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A58802 The Christian life part III. Wherein the great duties of justice, mercy, and mortification are fully explained and inforced. Vol. IV. By John Scott D.D. late rector of St. Giles's in the Fields.; Christian life. Vol. 4. Scott, John, 1639-1695.; White, Robert, 1645-1703, engraver. 1696 (1696) Wing S2056; ESTC R218661 194,267 475

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Sense doth multiply its Temptations we shall still multiply our Desires and Affections and at every new Game that springs we shall still let fly new Passions But now the Ends of Vice are not only various but also contrary to and inconsistent with one another For all Vices consisting in Extreams either in Excesses or Defects their Ends must be contrary too and so they cannot but disagree Excess and Defect being in themselves most contrary And these contrary Vices must needs raise contrary Factions in the Mind and people it with a Rabble of wild and inconsistent Passions which will be always bandying one against another and consequently embroiling the Soul in eternal Mutinies and Tumults And this is the State of every vicious Man he is divided into infinite Schisms and Separations and like a barbarous Countrey cantoned out into a World of petty Principalities which are always together by the Ears and continually invading one anothers Dominions Now what a miserable Distraction must a Man's Mind be in when it is thus justl'd to and fro in such a crowd of contrary and impetuous Passions when Pride shoves it one way and Covetousness another when Ambition thrusts it forward and Cowardise pulls it back again and so many different Lusts do at the same time hurry it so many different and contrary Ways How is it possible it should escape Actaeon's Fate to be worried till it is torn in pieces by its own Hounds And therefore as we value the Peace of our own Minds and would not have the inward Harmony discompos'd by the perpetual Iarrings of so many contrary Passions it concerns us to subdue and mortify our Lusts For so long as we entertain these seditious Incendiaries they will be perpetually raising Tumults within us and our Minds will never be at quiet for them For the only Way to keep our Minds at Peace is to unite our Affections which we can never hope to do till we have subdu'd them to the Empire of our Reason But when we come to be under the Command of that one supreme End which our Reason will propose to us as the utmost Scope of our Desires then and not till then will these scattered Rivulets of our Affections unite themselves in one and the same Channel and flow towards one and the same Ocean And then our Mind will be at Rest and all its contrary Passions being laid which now like the boisterous Waves dash one against another it will no longer be capable of being ruffl'd into a Storm but in the midst of all the Changes of this World will find it self perpetually inspired with the most calm and gentle Thoughts CHAP. IV. Of Helps to Mortification given us by the Spirit of God THE Motives and Arguments for Mortification which arise from considering the Mischiefs and Inconveniences of Sin having been spoken to I shall now proceed to such Helps to this Duty as are given us by the Spirit of God And I shall consider them under these four Heads First THE external Arguments and Motives of the Gospel Secondly THE external Providences of the Divine Spirit by which he excites us to our Duty Thirdly THE Aids and Assistances which the Holy Angels give us who are the Agents and Ministers of the Holy Ghost Fourthly THE internal Motions and Operations of the Holy Ghost upon our Souls I. LET us consider the external Arguments and Motives of the Gospel such as the Promises and Threats of it the great Example of our Saviour describ'd in it together with all those mighty Considerations out of his Passion and Resurrection his Intercession for us at the right hand of God and his Coming to judge the World in the last day All which are the Aids and Assistances of the Holy Spirit who hath revealed them to us and demonstrated their Truth and Divinity by sundry miraculous Operations which are therefore called the Evidences and Demonstrations of the Spirit So that whatsoever there is in the Gospel to enable us to our Duty whatsoever Counter-charms its Promises afford us against the Charms and Allurements of our own Lusts whatsoever Antidotes its Threatnings prescribe us against the terrours of the Devil's Temptations whatsoever Motives there are in the Life or Death Resurrection and Intercession of our Blessed Saviour and in his final Iudgment by which we must stand or fall for ever In a word whatsoever Arguments the Laws or the Creed of our Holy Religion offer us either to incite us to our Duty or to enable us to baffle the Temptations of Vice they are all from the Spirit and consequently are to be reckon'd among those gracious Aids and Assistances which He affords us And hence the Gospel which teaches us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly is called the grace of God which bringeth salvation unto all men Tit. ii 11 12. And in Rom. viii 2. the Apostle calleth it the law of the spirit of life in Christ Iesus by which he was made free from the law of sin and death Nay sometimes the Gospel is called the Spirit 2 Cor. iii. 6. who also hath made us able ministers of the New Testament not of the letter but of the spiri i. e. not of the Law but of the Gospel for the letter killeth but the spirit giveth life That is as he elsewhere explains himself the Law is a Ministration of Death but the Gospel brings Life and Immortality to light And that this is the Meaning is plain from what follows v. 7 8. but if the ministration of death written and ingraven in stones was glorious which is a plain description of the Law of Moses how shall not the ministration of the spirit be rather glorious And consonantly hereunto by the Spirit we may understand the Motives and Arguments of the Gospel II. LET us consider the external Providences of the divine Spirit by which he excites us to our Duty and doth many ways administer to our Reformation which are so considerable a part of God's Grace and Assistance that there are very few good Thoughts or Purposes that spring up in our Minds which have not their Rise from some external Event of Divine Providence And this we may easily observe by following the Train of our own Thoughts and pursuing the Stream of them to their Spring and Original For though many times we find good Thoughts injected into us we know not how nor whence yet if we do but curiously observe the Rise of our soberest Thoughts and Purposes we shall generally find that it is some external Accident or other that occasions them Either our Sin betrays us into some great Shame or Infelicity or our wicked Designs are baffled by some intervening Accident or some remarkable Iudgment meets us as the Angel did Balaam in the Road of our Folly and Wickedness by which our stupid Consciences are many times startled into Reflections or by some good Providence we are directed to a serious Book or faithful Guide
