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A34877 A supplement to Knowledge and practice wherein the main things necessary to be known and believed in order to salvation are more fully explained, and several new directions given for the promoting of real holiness both of heart and life : to which is added a serious disswasive from some of the reigning and customary sins of the times, viz. swearing, lying, pride, gluttony, drunkenness, uncleanness, discontent, covetousness and earthly-mindedness, anger and malice, idleness / by Samuel Cradock ... useful for the instruction of private families. Cradock, Samuel, 1621?-1706. 1679 (1679) Wing C6756; ESTC R15332 329,893 408

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notorious sinners and rescuing from their malice pious and good men in answer to their prayers is another argument of Providence and must needs force impartial men to say Doubtless there is a God that ruleth and judgeth in the Earth The Histories of all ages bear Testimony to this so that I need not add any particular instances 6. The restraining of the rage and power of Devils and infernal Spirits and such as are imployed by them is another great and convincing argument of Divine Providence These Fiends of darkness and perdition are acted with extreme rage and fury against all that are good and if God did not restrain them they would quickly pull the World about our ears We could never be secure in our Houses or abroad one moment for them 7. Events and issues very often are not correspondent to the designs and intents of the contrivers As Joseph told his Brethren Gen. 50.20 Ye thought evil against me but God meant it for good Who could have thought that Haman should have been a means of advancing Mordecai And yet so it came to pass what ever the World thinks the actions of men and their successes are under the Regiment and guidance of the Divine Will and Providence that invisibly governs and over-rules Have we not often seen how in one moment a pitifull small unexpected occurrence has broke in pieces a design laid with long deliberation with huge prospect and forecast of difficulties and with great reserves and preparations against all imaginable obstraites I say one poor unthought of accident has on the suddain crack't and broke to shivers all this long elaborated project That suddain and unexpected discovery of the long-elaborated Hellish Gund-powder Plot in our Nation is a pregnant instance of this and many more might also be given 8. The Miracles and extraordinary things that Sometimes happen in the World contrary to the course of Nature loudly proclaim a Providence 'T is true God does seldom alter the regular course he hath setled among his creatures But sometimes he does it to acquaint the World with his Power and Prerogative lest otherwise the arrogance of men should question his Omnipotence and be apt to suspect he could not do it Thus he made the Sun to stand still at the prayer of Joshua Thus he commanded the fire not to burn the Three Worthies when thrown into the fiery Furnace Thus he stopt the mouths of the Lyons that they should not devour Daniel Who can bind the hands of the Almighty or hinder him from doing what he pleaseth both in Heaven above and in the Earth beneath 9. The horrors of Conscience that wicked men sometimes feel upon their commission of very secret sins is another argument of Providence Psal 39.11 When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquity thou makest his beauty to consume away like a Moth. God makes mens own Consciences oftentimes chastise them for such secret s●ns as the World knows not of 10. T●e exact fulfilling of what was foretold promised or prophesied of in the Scriptures is another great argument of Providence And thus much for proof both by Scripture and reason that there is a Providence I come now to the Third thing I propounded to consider viz. The extent of this Divine Providence Under this head I shall shew these two things 1. That the Providence of God extends to all his Creatures 2. That in a more special and singular manner it manifests it self for the good of his Church and People 1. The Providence of God reaches all his Creatures and all their actions I shall labour to prove this by an induction of particulars 1. It reaches things casual Prov. 16.33 The lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposal thereof is from the Lord. God is said to deliver him to a mans hand whom we suppose to be killed by chance compare Exod. 22.13 with Deut. 19.4.5 2. It reaches to things inanimate viz. Natural Agents The water rises to that height that it drowns the Old World when God commands it The fire will not burn the Three Worthies if God forbid it Daniel 3.25 3. It reaches to Creatures that