereof the drawing of the Father is requisite and 't is performed by inward teaching Eph. 5.32 Rev. 19.7 Johae 6.44 45 and thereby producing a heavenly inclination to this union and communion with his Son as the most excellent person and most beloved of the Soul. This secret work being formed upon the heart makes up that inseparable conjunction with Christ which shall triumph in the same chariot to eternity Moreover when 't is freely consented to by the Soul For the gracious heart acts voluntarily tho by
soul and weeps in secret and often bewailes it before the throne of God. 4. There is also found within it a secret joy in the discovery of light It takes inward pleasure in the launcing of the tumors of pride to l●t out the corruption of nature The lamp of Gods word is more precious and joyful to it than the dawnings of a Spring-morning out of the East It 's a sign of an unsanctified heart and a very proud spirit to snuff and snarl at godly reproof But this is a certain note of grace begun when no corruption is too dear no secret sin so delectable but it will part with it at the conviction of the Spirit Yea and the more searching any Ministry is the more it delights to sit under it dares not call that a legal preaching which drives men out of the School of the Law into the Temple of Christ 5. Besides the tender soul grieves under its fears of the want of true Faith and is never quiet till it gain some lively hope of its implantation into Christ which it cherishes and nourishes by the application of promises But till then it wrings its hands runs up and down mournfully through all the Streets of New Jerusalem being desolate in spirit as not having a comforting sense of any faith at all It cries lamentably from watch-man to watch-man bears many affronts and injuries in the tearing of her vail and smiting upon her bead Song 5.7 till at last she finds her beloved embraces him in the armes of Faith. Then the soul continues in the use of all prescribed means to attain the vision of his divine love in the glass of affiance 6. Again This troubled soul flies far from the land of excuses hates palliations and self-conceited applauses and layes all the fault upon it self heaps accusations and layes snares and tentations for its own feet and so great that the holyest minister and one skilful in cases of conscience can hardly sometimes answer and resolve Whereas the hypocritical Pharisee is commonly full of talk hath little or no solidity is confident and boasts of experiences with a false tongue and a deceitful heart But our gracious young convert is as sensible of the least sin as the tenderest hand hath a quick and immediate sense of the sitting of a flye or the gentle breathings of a Western Air. It laments over In-dwelling sin bewails its residence and sounds continual alarums against it For it cannot bear the domination of that proud Vice-roy of Satan to fullfil it in any lusts thereof If it prevail though but a little the soul triumphs as if its conquering flag were entring the gates of heaven For although its motions and impulses against unholiness be yet but weak tender and low yet are they the fruits of integrity and grow forward in Strength This is a true sign of grace and that the new life is in good earnest begun in that heart for it finds repentance towards God and true sorrow for sin conjoyned with real inclinations resolutions and workings in its gradual turning from it and an holy hatred of all thoughts of reversion to it 7. The soul feels within it self an holy inclination to sincerity in all its actions which like a fragrant perfume in every chamber of all its powers and faculties gives a grateful scent in every duty Psal 139.23 and delights to be unfeigned in every good word and work It hates painted garments of hypocrisie and therefore with great humility requests of God to search its heart and begs to be what God would have it and prays withal Psal 143 2● 130.3 that he would not enter into a severe judgment and mark what 's done amiss with an urgent scrut iny for then no flesh can stand in his sight but intreats forgiveness of God that so he may be feared and worshipped From hence springs that solid sweet and comfortable doctrine of the Reformed Churches That the true desire of grace is true grace On which Basis sound consolation will stand inviolably when all the proud towers of Pelagius and Arminius shall moulder into dust at the fall of Babylon For now the soul in this humble and holy frame lies at the foot of God mourns for sin as committed against God thirsts after the righteousness of Christ alone and praves for the spirit of God to allure and draw it into fuller communion having taken God in the new covenant for its God alone 8. Lastly it studies the increase of holiness by all holy means and methods in meditation self-examining and conversing with old disciples and experienced believers For in such-like God communicates his gracious presence ● cor 7 1. and in these mountains of Zion commands the blessing and life for evermore In these and such particulars if serious Christians would please to go down the stairs of humility Psal 133.3 into the closet of their own heart and ponder more upon what they read with holy meditation they might better observe the motus primo primi the first infant motions of their hearts towards God and heavenly objects but cursory reading spoils all Some