Spirit to enable us to mortify our Sins p. 349 350 351. Secondly The Necessity of our Concurrence with the Spirit p. 352 353 354 355. Thirdly The Certainty of Success p. 356 357. Fourthly The great Reason there is for our continual Prayers to God p. 358 359. Fifthly The indispensable Necessity of our faithful and sincere Endeavours in order to the mortifying our Lusts p. 360 361. Sixthly The Possibility of keeping the Commands of God in that God by his Spirit doth so powerfully Aid and Assist us p. 362 363. Seventhly The Inexcusableness of Sinners if they go on in their Wickedness p. 364 365 366. CHAP. V. OF the Eternal Reward of Mortification That there is a State of everlasting Life and Happiness prepared for good Men proved by plain and easie Arguments First Because the Law of our Natures hath not a sufficient Sanction without it 367 368 369 370 371 372. Secondly From those Desires and Expectations of it which do so generally and naturally arise in pure and vertuous Minds p. 373 374 375 376. Thirdly From the Justice and Equity of the Divine Providence p. 377 378 379. Fourthly From the Revelation of his Will which God hath made to us by Jesus Christ p. 380 381 382 383. From the Consideration of which the following Inferences are raised First What an unreasonable thing it is for us Christians immoderately to doat upon the World p. 384 385 386. Secondly How vigorous and industrious we ought to be in discharging the Duties of our Religion p. 387 388 389. Thirdly How upright and sincere we ought to be in all our Professions and Actions p. 390 391. Fourthly What great reason we have to be chearful under the Afflictions and Miseries of this World p. 392 393 394 395. CHAP. VI. OF the Necessity of Mortification to the obtaining Eternal Life proved First From God's Ordination and Appointment p. 396 397 398. Secondly From the Nature of the thing which implies a Disagreement in wicked Souls to the future Happiness p. 399. To evidence this Disagreement three things are proposed First Wherein the Felicities of the future State do consist p. 401 402 403. Secondly What the Temper and Disposition of wicked Souls will be in the future Sate p. 404 405 406 407. Thirdly How contrary such a Temper and Disposition must be unto such Felicities p. 408 409. For First There is in it an Antipathy and Contrariety to the Vision of God p. 410 411. Secondly To the Love of God p. 412 413. Thirdly To the Resemblance of God p. 414 415 416. Fourthly To the Society of the Spirits of just men made perfect p. 417 418. From all which these following Inferences are deduced First How unreasonable it is for any Man to presume upon going to Heaven upon any account whatsoever without mortifying his Lusts p. 419 420 421 422 423 424 425. 426. Secondly The indispensable Necessity of Mortification since it is plain we can't be happy without it p. 426 427 428 429 430 431. Thirdly What is the only true and solid Foundation of our Assurance of Heaven p. 431 432 433 434 435 436 437. Fourthly What is the great design of the Christian Religion p. 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445. OF THE Christian Life PART III. CHAP. I. Of Justice as it preserves the Natural Rights of Men and particularly in reference to their Bodies HAVING in a former Discourse asserted and explain'd the Nature of Moral Good and Evil in Humane Actions I shall now distinctly consider the Sum of all that Moral Duty which we owe to God and to our Neighbour as the Prophet hath compris'd it in these words He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly to love mercy and walk humbly with thy God Mic. vi 8. I begin with that Duty which God requires of us towards our Neighbour and 't is all imply'd in the two distinct Vertues of Iustice and Mercy IN discoursing of Iustice I shall endeavour these two things 1. To shew what that Justice is which is requir'd of us towards our Neighbour 2. To prove that it is grounded upon such immutable Reasons as do render it a Moral Good I. I shall endeavour to shew what that Justice is which is owing to our Neighbour In general therefore Iustice consisteth in giving to every one his due in which latitude it comprehendeth all matter of duty for every Duty is a due to God or our Neighbour or our selves and accordingly every performance of every duty is a payment of some due and as such is an act of Righteousness And therefore in Scripture Good Men are frequently stiled Righteous and the Whole of Vertue and Goodness is called Righteousness because it is a payment of some due either to God our selves or our Neighbours But Iustice being here consider'd as a distinct and particular Vertue must be understood in a more limited sense viz. for Honesty in all our dealings with men or giving to every man his due with whom we have any Intercourse And wherein this consisteth will best appear by considering what those things are which are due from one Man to another or what those Dues and Rights are which men may claim by the eternal Laws of Righteousness And these are twofold 1. Natural and 2. Acquired I begin with the First viz. the Natural Rights of Men which are such as appertain to Men as they are Reasonable Creatures and dwelling in Mortal Bodies and joyned to one another by their natural Relations and by Society For in all these capacities there accrue to men certain Natural Rights which we are obliged in Justice not to violate but so far as we can to secure and make good to one another First Therefore we will consider men as dwelling in mortal Bodies Secondly As Rational Creatures Thirdly As joyned to one another by natural Relations Fourthly As naturally united in Society and I will shew what Rights there are redounding to them from all these Respects and Considerations I. WE will consider Men as dwelling in mortal Bodies in which there is a twofold Right accruing to them 1. a Right to their Bodies 2. a Right to their bodily Subsistence I. As dwelling in mortal Bodies they have a natural Right to their Bodies and to all the Parts of them for their Bodies being the Tenements which the great Landlord of the world hath allotted to their Souls during their abode in this terrestrial State are upon that account their undoubted Right which unless they forfeit they cannot be deprived of without manifest Injury and Injustice For if God gave this Body to my Soul it is certain that immediately under him my Soul hath a Right to it and holding in Capite as it doth from the Supreme Proprietor is Tenant at will to none but him for this its earthly Habitation so that antecedently to all Humane Laws and Constitutions every Soul is vested with a natural Right to its own Body
then with our Reproofs we ought to take care that we do not intermingle Lightness or Drollery on the one hand nor Passion or sharp Invectives on the other but that we perform this merciful Office with the greatest Modesty Seriousness and Compassion first endeavouring to anticipate the Offender's Displeasure with kind and gentle Insinuations of our unfeigned Respect and Benevolence towards him then representing his Crime to him with such a compassionate sense of the Evil and Danger of it as may convince him that that which renders us so severe to his Sin is nothing but mere Mercy and Charity to his Soul for to reprove a Man lightly or passionately looks more like a design to deride or reproach him for his Sin than to reclaim him from it Lastly we ought to take great care that the Matter we reprove him for be really culpable that we do not reprehend him for any innocent Freedom no nor for every trifling Indecency but only for plain and unquestionable Trespasses upon Religion lest he should look upon our Reproofs as the language of a supercilious and morose Spirit that affects to domineer and find fault and as such should despise and reject them To avoid which it is highly adviseable that while we reprove what is evil in him we should commend what is good that so our bitter Pill being sweetened with a due Commendation may be rendered more palatable and so go down with less Difficulty But if the Offender whom we reprove be under our Power and Government to our Reproofs and Admonitions we are obliged in Mercy to add Correction if Necessity requires for when it is come to that pass that our Child or Servant must smart or be damned 't is a cruel Softness and Indulgence not to chastize him Were your House on fire you would think it a Mercy to be rescued from the Flames though you were dragged out by the Hair of the Head And when the Flames of Hell are kindling about your Child or your Servant would it not be much more merciful to snatch him away though with Smart and Violence than to stand still and let him perish for fear of hurting him 'T is true Correction ought not to be used till gentler Means have been tried and found ineffectual For Blows are Arguments for Beasts and for beastly Natures fit only to be applied to stubborn and obstinate Tempers that are insensible of Reason and Persuasion But when they are applied it ought to be done with the greatest Tenderness and Compassion when our Minds are calm and our Passion allayed that so the Offender may be sensible we do it not to wreak our Spleen or vent and ease our Fury but meerly to reclaim and amend him The Sense of which will cause the Correction to operate more kindly in him to affect his Ingenuity as well as his Fear and to melt him with the Mercy whilst it breaks him with the Severity of it This therefore is the Mercy which we are obliged to exercise towards obstinate and stubborn Offenders Fifthly and Lastly