have only the lowest life viz. Vegetables and Plants How wisely hath God ordered those things Some Herbs he hath made good for food Into others he hath put excellent Medicinal virtues and hath made them good for Physick Some Flowers have glorious out-sides Solomon in all his glory was not cloathed like one of them Others of them have rare qualities and virtues beneficial to mankind 4. It reaches to Creatures that have only sense Who can sufficiently admire the wise Oeconomy of Bees and Ants and Silk-worms Flyes and Lice and Frogs the very corruption of the Earth when they have received a commission from God are too strong an Army for Pharaoh a mighty Prince When all Egypt besides was pestered with Flyes the Land of Goshen a little spot in the midst of it was not molested with any no not with Flyes which cannot be kept out of any place What Walls Rivers or Armies can hinder their motion or prevent their entrance And yet those active sprightly Creatures did not invade Goshen though they were round about it when God forbade them 5. The Providence of God reaches unto Angels Good Angels he makes use of as his instruments in the government of the World and sends them abroad to serve and minister for the good of his People As for Devils and evil Angels he hath them under restraint so that they can do no more then he permits them And the curbing and restraining such malicious Spirits is a mighty argument of Gods Providential care over us 6. It reaches unto men That will evidently appear if we consider these things 1. The first thing that speaks Gods Providence and Government over mankind is his giving them Laws 1. The Law of Nature which he gave them in their first Creation which directeth them how to discern good from evil truth from falshood right from wrong 'T is true by the fall of our first Parents these common and universal principles are much weakned and darkned Yet God hath so ordered it by his Creation at the first and his provident care over man since that those principles are not nor can be ras'd quite out of mans Soul but there are still some Natural motions of good and evil of right and wrong some rules of right practice left in their minds if they will attend to them 2. He gave unto his people the Jews the moral Law on Mount Sinai which as to the main is an epitome or abstract of the Law of Nature 3. He does now in these Gospel times as he promised write his Law on the hearts of his people and inclines them to observe it That so they may not only have a Law without them but an inward living Law of holiness and purity within their Souls Ezek. 36.26 27. 2. The second thing that speaks Gods Providence over man is his
not their first Station they sinned against God and by sin fell from their happiness 3. Let us inquire how they came to sin Being created pure they had no lust within to incline them to it and being in Heaven they had no Object without to draw or allure them to it neither had they any ●emp●●r before one or more of their own number fell to intice them to it Some late Divines conceive that the great Angel ●ow called Belzebub first fell and then drew others by his t●mpta●ion and seducement into the same rebellion and disobedience with himself For Matth. 25.44 we read of the Devil and his Angels and Matth. 12.24 of Belzebub the Prince of Devils From whence we may probably conjecture there was some Prince or Chief of the Apostate Angels who was the Ring-leader in this faction and rebellion against God And if any shall further inquire how sin came into the Angels at first all that we can say is this They were created good yet mutable and they voluntarily chose not to abide in their first estate 'T is Gods Prerogative only to be immutable All Creatures though never so pure if not assi●ted by grace are mutable and may sin Job 4.18 Behold he put no trust in his Servants and his Angels he charged with folly The Angels being mutable Creatures might fall from their righteousness if left to themselves and some of them did fall and God charged them judicially with folly for it They were created in a blessed state and from that they might and some of them did fall But however it was we may assure our selves God was not the cause of their fall by infusing any evil into them Neither is he to be looked upon as consenting to their sin in that he did not hinder them from it or in that he did not support them by his Grace For he oweth his Grace to none and giveth it when and to whom he pleaseth And in the Angelical Nature as well as the humane he would discover his Justice and his Mercy and the freed●m of his dispensations 4. Let us consider the time when they fell How soon they fell we cannot certainly determine 'T is probable they fell very soon For Joh. 8.44 Satan is called a Murderer