indeed advise an hours meditation to an hours reading I think a set quantity of time is not necessary but so much as may cleare and warm the motion upon the heart By experience it will be found that the spirit of God works by vacious methods and very different yet so that by one or other token any poor broken trembling soul may in some measure be comforted as to a true work begun in the heart Psal 51.6 and may learn to know divine wisdom in its secret formations of grace within its utmost recesses and retirements To conclude I take this to be one of the lowest sentiments of a true work when there are found continually secret inclinations motions thirstings and desires after God and holiness which by strict and careful observation may be perceived to grow and increase year by year and this note is common to all believers though in their weakest estate who would not change their slender hopes for all the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them This work flows from the first breathings of the spirit of God and may be discerned as to truth and sincerity by these two notes 1. If conjoyned with patient continuance in well-doing Rom. 2.7 though weakly yet with the face toward Zion 2. If growing in spiritual strength tho' at present by small degrees and for a while scarce discernable 2 Pet 3.18 like the growth of a child or the augmentation of a plant or the motion of a shadow of the Style upon the Sun-Dial But so much of the first Let 's treat a while on the second branch of the chapter about a deserted soul and then come to an end 2. Of the lowest acts of grace in a deserted Soul. Here such as are inwardly for the main work truly gracious yet through vain walking and too
Tokens sent before Marriage and to be sure God will not lose his earnest nor be defeated of the fore tokens of his contract of love to souls sometimes the Spirit is compared to fire and yields both the light of joy the heat of love and influences or quicknings for service And 't is this lively Faith which works by love effectually thru ' the Spirit But I would speak a little more distinctly for the observation and the experience of holy men hath set to their seals that they do find and feel sometimes a most illustrious irradiation upon their hearts from the Spirit of God which I take to be of two sorts The 1. We may call an irradiation of concurse with our spirits The 2. An irradiation of incidence upon our spirits Give leave to use the terms and explain them to the meanest The First or the irradiation of concurse is then dispensed when he shines upon our Argumentation when we have laboured with our spirits used scripture mediums and upon examination suited them to our hearts in their most inward sincere and humble searches then comes the spirit of God and witnesses with our spirits that we are the children of God. When we have toiled and sweat many a time in our closets and brought things as we hope some times to a pritty good issue then thru ' one tentation or another our unbelieving hearts fly off from the Conclusion and all our comfort vanishes But now when our arguings by evident Scripture tokens are finisht over and over and yet still we demurre to lay hold on the Tree of life and while we stick in the mire of fear doubtings and hesitancies and wander under dark clouds in the depth of midnight then comes in the spirit of God Rom. 8.16 as the Morning Star glittering over the Horizon and clears all This is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the co-witness of the Spirit of God. 2. The other is that which I beg leave from a term in Opticks to call the irradiation of incidence and is then illustriously performed when the Spirit of God in his most free and glorious agency is pleased to shine personally upon our spirits without and apart from all argumentation whatsoever This comunion with the spirit draws nigh to that of Angelical intuition where by acts of volition and luminous emanation they converse mutually together in a higher degree than we do here by ratiocination with mediums and consequences This is the point we are now upon to shew that the Spirit of God when he pleases without any previous foregoing arguments doth testifie by a secret still heart-ravishing voice Acts 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and doth sweetly and suddenly as 't is said in the Acts dart in a ray perswading and satisfying the soul in an instant that thou art a Child of God that sin is pardoned and that thou shalt be saved page 147. Which I re●ember the British Divines at Dort call the ●pirits speaking to the heart and even in darker times there were some of the Il●uminate both of Spain and Germany and France that had to do I am perswaded with many distrssed souls in their secret confessions were acquainted with great wor●nigs in the hearts of penitents but few of ●hem had skill to manage those inward methods Of which things we may find some ●otable footsteps in Bonaventure Gerson Thanlerus and sundry others So that of this inwa●d clear and bright perswasion of Gods love to the heart we have no solid reason to doubt but that some holy persons have enjoyed it Austin at his conversion in the garden at Millain had a voice though he had no vision as Paul had in the fields by Damascus I shall be sparing and touch but an instance or two Dr. Manton spake it in my hearing at Oxon of one that being in