ANOTHER of the Miseries which affect Mens Souls is Impotency or Want of Power to recover themselves out of their vicious Courses for a vicious State doth so miserably weaken and disable Mens Faculties so impair the health and vigour of their Minds that it is not in their Power to help and recover themselves out of it For to their Recovery it is necessary first that their Thoughts should be determined to a fixed and exact Consideration of the Evil and Danger of their Sins and of the blessed Hopes which God hath set before them to tempt them to renounce and forsake them And then that these Considerations should so prevail upon and influence their Wills as to captivate them into a thorough Resolution of Amendment both which Effects are out of the reach of the Sinners Power considered singly and without the concurrence of the Divine Grace For his Mind is so depressed and bowed down towards these earthly and sensible Objects which have been hitherto the sole Companions of his Thoughts that it is not able to raise up it self to the Consideration of Divine Things And though now and then a good Meditation may break in upon him and seize upon his Thoughts yet it cannot hold them a quarter of an hour together they are so roving and slippery so backward and averse to any thing that is serious and divine So that unless the Divine Spirit lays hold upon them and by his powerful and importunate Inspirations confines and fixes them the Man will never be able to reduce them to any fast and steady Consideration And when with the Holy Spirit 's Assistance he hath effected this he hath a perverse and obstinate Will to deal with which no Considerations will be able to determin to a fixed Resolution of Amendment but what are set home upon his Mind and continually actuated and enlivened with the vigorous Influence of the Spirit of God So that of himself every habitual Sinner is a most weak and impotent Creature that with all the Powers of his Mind and Will the utmost Efforts and Struglings of his own Faculties is not able without a supernatural Aid to rescue himself from Sin and Misery For how many sorrowful Instances do we every day converse with of Men who in their sober Thoughts will sadly lament their own Follies and blush in the morning when they remember how their Brains were set a float by their last Night's Intemperance who yet when the next Temptation beckoneth them to their Lust again return as greedily to it as ever and though when they have repeated their Sin they curse it and resolve against it yet when they are tempted sin again and then weep and call themselves miserable But still alas the same Inchantment confineth them to the same Circle Now in this Philosophy is at a stand nor can there any other rational account be given of it but only the miserable Frailty and Impotence which Men contract by vicious Courses What then is to be done for these miserable Persons in this their forlorn and helpless Condition Why besides all the above-named Instances of Mercy which we are obliged even for Pity 's sake to apply to them we are also bound in Mercy earnestly to recommend their woful Condition to the God of all Grace and Compassion to beseech him to commiserate their Impotence and with the out-stretched Arm of his Grace to touch their dead Souls and raise them up into Newness of Life For though in all Cases of Misery Prayer is a proper Act of Mercy yet there is none that doth so much need and call for our Prayers as this For in all other Cases either it is in the Power of the Miserable to help themselves or it is in the Power of the Merciful to rescue and relieve them or the Miseries are such as will quickly end and expire into Eternal Ease but as for th● Misery of the obstinate Sinner it is
Laws of Generation he hath ordered all Men to come into the World weak and helpless and unable to provide for themselves he was bound in Goodness to oblige their Parents by a natural 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Affection to nourish and take Care of them till they grow able to take Care for themselves that so they might not be utterly abandoned so since he hath thought good to expose us here to so many Miseries and Calamities he stood obliged by the eternal Benignity of his Nature to oblige us by all the Bowels of Mercy to succour and relieve one another till we are grown up to that Perfection of Happiness wherein we shall have no more need of Succour that so at present we may not be left destitute and forlorn but may find all that Relief in one another's Mercy which is wanting to us in his immediate Providence For 't is for wise and merciful Ends that he permits us to be miserable here to correct our Follies and polish and cultivate our Nature and train us up under a severe Discipline into a State of Everlasting Happiness and therefore for the Redress of these Miseries which for our Good he is fain to inflict upon us it was necessary he should Consign us to the Protection of one anothers Mercy that so this for the present might be a Cordial to our Griefs a Supply to our Wants an Ease to our Oppressions and a Sanctuary to our Calamities till Misery hath effected the gracious End she designed it for and then he will release our Mercy from its Work and permit it to enjoy an Everlasting Sabbath But so long as he thinks fit to continue us in this state of Misery his own Benignity will oblige him to oblige us to assist and comfort one another by the mutual Exercise of our Mercy that so being instead of Gods to one another we may not be utterly abandoned to Wretchedness but by mutually succouring each other might all of us be tolerably happy which we should all of us most certainly be were we but so benign and merciful to one another as he expects and requires CHAP. I. Of the Nature of Mortification GOD having made us free Agents and planted in our Natures an uncontroulable Liberty of Choice in Wisdom he hath so ordered and disposed things that as we cannot be Miserable unless we will so neither shall we be happy whether we will or no. For as his Goodness would not suffer him to make us necessarily miserable so neither would his Wisdom permit him to entail our Happiness on our Natures and make it inseparable to our Beings for should he have done so he must have altered the Laws of his own wise Creation and made those Beings to act necessarily which he made to act freely For Happiness is the End of all our Actions and therefore should God have made that necessary to us he must have made us to act towards it with the same Necessity as inanimate Bodies do towards their proper Center and consequently there would have been no such thing as a free Agent in the lower World That we may always act therefore according to the Condition and Frame of a free Nature the Foundations of all our Happiness and Misery are laid in the right Use or Abuse of our Liberty and do immediately spring out of the Wisdom or Folly of our own Choices so that if we chuse wisely according to the Laws of Virtue and right Reason we do thereby advance towards that happy and heavenly State we were created for as on the contrary if we chuse foolishly according to the rash Counsels of our own vicious Appetites and sensual Inclinations we thereby sink our selves deeper and deeper towards the Abyss of endless and inconceivable Misery For such is the Frame and Constitution of our Natures that we cannot be good and miserable nor vicious and happy and accordingly the Apostle sets before us the inevitable Fate of our own Actions Rom. viii 13. If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live What these Deeds of the Flesh or Body are the Apostle telleth us Gal. v. 19 20 21. The works of the flesh are manifest which are these adultery fornication uncleanness lasciviousness idolatry witchcraft hatred variance emulations wrath strife seditions heresies envyings murders drunkenness revellings and such like and they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God This is the Muster-roll of that formidable Army of Wickednesses with which we are to engage and which we must vanquish or perish for ever If ye mortify the deeds of the body ye shall live i. e. if ye kill and destroy them if ye wholly cease from them both as to the outward Act of them and the inward Appetite and Inclination towards them For Mortification doth not only consist