from the beginning and 1 Joh. 3.9 'T is said the Devil sinneth from the beginning that is soon after the Creation That these Angels were created plainly appears from Col. 1.16 And probably they were created on the second day when the Heavens the proper place of their residence were created 'T is certain they sinned before Man fell For the Devil in and by the Serpent seduced Eve Gen. 3.1.2 Cor. 11.3 5. Let us consider their number 'T is certain that the number of these Apostate Angels is very great and that there are very many of them going up and down in the World as may appear by this that an whole Legion of them was in one man Luke 8.30 * Legio apud Romanos continebat 12500 mi●ites num●rus certus pro incerto ut ipse Daemon explicat But how great their number is cannot by us be certainly determined 6. Let us consider their Nature Properties and Employment 1. They are Spirits of great knowledge cunning and subtilty They are subtil by Nature and by long experience in tempting since the beginning of the World their subtilty is much increased They can transform themselves into Angels of light 2 Cor. 11.14 But this is observable they never move to good as 't is good but as it may have some evil consequent upon it And further they know how to suit their temptations to the several tempers of men They have much Natural and Experimental knowledge so as they can discern hidden causes and virtues which mans reason cannot reach unto They know how to apply actives to passives they can guess notably at future events but as for a certain knowledge of them unless of such things as depend upon necessary causes or have been some way or other made known unto them by God that they have not That knowledge is proper to God and accordingly he challengeth it unto himself Isai 41.23 Shew things that are to come hereafter that we may know ye are gods says he of the vanities and Idols of the Heathen They are of wonderful sagacity to judge of mens hearts by their outward gestures and carriage In a word they are wise enough to do evil but to do good they have no knowledge 2. Their malice is very great This is set forth to the life 1 Pet. 5.8 Be sober be vigilant because your adversary the Devil like a roaring Lyon goes about seeking whom he may devour whom resist stedfast in the Faith His malice is so great that he goes about doing mischief though he knowes that he gets no good by it nay though his punishment will be so much the greater for the mischief he does His malice is great against all mankind but principally against the Saints and Servants of God First Because they bear the Image of God Secondly Because they through grace resist his temptations here and shall as approvers of Christs righteous sentence judge him hereafter 1 Cor. 6.3 3. They are Spirits of great Power though it be limited by God so that it cannot be exercised but when and where and how it pleaseth him The Devil doth exercise his power as far as he is able to the hurt of the Children of men but especially to the hurt of the Saints obstinately endeavouring to hinder them from enjoying that happiness which he lost 4. They are Spirits of great industry to do mischief as we may see Job 1.6.7 The Devil not only does all the outward mischief he can but he tempts also by inward suggestions For being a Spirit he hath communion with our Souls and Spirits and can dart evil thoughts into us thus he filled the heart of Judas to betray his Lord and Master Thus he provoked David to number the People 1 Chron. 21.1 His temptatio●s are many times suddain impetuous importunate And his suggestions may oftentimes be known from those that arise from our own corrupt hearts by the suddenness violence and unnaturalness of them Those that arise from our own corrupt Natures are usually pleasing unto us But if the te●ptation be against the light of Nature as for one to kill a friend whom he dearly loves and do fill the Soul with horror as blasphemous thoughts do those may be reckoned as Satans fiery Darts For they torment the mind as poisoned Arrows do the body And by an humble recourse to Christ for help we should labour to quench these fiery Darts Our Saviour himself was tempted by the Devil to most hideous things Matth. 4. And having been tempted himself he knows how to succour those that are tempted Heb. 2.18 The Saints of God therefore should encourage themselves from these considerations 1. A restraint is put on Satan in all his temptations 1 Cor. 10.13 He