conflict in prayer had a beam shining into the chamber and being desired by him to have a care of delusion answered O Mr. Manton little do you know what God may do for his poor distressed children or very like words But the caution was wise and grave I know one also who being for almost a week deeply distressed about Eternity had an impression as like a voice within as if he heard it comforting in these words I will give thee rest and so i● followed speedily and joyfully and at another time I will not leave thee no● forsake thee I might also hint at the beam upon the wall in prayer to Dr. Winter in his life and the voices of Angels to Mr. Patrick Simpson I must confess they are great priviledges and sweetnesses which God may it his divine good pl●asure and I am perswad●d doth sometimes instil and drop in to gracious when timorous hearts an● whose constitutions the great former o● hearts and spirits knows full well to b● naturally over subject to fears and inwar● commotions he like a most gracious and Tender Father full of pity and bowels discerns our frames See Mr. Ma●hers prevalency of prayer Psal 103. p 17.14 at the end of his Tract of N. E. troubles Psal 40.17 By his loving eye and remembring that we are dust is mindfull of us in our low condition whereas many proud and disdainful persons set light by the inward sorrows of broken and contrite souls And are like lamps despised in the thought of him that is at ease But says David though I am poor and needy yet the Lord thinketh upon me and with how many precious thoughts his goodness is pleased to embroider and enamel upon the hearts of his holy humble meek and trembling children For your high exalted boasting persons tho' it may be have some few grains of grace at bottom are seldom visited with these inward joyes But the meek will he teach his ways Such blessed thoughts of grace David could not number Ps 139.17 18 they were more than the Sands of the Sea or the stars of heaven for multitude But now if these or such like lines should fall under the view or knowledge of any prophane or scoffing Ishmael that may vilifie the works of God and like bruits speak ignorantly of what they know not would advise them to forbear presumptious speeches 2 Pet. 2 12. Jude 10. lest their bonds be made strong lest the Terrors horrors of the almighty should one day drink up their spirits So that when Gods Servants shall rejoyce and sing for joy of heart they shall cry for sorrow of heart and howl for vexation of spirit Isal 65.14 But yet because there may be such things as Enthusiasines and transformation of Angels of darkness among some that call themselves Sweet-singers and among others that have more need to mourn over their follies and delusions in the dust of shame I would speak somewhat to that question of an humble Soul. Quest How may I comfort my heart that this irradiation you speak of is a true and immediate work of the Spirit of God and
crucifie them to the world more and more You begin to grow up and some into years It s high time as the Apostle exhorts to put on the Lord Jesus and to make no provision more for the flesh and the lusts thereof Rom. 13.14 5. Fifthly The Doctrine of Faith infers it to be great wisdom and duty to keep your consciences undefiled For the mystery of Faith is held and preserved in a pure clean and serene conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 like a chrystal Venice-glass tipt with gold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that runs like a clear sweet stream not conscious of any sin wilfully committed 1 Tim. 1.19 It s sometime termed a good conscience whereof wilful sins make sorrowful ship-wracks A good conscience is a continual feast gave Paul a Banquet every night and composed him to a better rest 2 Cor. 1.12 than in a bed of Roses But why is a good conscience such a golden vial for Faith Because holiness of life feeds conscience with joy and thereby testifies and comforts about the truth of Faith. 6. Sixthly We may observe from the former tract that Faith is an excellent engine to discern and observe the wise Government of God in the World and in the Church It s a Telescope to discern afar off in the heavens and a Microscope to pry into minuter accidents in the earth Had we no other Argument Heb. 11.3 yet by Faith we may know it and that more fully and punctually how the worlds were framed and by Faith we understand the divine dominion and management of the world by Spirits He maketh his Angels Spirits Psal 104.4 his Ministers a flaming fire of some whereof le ts speak in order 1. First God manages many things by the ministration of Angels They are the seven eyes of God that joy to see the plummet in the hand of Zerubbabel for rebuilding the Temple Heb. 1.7 Zech. 4.10 Dan. 9.21.10 13 20. Gen. 19.1 2 Kin. 1.9 15. Deut. 32.8 We read in Scripture of the Prince of Persia and Graecia of Michael and Gabriel tho the third is judged to be meant of Christ the other of created Angels which were imployed in divine works and messages and what were the Chariots of Mahanaim and near Samaria and at Elijah's rapture and other times but the holy Angels of God. There is also a place in Deuteronomy which the Septuagint read thus When the most High divided the inheritance to the Nations when he separated the Sons of Adam he set the bounds of the people according to the number of the Angels of God. Tho I do not