in a formal Abstinence from the outward Acts of Sin or a superficial Skinning over the Orifice of its Wounds but searches to the very bottom of that putrid Core within and eats out the inward Corruption from whence those outward Blisters arise It purges the Heart as well as the Hands and drains those impure Inclinations which are the Springs of all Impiety and Wickedness BUT to handle this Subject more particularly I shall do these three things First SHEW wherein Mortification consists Secondly WHAT are the Proper Instruments of it Thirdly WHAT are the most prevailing Motives to it I. WHEREIN doth Mortification consist I answer in these three Things 1. In Abstinence from the outward Acts of Sin 2. In not consenting unto any Sin 3. In a constant Endeavour to extinguish our involuntary Sins I. MORTIFICATION requires Abstinence from the outward Acts of Sin For it is impossible that any Man should mortify his Lusts while he indulges himself in the free Practice of them because Practice is the Fuel that foments and feeds the inward vicious Inclinations and both pampers and enrages the lustful Appetites of the Soul For that Delight which we reap from acting our own Concupiscences doth but increase and provoke them it being natural to Men when they have been pleased with any Action to be more vehemently inclined to repeat it the Delight which they found in the former Enjoyment provoking their Desires to enjoy it again So that we may as well hope to put out a Fire by a continual feeding it with Fuel and blowing it into Flame as to mortify a Lust whilst by our continued practising it we nurse and cherish it and do at once both feed and irritate its Flames If therefore we would ever mortify the Lusts of the Flesh we must strictly restrain our selves from all outward Acts of them For whilst we indulge our selves in these we feed our Disease and pamper our bad Inclinations into vicious Habits and our vicious Habits into sinful Necessities II. MORTIFICATION consists in the Dissent of our Wills from all sinful Proposals
our Toil we shall need as much at least as we did before only before we did not possess what we needed whereas now we shall need what we do possess But did we take the pains to learn that great Lesson of Christian Contentment we should then pursue the World with far less Vehemence and enjoy it with far more freedom We should be industrious without that eager Solicitude and if it pleased God to bless our Industry we should neither waste what we have nor want it and many a happy year we should enjoy that which now we consume in vexatious Care to keep and restless Desire to increase it How unpleasant is the Life of the intemperate Epicure who lives in a continual Lethargy and dozes away his time in Sottishness and Stupidity and by perpetually sucking in Rheums and Defluxions doth so weaken and dilute the Vigour of the Organs of Sense that he perceives not the briskness of his own Relishes but after his delicious Gobbets are past his Throat they load and oppress him and his Stomach is fain to do Penance for the Folly and Extravagance of his Palate and those deep Draughts wherein he seeks to drown his Conscience and his Melancholy leave behind them such an Uneasiness both in his Body and Mind as nothing can reprieve For as soon as he hath slept away the Fumes of his Intemperance he finds himself sick as well of Company as of Solitude and is fain to endure all the four Regrets both of his Conscience and his Stomach Whereas would but this Man govern his Appetite by the Laws of Temperance would he eat to satisfy and not to invite his Hunger and drink to refresh and not to force and oppress himself his Relish would be quick and vigorous his Gust sincere and his Digestion easy and his Appetite being not overloaded with the foregoing Meal would quickly return again and give a pleasing Relish to his next Morsel When he rose from his Table his Nature would not be burdened but refreshed and recreated his Eyes would not swim in Floods of Rheum nor his Brains in Seas of Liquor his Face would not be fired with the unwholesome Inflammations of his Liver nor his Reason overcast with the Clouds and Vapours of his gorged Stomach but after his frugal Meals he would still find his Organs fresh and vigorous and when he went to bed his Sleep would not be broken with so many unquiet Starts nor sickly Qualms nor in the Morning would he awake in a Feaver but all his Life would be serene and calm and he would enjoy all that is pleasant in Luxury and be only barred from the apparent Sting of it Many other Instances I might add but these I think are sufficient to demonstrate that Vice is the great Disturber even of those sensual Pleasures and Delights that it promises to us So that it plainly contradicts its own Pretensions and though it invites to Pleasure yet entertains us with nothing but Distraction and Uneasiness The Cup of Fornication which it holds out to us tho' 't is spiced at the top is Gall and Wormwood at the bottom and all those Delights that it courts us with are only so many painted Miseries which though they may look amiable and inviting at a distance yet upon a more considerate View will be found to be most wretched Cheats and Impostures So that methinks were we but ingenious Epicures that understood the Pleasures of the Body and the true Methods of enjoying them we should for their sakes discard those Lusts that are so contrary and destructive to them and it would be as impossible for us not to hate our Sins as not to love our Pleasures AND thus you see how many Mischiefs and Inconveniencies our Lusts bring upon us in respect of our Bodies and outward Circumstances so that if we had no immortal Spirit to take care of no Interest beyond the Grave to look after yet methinks had we but Reason enough to understand and Self-Love enough to pursue our present Welfare that were sufficient to oblige us to mortify our Lusts. For so long as they live they will be Plagues to us and we must never expect a quiet Possession of our own Happiness till we have utterly destroy'd these mutinous Disturbers of it that are as so many Thorns in our Eyes and Goads in our Sides But alas 't is not our bodily Happiness only that they interrupt and invade but which is more intolerable they poison our Souls with their contagious Breath and scatter Plagues and Infection over our noblest Faculties Which brings me to the Second sort of motives to persuade you to mortify your Sin viz. those that are drawn from the present Mischiefs and Inconveniencies that it brings upon our Souls which are chiefly these three First IT spoils our Understandings Secondly IT subverts the natural Subordination of our Faculties Thirdly IT disturbs the Tranquillity of our Minds I. CONSIDER how much your Sins do spoil and waste your Understandings For Sin is an Affront to our Understandings and a plain Contradiction to the Reason of our Minds there being no Vice whatsoever but what is founded in Folly and Unreasonableness Whilst therefore we live in Sin we do so far lay aside our Reason which ought to be the Moderator of our Actions and abandon our selves to the Conduct of our own blind Appetites and head-strong Passions which will naturally weaken our Rational Faculties and bring a lingering Consumption on our Understandings For as our Powers are improved and perfected by Exercise so they are impaired and wasted by Disuse and Inactivity and therefore our Reason being such a Power as is not naturally to be perfected but by Action it necessarily follows that the less active it is the more imperfect it must be Whilst therefore we live in Sin or which is all one in the Neglect of our Reason we consume and waste our Rational Faculties which being unemploy'd will naturally contract Rust and grow every day more weak and restive For a Life of Sin is all transacted by Sense and Passion Reason sits looking on and having no part in the brutish Scene melts away in Sloth and Idleness It s Vital Powers freeze for want of Motion and like standing Waters stagnate and gather Mire till they corrupt and putrify And besides this Decay that Sin brings upon our Understanding by taking us off from the exercise of it it is also injurious to those bodily Organs by which our Understanding while we are in the Flesh doth reason and operate For our Body is as it were the Musical Instrument upon which our Mind sets all its Harmony and by which it runs all the curious Divisions of Discourse And the Blood and Spirits and Brain and other Parts of it are the Strings of this Instrument upon the well-tuning of which depends all the Musick of Reason But now there is scarce any Sin that doth not some way or other indispose our Bodies for the use of
our Minds and render them unfit especially for the most perfect Exercise of our Reason Thus Drunkenness dilutes the Brain which is the Mint of the Understanding and drowns those Images which are stamp'd upon it in a Deluge of unwholsome Moistures Thus Gluttony cloggs the Animal Spirits which are as it were the Wings of the Mind and renders them incapable of performing the noblest and sublimest Flights of Reason Thus Anger and Wantonness force up the boiling Blood into the Brain and by that disorders the Motions of the Spirits there confounds the Fantasms and disturbs the Conceptions and shuffles the Ideas of the Imagination into an heap of inarticulate and disorderly Fancies And how is it possible our Minds should strike true Harmony when its Instrument is thus disorder'd and all the Strings of it are so out of Tune How should we understand well while our Brains are overcast with the thick Fumes of sensual Lusts and those Spirits which should wing our minds are grown so listless and unactive that they rather hamper and entangle them For what Clearness is to the Eye that Purity is to the Mind As Clearness doth dispose the Eye to a quick and distinct Perception of Material Objects so Purity from Lust and Passion disposes the Mind to a more clear Apprehension of Intellectual ones and the more any Man's Soul is cleansed from the Filth and Dregs of Sensuality the brighter it will be in its Conceptions and the more nimble and expedite in its Operations For Purity doth naturally fit the Body to the Mind it puts its Organs all in Tune and renders its spirits fine and agil and fit for the noblest Exercises of Reason which they can never be whilst they are subject to disorderly Passions and drenched in the unwholsome Reeks of Sensuality and Voluptuousness But besides this Mischief which Sin doth to our Understandings by rendering our Bodies unapt to all Intellectual Purposes it also dyes the mind with false Colours and fills it with Prejudice and undue Apprehensions of Things For while our Souls are under the sway of any disorderly Passion or Appetite they will naturally warp our Iudgments into a Compliance with their own Interest and bribe us to judge of things not according to what they are but according to what we would have them And when our Iudgments are thus bribed by our Interest and swayed by our Passions it is impossible we should judge truly of Things For our Passions will discolour the Objects of our Understandings and disguise them into such Shapes as are most agreeable to our Humor and Interest and so our Opinions of Things will alter upon every Variation of our Humours and our Thoughts like Weather-cocks will be wheeling about upon every Change of Wind. So that while we are encompassed with the Mists of sinful Prejudice they will necessarily hinder the Prospect of our Reason and obscure the Brightness of our Understandings and the Clearness of our discerning Faculties And thus you see how natural it is to Vice to spoil and wast our Understandings and to choke up those Fountains of Light within us with Clouds and Darkness And that it doth so is very apparent in Fact for how much wicked Men have lost their Reason is apparent by the ridiculous Principles upon which they generally act which generally are so very weak and absurd that it would be impossible for Men to assent to them were not their Understandings perished and the Reason of their minds wofully impaired and wasted As for instance the desperate Atheist wishes that there were no God upon this Principle that it is better for Men to be without a God than to be without their Lusts then which there can be nothing more wild or extravagant For it is plain that without our Lusts we can be happier than with them whereas it is the common Interest of Mankind that the World should be governed by infinite Goodness conducted by infinite Power and Wisdom and no Man or Society of Men can be happy without it For take God out of the World and you take away all Hope from the miserable all Comfort from the sorrowful and all Support from the dejected and calamitous and at one blow cut in sunder all the Bands of Society rase the Foundations of Virtue and confound all Distinction between Good and Evil. And yet the besotted Wretch for the sake of a paltry Lust that betrays him with a Kiss and stings him in the Enjoyment would fain banish God out of the World though it is apparent that in so doing he would do Mankind more Mischief than if he should blow out all the Lights of Heaven or pull down the Sun from the Firmament And in the general what more ridiculous Principles can there be thought than such as these That Sense is to be preferred before Reason Earth before Heaven Moments before Eternity that the short-liv'd pleasures of sin which expire in the fruition are sufficient to ballance the loss of an immortal Heaven and the sense of an eternal Hell that 't is time enough to repent when we can sin no more and that God is so fond a Being as that rather than ruin those that wilfully spurn at his Authority and trample upon his Laws he will accept a few Tears and Promises to live well when we can live no longer in exchange for all the Duty we owe him and that we may sit all the day in the lap of our Lusts and enjoy them without controul and then at night when we can enjoy them no longer fly up to Heaven upon the Wings of a Lord have mercy upon us And yet a wicked Life is either built upon no Principles at all or upon such as these which are ridiculous beyond all the extravagant Conceits of Fools or Madmen 'T is no wonder therefore that the Scripture so frequently brands the Sinner with the infamous Character of a Fool for if you measure him by the Principles he acts upon there is not a greater Fool in Nature which is a plain Evidence how much Vice doth besot the Understandings of Men and like those Barbarous Philistines puts out their Eyes only to sport it self with their Follies and Extravagances So that methinks had we any Reverence for our own Reason by which we are constituted Men and distinguish'd from the Beasts that perish we should never endure those Lusts within our Bosoms that do so much impair and wast it II. SIN subverts the natural Subordination of our Faculties For the natural Order and Politie of our Natures consists in the Dominion of our Rational Faculties over our sensitive Passions and Appetites so that then only we live according to the Law of our Nature when we eat and drink and love and hate and fear and hope and desire and delight according as right Reason prescribes For the noblest Principle of Humane Nature is Reason by which it is that we are constituted Men and advanced into a Form of Beings above all sublunary
special notice of them which as St. Austin tells us made them to attribute its Success to the Power of Magick thinking it impossible that it should do such Wonders without the Assistance of some powerful Spirit And indeed it is not to be supposed how it should work such strange and suddain Alterations in Men by its external Arguments and Motives without a divine Power concurring with them and animating and enforcing them and though now that Christianity hath gotten such footing in the World and is become the Religion of Nations the divine Spirit does not ordinarily work upon Men in such a strange and miraculous way but proceeds in more humane Methods by joyning in with our Understandings and leading us forward by the Rules of Reason and Sobriety so that whatsoever Aids it affords us they work in the same Way and after the same Manner as if all were performed by the Strength of our own Reason yet we have a standing Promise which extends to all Ages of Christianity that to him who improves the Grace which he hath already more Grace shall be given that if we work out our salvation with fear and trembling God will work in us to will and to do and that he will give his holy Spirit to every one that sincerely asks and seeks it For of the Performance of this Promise there are