justifie the Translation yet it shews that this notion was current among the antient Jews And altho the Pseudodionysius in his Hierarchy of Angels sets down many frivolous fancies and curiosities about their orders yet that God is pleased to execute his pleasure by the administration of good and sometimes evil Angels is consonant to holy Scripture As in the Psalmist Psal 78.49 he sent evil Angels among the Egyptians and so made a way to his anger whom some interpreters judg to be good Angels but called so from the evil of punishment which as instruments they inflicted However that be yet t is a Scripture truth and an object of Faith and known by experience in several ages And altho the methods be unknown yet the matter is certain and indeed may be joy and comfort to Saints to know that they encamp about them that fear him and are the valiant ones about their beds by night Psal 34 7 they are the holy Watchers in Daniel and the comforters and aiders of Saints by day and why may not they suggest some heavenly ill apses as well as evil Spirits tempt when God permits It s ground of sweet joy and praise for the Saints to have such society and communion with these holy Sons of God these Morning Stars that sang before him Ioh 38 7 Zech 6 8 It s said of them that they quieted the Spirit of God in the North Countrey that is Gods wrath was satiated by the execution of justice upon Babylon in the ministry of these holy Angels They fought against the Assyrian in Sennacharibs Camp 2 King 19 35 Zech 1 8 2 Chro. 35.21 they were in Battel aray against Babylon among the Myrtle Trees What may we divine of the visions to Pharaoh Necho when commanded to go up against Carckemish the Cercusium in Ammiano or of that to Alexander in Josephus or of that voice to Totilas commanding him to go against Italy and making him the flagellum Dei Gods Scourge to the Nations were not they secret impulses and instigations of Angels upon their Spirits to do the work of God 2. Sometimes by the spirits of men God turned the Egyptians hearts to hate his people and deal subtilly with his Servants after a while Ps 105.29.37 E●od 12.36 he gives them favour in the sight of the same nation so that they lent them what they required both Jewels of gold silver and raiment sometimes a Pharaoh that dealt kindly with them all the days of Joseph and then other Pharaohs that were very harsh and cruel to them Sometimes a Grecian Alexander shall favour them and after him Antiochus one of his Successors deal barbarously with them When Israel was come into their own land God promised to restrain the Spirits of the Neighbouring Heathens at the three times a year when they went up to worship yea to bridle the inward desires of the adjacent nations Exod. 34.24 that not a man of them should so much as desire their Land. In after-ages the Prophet Daniel treating of the times of the silver breast Dan. 11.27 Prophesies there should arise two Princes scil Antiochus Epiphanes and Ptolomaeus Philometor who should speak lies at one table but it should not prosper that is make feigned shews of amity when they feasted together but it should not avail them To name no more there is a wonderful Praediction in Ezekiel that in the latter days not yet fulfilled things shall then come into the mind of Gog● that is the Turk or Tartars as the learned judg He shall think an evil thought Ezek. 38.10 even to come into the Land of Israel ver 18. ver 22. after the Jews are re-entred into it But the Lord will plead against him to his utter destruction and he shall be finally ruined when the Lord will raise up the Sons of Zion against the Sons of Greece Zech. 14.3.9.13 that is against the Turk or Tartarian in that day having fixed his seat at Constantinople in the old Imperial Pallace of the Graecian or Eastern Empire and being the Successor of the Graecian Alexander in his East Dominions 3. Sometimes by the heavenly bodies and their influences by the spirits of meteors and many other natural exhalations out of the sea and bowels of the earth as from Vesuvius Aetna Hecla and the Vulcanian Islands How did the Stars in their courses fight against Sisera Judg. 5.20 causing great inundations in the
River Kishon that ancient River or River of Antiquities or great battels of old but now swelling to a great overflow swept away the Host of the Canaanites How did the Lord tame the pride of Egypt by locusts hail fire and frogs and darkness that might be felt thick fogs as black as pitch and many other ways How did God subdue the proud Pope Hadrian by a fly c. There 's no age but ecchoes and cries aloud to all people to prove and make all to acknowledg the Soveraign Dominion of the Lord of Hosts in the Heavens Earth and Seas and over all Creatures nay under the earth in Mineral Caverns if Paracelsus and the Learned Agricola write true stories of multitudes of Spirits and living creatures in the bowels of the earth All testimonies trumpeting aloud how God at times arms what of his Hosts he pleases for the protection of his Church and the ruine of his enemies Famous is that memorial of the cloud which presented its dark side to the Egyptians but gave light to Israel when the Red-sea stood up in heaps and the depths were congealed or frozen in the heart or midst of that sea Exod. 15.8.14.22 so that the waters became as a wall to his people which the Egyptians essaying to pass thorough were