none of us all but have had many sensible Experiences for how often do we find good Thoughts injected into our Minds we know not how nor whence How frequently are we seiz'd with strong and vehement Convictions of the Folly and Danger of our own Wicked courses even in the midst of our loose Mirth and Iollity when we are rock'd into a deep Security when we have endeavour'd to chase good Thoughts from our Minds or to drown them in Sensuality and Voluptuousness How often have we been haunted with their Importunities till we have been scar'd by them into sober Resolutions And when we have complied with them what Ioys and Refreshments have we sometimes found in the Discharge of our Duty to encourage us to Perseverance in Well-doing All which are plain and sensible Instances of the internal Operations of the Holy Spirit upon our Souls So that when we comply with these inward Motions of the Holy Ghost so as to forsake those sins which they dissuade us from we do then mortify the deeds of the body by the spirit FROM the Consideration of these Benefits by the Spirit of God many useful Inferences may be deduc'd And First From hence we may discern the Necessity of the Spirit to enable us to mortify the Deeds of the Body And indeed considering the Infirmity of our Natures and the many Temptations we have to encounter how we are habituated to a Sensual Life before we are capable of exercising our Reason and how much our Wills are biass'd by our Carnal Inclinations it is hardly to be imagined how we should ever be able to retrieve our selves from the Power and Dominion of our own Lusts without some supernatural Aid and Assistance For tho' we have an Understanding capable of distinguishing between Good and Evil and of discerning all those Advantages and Mischiefs that are inseparable unto vertuous and vicious Actions though we have a Will that can comply with the Dictates of right Reason and is no ways determined and necessitated to Evil and though we can do whatsoever we will Yet if besides those Motives which arise out of the Nature of Virtue and Vice we had not supernatural Arguments to assist us our Inclinations would certainly prove too strong for our Reason If the lascivious Wanton had no other Arguments to oppose against the Temptations of Lust but that it vexes him with Impatience fills him with mad and ungovernable Desires torments him with Fear and Iealousie betrays him into Sickness and Poverty and the like How can it be expected that such slender Arguments should prevail against the Importunities of his depraved Appetite If the covetous Oppressour had no other Motive to confront his Lust with but that his Injustice exposes him to the Hatred of those whom he injures and violates the Laws of Society and consequently is destructive of the Publick Good in which his own is involved alas What thin Arguments would these be to him in comparison with the Temptations of a Bag of Gold And though to these natural Arguments God hath added sundry supernatural ones in the Revelation of the Gospel such as are in themselves sufficient to check our most outragious Appetites and to baffle the strongest Temptations Yet alas our Thoughts are so squander'd among this great Multiplicity of carnal Objects that surround us that did not the Divine Spirit frequently suggest those supernatural Arguments to us and by the powerful Influence of his Grace keep our Minds intent upon them we should never recollect our selves to such a thorough Consideration of them as is necessary to persuade our selves by them into a lasting Resolution of Amendment So that we have very great need both of the outward and inward Grace of God for though we can deliberate what is best to choose and choose what we find best upon Deliberation yet we are like Men standing in bivio between two contrary Roads and are naturally indeed free to turn either to the Right hand or to the Left but on the Left-hand way there are so many Temptations perpetually beckoning to us and inviting us unto that which is Evil and our brutish Passions and Appetites are so ready upon all occasions to yield and comply with them that we should certainty go that way did not the Holy Spirit importune us with strong Arguments to turn to the Right-hand way of Vertue and Goodness II. WE may learn from hence the Necessity of our Concurrence with the Spirit For the Spirit of God works upon us in such a way as is most congruous to our Free and Rational Natures that is it doth not act upon us by mere Force or irresistible Power but addresses to our Reason with Arguments and Persuasions and so moves upon our Wills by the Mediation of our Understandings But when He hath done all He leaves it to our own Choice whether we will reject or embrace his Proposals For although I firmly believe as no Man would be wicked were he not invited by the Temptations of sin so no Man would be good were he not solicited by the Grace of God yet I see no Reason to imagine that either the one or the other invades the Liberty of our Wills The Temptations of Sin indeed incline us one way and the Grace of God another but when all is done they leave us free to choose or refuse and neither the one nor the other forces or necessitates us And hence the Successes of the Divine Grace are in Scripture attributed to the Disposition or Indisposition of the Subject it acts upon So Matth. xi 20 21. Then began he to upbraid the Cities wherein his mighty
works were done woe unto thee Corazin woe unto thee Bethsaida for if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes From whence I argue that that Grace which would have converted Tyre and Sidon was not irresistible for if it had it would have converted Corazin and Bethsaida too For how could they have resisted irresistible Grace And why should it not have had the same Effect on the one which it would have had on the other had there not been something in the one which was not in the other which did actually resist and vanquish it And so likewise in the Parable of the Seed sown in the High-way the stony thorny and good Ground Matth. xiii the Reason why the Seed prospered in some and not in others is plainly resolved into the different Condition of the Soil for as for those that either considered not at all or not enough the Seed of the Divine Grace proved altogether ineffectual to them but as for those who had so throughly consider'd its Proposals as to form in their Minds a firm and settled Judgment of them it produced in them a most fruitful Spring of Virtues and good Works Which is a plain Argument that the Successes of God's Grace depend upon the Concurrence of our Endeavours with it for had it wrought irresistibly upon these different Soils it must have had the same Success in all And indeed it is infinitely unreasonable to expect that God should make us good irresistibly without the free Concurrence of our own Will and Endeavours since by so doing he must offer Violence to the Frame of our Beings and alter the established Course of our Natures which consists in a free Determination of our selves according to the Dictates of our own Reason For that which is irresistible must necessitate the Subject upon which it acts and therefore if we are impell'd to be good by a Power which we cannot resist it is not in our Power to choose whether we will be good or no. Wherefore though God be infinitely desirous of our Happiness and ready to contribute whatsoever is necessary to promote it yet he will not effect it by necessary Means and Causes but in such a way only as is fairly consistent with the Liberty of our Wills that is he will not save us without our selves whether we will or no but take our free Consent and Endeavour along with him And having done all that is necessary to persuade us he expects that we should consider what he saith and upon that consent to his gracious Proposals and express this Consent in a constant Course of holy and vertuous Endeavours and if we will not do this we cannot be sav'd unless God work a Miracle for us and alters the Course of Nature which is the great Law by which his Providence doth govern all the Beings in the World And this we have no Reason to expect either from the Goodness of God's Nature or from any Revelation he hath made to us not from the Goodness of his Nature for why is it not as consistent with that to govern us as free