drowned Nay the wonderful motion of the tides which is so great a mystery Heb. 11.29 Exod. 15.10 Psal 147.18 is managed by Gods Wisdom and the inconsiderable sands are a boundary to the Ocean determining how far his waves shall toss themselves and go no further Jer. 5.12 They have their stated and fixed limits by the laws of Creation which has settled their channels into which they shall subside at his command Some there be to mention it a little that would inferr the sea to be higher than the earth from such a Text. But 't is a mistake and misapply of Scripture Jonah 1. Exod. 20.4 Psal 24.2 Psal 107.23 which expresly sets the waters under the earth and that it is establisht upon the floods and mentions mens going down to the sea in ships If the sea were not lower comparatively to the ordinary surface and globe of the earth besides the mountains how can all the Rivers r●n down into the sea if the earth out of which they spring Psal 42.10 Eccles 1.7 Jer. 51.42 were not higher wherefore the Prophet alluding to the natural situation foretells that the sea should come up upon Babylon and more to that purpose But this belongs not properly to our present work only so far as to shew that God rules the raging seas and the stormy winds fullfil his pleasure Let 's step to Land and end our voyage with one note more Psal 1●8 8 to observe how that God injoyned Israel to plow and sow for six years but must trust him for the seventh and part of the eighth till the harvest came living for the while on the blessed providence of God sending them the greater plenty in the foregoing years 4. Fourthly and Lastly le ts touch a little upon the mysterious government of the Church by his most Holy Spirit swaying his golden scepter in the hearts of Converts and ruling them by his rod out of Zion But this refers to that great point of communion with the Spirit of God Psal 110 2. which this treatise only considers in the doctrine of assurance Chapter 8th and in one further consequence following which is the seventh 7. We may learn from the preceding tract that the knowledg of our Faith and the attainment of assurance flow principally from the influences of the Spirit of God. He is the profound teacher of all mysteries and the worker of Faith and therefore gives the clearest evidence without the necessity of arguing when he is pleased to speak to the heart Joh 16.13 He shall teach you all things our Lord promises and guide into all truth He glorifies the Son receives of his shews it to us and manifests things to come Where he teaches any doctrine he works the knowledg and sense of it into the heart and causes us to believe He is the former of faith he commands and inclines us to trust and imprints the image of Christ upon us Epist Gassendi de motu impresso c as the vis impressa sends out a power from the hand or instrument upon the ball arrow or bullet which together with the air that 's gathered by the force into an impulsive vortex behind the body as in the ignis lambens carries on the motion to the end of its vigor 'T is more abundantly here when the spirit becomes the arm of God to break the stone in the heart he moves works in the most intimate recesses of the soul he shapes and forms the new Adam within us and inspires it with fire from the throne between the wheels of the cherubims Ezek. 10.7 He is the skilful architect of the Temple of the Church cementing the living stones together which were cut out of the mountain of the divine Decrees to make a glorious Habitation for God by the Spirit Eph. 2.22 Let 's then never forget to be earnest in prayer for the gift of the spirit since the influx of all grace and the beautiful enamel of our hearts with heavenly gifts flows from this holy spirit of Vrim and Thummim And the truths in Scripture can only be settled and confirmed upon our hearts by him He is like the master of Assemblies that fastens the nail in a sure place Eccles 12.11 like the great shepherd that knock's in the paxilli in caula the stakes about the hurdles of the sheep-cotes to keep the harmless creatures from the Wolves close and warm together in a dark and stormy night 8. Another deduction from the former treatise may be that the number of true believers is very small for the generality of the world knows not God in Christ The Turks indeed own him for a great Prophet but disdain his banner The Jews confess there was such a person at Jerusalem but contradict his message blaspheme his Deity and stumble at his sufferings Among the various nations bearing the name of Christian what wild confusions and absurdities are practised in Muscovy by the testimony of the ingenious Olearius Marriage and what rude mixtures and barbarities are found among the Abyssins south of Egypt as we are taught by that learned Writer Ludolphus or what ignorances blind Customs and perverse worshippings are notified among the Armenians Ludolph Edit 1684. Fol. Maronites or Thoma-Indians as are related by Breerwood Paget and in the collections of travels in Purchas and several others What shall we say to the corruptions among the Pontificians nay in the Reformed Churches of God in the world and how are the lives of most grown degenerate and prophane insomuch that one has adventured to pronounce that 't is hazardable whether above one in a million may be saved I remember also to have read somewhere Dr. Mouli● that Chrysostome should say to