Agents as to make us such Not from any Revelation of his Will for that indispensably exacts our free Concurrence with his Grace and Assistance and requires us to make our selves a new Heart to cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit and to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling 'T is true God is also said to work in us to will and to do to create in us a new heart and to create us in Iesus Christ unto good works Which seemingly repugnant expressions can be no otherwise reconciled but by supposing God and Man to be Ioint-Causes contributing to the same Effect so that where God speaks as if He did all we must suppose the Concurrence of our Endeavours and where he speaks as if We were to do all we must suppose the Concurrence of his own Grace III. WE may be assur'd from hence of the Certainty of Success upon such a Concurrence of our Endeavours with the Spirit of God which plainly implies the Assistances of the Spirit to Be within our Power as being in an inseparable Conjunction with our sincere and faithful Endeavours And that they are so is apparent for as for the outward Assistances of the Spirit which are the powerful Arguments and Motives of the Gospel we have them always at hand and may make use of them when we please we have a free Access to this divine Armoury and may at any time furnish our selves with sufficient Weapons to assoil the most formidable Temptations And as for the inward Aids of the blessed Spirit God by his own free Promise hath inseparably entailed them upon our honest and pious Endeavours Thus he hath promised to give his grace to those who humble themselves and to draw nigh unto them who submit themselves to him Iam. iv 6 7 8. and unto every one that hath that is improveth what he hath he hath promised it shall be given and that he shall have abundance xxv Matth. 29. and to every one that asketh sincerely and honestly he hath promised to give his Holy Spirit Luk. xi 13. And thus by his own free Promise he hath tied his Spirit to our Endeavours so that we may have his Assistance when we please he being confined by his own Promise to be ready at our Call and to come in to the Aid of our Endeavours whensoever we shall need and ask his Assistance And having such a powerful Second engaged in our Quarrel what Reason have we to doubt of Success and Victory For what Lust is there so strong that we may not subdue What Habit so inveterate that we may not conquer What Temptation so powerful that we may not repulse whose endeavours are thus seconded with Almighty Aids from above For now whatsoever the Divine Spirit can do in us we can do because we can do that which being done will infallibly oblige him to concur with us And though we cannot conquer our Lusts in our own single Strength yet we can by our Endeavours engage him on our side who is both able and willing to enable us to conquer them So that if we will we may be invincible and there is no Temptation can be too strong for us if we do not by our own Sloth and Cowardice disingage the Almighty Spirit from assisting us IV. FROM hence we may perceive how much Reason there is for our continual Prayers and Supplications to God since it is so apparent that our Victory over Sin and consequently our eternal Welfare doth so much depend upon the Aids and Assistances of the Spirit of God and since God is so ready to give his holy Spirit to us whensoever we sincerely ask and desire it Now the great Reason of Prayer is Want and the greatest Encouragement to it is Assurance of
Supply but there is nothing in the world that we have more Need of and if we faithfully seek it nothing that we can have more Assurance of than the gracious Influence of the Holy Ghost We have as much Need of it as of our daily Bread because our Souls will starve and famish without it And we have as much Assurance of it as the sacred Word of the God of Truth can give us because He hath promised it to us who can as soon cease to be as to be faithful And therefore if after so much Need and Encouragement we do neglect our Prayers and turn our backs upon the Throne of Grace it is a plain Argument that either we are wretchedly insensible of our Need of God's Grace or causelesly suspicious of the Truth of his Promise And doubtless he that can pass day after day without putting up one Prayer to Heaven that can venture himself among the infinite Snares and Temptations of this world without imploring the Divine Aid and Protection is a very bold and fool-hardy Sinner one that declares he regards neither God nor his own Soul and that he cares not what becomes of him either here or hereafter Methinks did we but soberly consider how much we want God's Grace and how ready He is to afford it us we should as soon venture to rush naked into a Battle among Squadrons of Swords and Spears as to go at any time into the World without God to hazard our immortal Souls in the midst of such a numberless Battle of Temptations without arming our selves by Prayer with the Divine Grace and Assistance Wherefore since we have so much Need and if we seek it so much Assurance too of the Spirit of God let us take that excellent Counsel of the Author to the Hebrews Heb. iv 16. Go boldly and importunately to the Throne of Grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help us in the time of need V. FROM hence we may perceive the indispensable Necessity of our faithful and sincere Endeavours in order to the m●rtifying our Lusts. 'T is a strange Principle which some Men have taken up that if their Names are recorded in the eternal Roll of Election they shall in time be made good by an irresistible Grace and that if they are not they shall never be good at all though they should endeavour it with their utmost Power and Diligence And so they think their best way is to lye still in the Harbour and expect the Event concluding it in vain to begin their Voyage towards Heaven without an irresistible Gale from thence A Doctrine which I doubt too many Men have improved to their own everlasting Ruin though it hath no Foundation at all in Reason and hath nothing to support it self but a few mistaken Phrases of Scripture But he that shall impartially consult the whole Current of God's Word will find that the ordinary Language and Sense of it is this that God desireth not the death of a sinner but would have all men to be saved but because he would save us in such a Way as is congruous to free Agents and not by fatal and necessary Means therefore he indispensably exacts the Concurrence of our Endeavours that we should run the Race that is set before us and strive to enter into the strait gate and that by patient continuance in well-doing we should seek for honour and glory and immortality And from any thing that God hath said to us we have as much Reason to hope to be nourish'd without Eating as to be sav'd without Endeavour 'T is true God hath promised by his Grace to cooperate with us to joyn in with our Faculties and bless our virtuous Essays but he is by no means obliged to work for us while we sit idle to mortify our Lusts while we feed and pamper them or to purify our Minds while we go on to pollute them with all the Filthiness of the Flesh and Spirit No if we would that God should assist us we must do what we can for our selves We can attend upon the ordinary Means and Ministries of Salvation we can ponder and consider the great Motives of our Religion and abstain at least from the outward Acts of Sin and implore the Divine Aid to prosper and succeed our Endeavours And if we will do but this and what else is in our Power let us then blame God if we are not successful and if we die in our Sins let us charge his Decrees with our Ruine But if we will disregard the publick Ministries of Religion and wilfully excommunicate all good Thoughts from our minds if we will comply with every Temptation to sin and refuse to crave Assistance from Heaven against it we have none to blame for our Ruin but our selves For God hath told us before-hand that He will not save us without our selves and therefore he that is to go a long Journey hath as much Reason to sit down in hope to be snatched up into the Air by Whirlwind and so to be carried on the wings of it to his appointed Stage as we have to neglect our Endeavours for Heaven in expectation to be haled and snatched up thither by the Almighty Pulleys of an irresistible Grace Let us not therefore upon this vain Presumption sit still any longer with our hands in our bosoms lest we perish in our Sloth and expose our own Souls to everlasting Ruin by an idle Expectation of being irresistibly saved VI. FROM hence we may discern the Possibility of keeping the Commands of God in that God by his Spirit doth so powerfully aid and assist us For supposing we cannot keep the Divine Law by our own single Strength and Power yet it is apparent that we can do that which will oblige the Divine Spirit to assist and enable us to keep it that is we can do our Endeavour which being done entitles us to the Promise of Divine Grace and Assistance And though we cannot do all our selves yet since we can do so much as will certainly oblige God to impower us to do the rest it is already in our Power to do all if we will He that is strong enough to carry a Burthen of an hundred weight but is required to carry two may carry both supposing that by bearing as much as he can he shall certainly be enabled to carry the whole Now God hath promised us by the Assistances of his Grace whatsoever is wanting in the Power of our Nature and therefore if we fall short of our Duty and consequently of the Rewards of it we can reasonably blame no one but our selves For though we cannot do all in our own Strength yet that we do not do all is as much our Fault as if we could since we may do all through Christ who would strengthen us would we but do what we can Let us therefore no longer cry out of the Impossibility of God's Commands nor charge our Disobedience to them upon the
high Provocation it gives to God 144 145 146 147 148. Of MERCY CHAP. I. OF Mercy as it relieves the Miseries of the Souls of Men p. 149. Which Miseries are First Sorrow and Dejection of Mind p. 150 151 152. Secondly Errors and Mistakes in matters of less Importance p. 153 154 155. in which Case the proper Acts of Mercy are First Forbearance and Toleration p. 156 157. And Secondly To endeavour by all prudent and peaceable ways to rectify one anothers Mistakes p. 158. Thirdly Another of the Miseries of the Soul which Mercy relieves is Blindness and Ignorance in things of the greatest Moment p. 159 160 161 162 163 164. Fourthly Malice and Obstinacy of Will in mischievous and destructive Courses p. 164 165 166 167 168 169 170. Fifthly Impotency or want of Power to recover themselves out of their vicious Courses p. 171 172 173 174. For the enforcement of which Duty are subjoyn'd the following Considerations First The inestimable Worth of those Souls upon which our Mercy is to be employed p. 175 176. Secondly The great Interest we have in the Fate of the Souls of others p. 177 178. Thirdly The mighty Influence our Mercy may have upon their Welfare p. 179 180 181. CHAP. II. OF Mercy as it relieves the Miseries of the Bodies of Men which are reduced to five Heads First Natural Blemishes and Defects p. 182 183 184. Secondly Sickness and Diseases p. 185 186 187. Thirdly Outward Force and Violence from those in whose Power they are such as Bondage and Captivity p. 188 189. Imprisonment p. 190. bodily Torments and Persecutions p. 191 192 193. Fourthly Civil or Arbitrary Punishments inflicted on them for Injuries received p. 194. In which the Law of Mercy requires us in punishing Offenders First That we do it with a good Intention p. 195. Secondly Not to exact Punishment for small and trifling Offences p. 196. Thirdly Not to punish an Offender when we can do no Good by it either to our selves or to him or to others p. 197. Fourthly Not to punish an Offender so long as the End of punishing him is fairly attainable by gentler Means p. 198. Fifthly To inflict no more Punishment than what is absolutely necessary to the obtaining those good Ends we design by it 199. Sixthly Always to punish short of the Offence p. 200 201. Fifthly and Lastly Another of the Miseries which affect Mens Bodies is want of the outward Necessaries of this present Life wherein is shewn the proper Remedies which are to be applied to them p. 202 203 204 205. CHAP. III. OF Almsgiving as to the manner of performing it First That it ought to be performed with a good and merciful Intention p. 207 208. Secondly With Justice and Righteousness p. 209. Thirdly Readily and chearfully p. 210 211. Fourthly liberally and bountifully p. 212 213. Fifthly Timely and seasonably p. 214 215. Sixthly Discreetly and prudently p. 216 217. which ought more particularly to guide and direct our Alms First In the Method of Provision of them p. 218. Secondly In the Choice of the Objects of them p. 219 220. Thirdly In the Nature and Quality of them p. 221. Fourthly In stating the Proportions of them p. 222 223 224 225. Fifthly In the manner of bestowing and conveying them p. 226 227. The Practice of this Duty is pressed and enforced with some Motives and Arguments viz. First That it is imposed upon us as a necessary Part of our Religion p. 228 229 230. Secondly That it is highly recommended to us by the Examples of God and our Saviour p. 231 232 233. Thirdly That it is a most substantial Expression of our Love and Gratitude to God and our Saviour p. 234 235 236 237. Fourthly That it charges an high Obligation to us upon the Accounts of God and our Saviour p. 238 239 240 241. CHAP. IV. OF the eternal Reasons and Grounds of Mercy upon which it is founded and rendred morally Good This shewn in five particulars First The Suitableness of it to the Nature of God p. 242 243 244 245. Secondly The Convenience of it with the Frame and Constitution of human Nature p. 246 247. An Objection against Cruelty answered p. 248 249 250. Thirdly The near and intimate Relation of those Persons to us upon whom our Mercy is to be exercised p. 251 252 253. Fourthly The Equitableness of it to our own State and Circumstances p. 254 255 256 257. Fifthly The Necessity of it to the tolerable Well-being of humane Societies p. 258 259 260 261 262. Of MORTIFICATION CHAP. I. OF Mortification p. 263 264 265. Wherein it doth consist shewn in three particulars First In Abstinence from the outward Acts of Sin p. 266. Secondly In not consenting to any Sin p. 267 268. Thirdly In a constant Endeavour to subdue our involuntary Inclinations to Sin p. 269 270 271 272. CHAP. II. OF the Means and Instruments of Mortification which are reduced to these Six First Faith p. 274 275 276. Secondly Consideration p. 277 278 279 280 281 282. Thirdly Resolution p. 283 284 285 286 287. Fourthly Discipline which consists in three Things First In a frequent Repetition of it p. 288 289. Secondly In frequent Reflection upon and Examination of our selves p. 290 291. Thirdly In keeping our selves at as great a distance from Sin as prudently and conveniently we can p. 292 293 294. Fifthly Frequent Receiving of the Sacrament p. 295 296 297 298 299 300 301. Sixthly Constant Prayer 302 303 304 305 306. CHAP. III. OF Motives to Mortification drawn from the present Mischiefs and Inconveniences which our Sins bring us into which are first either outward and bodily or secondly inward and spiritual p. 307. The outward and bodily Inconveniences are Four First That Sin destroys our Health and shortens our Lives p. 308 309 310 311. Secondly That it stains our Reputation p. 312 313. Thirdly It consumes our Estates p. 314 315 316. Fourthly It disturbs our sensual Pleasures p. 317 318 319 320. The second sort of Motives to Mortification are drawn from the present Mischiefs and Inconveniences that Sin brings upon our Souls which are chiefly Three First It spoils our Understandings p. 322 323 324 325 326 327 328. Secondly It subverts the natural subordination of our Faculties p. 329 330 331 332. Thirdly it disturbs the Tranquility of our Minds p. 333 334 335 336 337. CHAP. IV. OF Helps to Mortification given us by the Spirit of God viz. First The external Argument and Motives of the Gospel p. 338 339. Secondly The external Providences of the Divine Spirit by which he excites us to our Duty p. 340 341 342. Thirdly The Aids and Assistances which the Holy Angels give us who are the Agents and Ministers of the Holy Ghost p. 343 344 345. Fourthly The internal Motions and Operations of the Holy Ghost upon our Souls p. 346 347 348. From the Consideration of these Benefits of the Spirit of God the following Inferences are deduced First The Necessity of the