Officers of the Church he doth qualifie and fit men with requisite gifts for their stated ordinary ministerial work which is to explain and apply the foresaid Scriptures and administer the Sacraments and guide and govern the Flock and doth assist them in a discharge of their Office 4. This same blessed Spirit is Christs advocate with men and does by the word illuminate their minds and sanctifie and renew their wills and draws them to Christ to rest on his great propitiation 5. This same holy Spirit also assisteth the Sanctified in the exercise of Grace given them as in the exercise of Repentance Faith Obedience and Selfdenial He also directs and governs their conversation inabling them to walk watchfully that they may not dishonour God nor their holy profession For if we live in the Spirit being quickned by his renovation we must also walk in the Spirit following his directions and if we walk in the Spirit we shall not fulfill the lusts of the Flesh And as many as are thus led by the Spirit they are the Children of God Gal. 5.25 6. He teacheth us to pray and guides us and directs us in our prayers and devotions Zach. 12.10 Rom. 8.26 27. and so is said to make intercession for us by teaching us how to pray and intercede for our selves For which intercession among other things he hath the name of a Paraclete given him by Christ Joh. 14.16 * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sive Advocati officium est Clienti suggerere utilia ad ea hortari eum animare atque confi●mare coram judice ejus causam agere pro eo intercedere 7. We are said to be sealed by this holy Spirit As a mans Seal does signifie the thing sealed to be his own so the Spirit of Holiness in us is God's Seal upon us signifying that we are His Eph. 4.30 Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God whereby you are sealed unto the day of Redemption 8. This holy Spirit is the earnest or first fruits to us of eternal life The Spirit is given to us by God as the earnest of the glory which he will give us To whomsoever he giveth the Spirit of Faith Love Holiness he gives the earnest of eternal life 9. This Spirit doth also witness or evidence to true Converts that they are the Children of God and so is called the spirit of Adoption Rom. 8.15 16. Ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear but the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father The Spirit it self beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God And this he doth evidence to us several wayes 1. By shewing or manifesting to us the Grace which he hath given us 2. By shewing the certainty of the Promise made to all those who have such Grace 3. By helping us from those Graces and those Promises to conclude with confidence that we are the Children of God And then he comforts us and helps us to rejoyce in what we do or suffer for Christ in the hope of the glory that we shall be partakers of Thus much concerning the Doctrine of the Spirit we come now to consider the duties which we owe to him Which are these 1. We ought to obey and follow his blessed motions Yet here we must take heed that we do not mistake the Spirit of God and his motions and instead of them follow the motions of Satan or of our own Passions or Pride or fleshly wisdom By these marks the Spirit of God may be known 1. The Spirit of God infuses into us Heavenly wisdom to mind the securing our peace with God and our title to the Kingdom of Heaven in the 1. place 2. He is a Spirit of Love his motions are for love and doing good 3. He is a Spirit of Concord and moves Believers to unity and disswades them from divisions among themselves or to joyn in carnal confederacies with the wicked see 1 Cor. 12.25 Eph. 4.3 4 5. 4. He is a Spirit that teaches Humility and Self-denial making us little in our own eyes 5. He is a Spirit that teaches Meekness Patience and Forbearance not Boisterousness Contention Reviling or Revenge 6. He is a Spirit that teacheth zeal for God not a furious destroying zeal but a zeal against known sin and for known truth and known duty 7. He is a Spirit that teacheth mortification and crucifying of our lusts and subduing of sensuality 8. He is a Spirit that doth not contradict the Doctrine of Christ delivered in the holy Scripture but moveth us to endevour to conform our selves thereunto Isa 8.20 9. The motions of this blessed Spirit do alwayes tend to our good and to drive us to God and to obey his holy Will and Commandments and never to transgress any of his precepts 2. We must take heed of quenching the Spirit 1 Thes 5.19 that is the gifts and graces of the Spirit in our selves but must labour to stir them up by prayer and the due exercise of them 3. We must take heed of grieving this blessed Spirit Eph. 4.30 Not that he can properly be grieved but he is said to be grieved when we do that which in it self is apt to grieve him if he were capable thereof and which provokes him to do that which grieved persons use to do namely to withdraw his gracious and comforting presence 4. We must not neglect the means the Spirit hath appointed us to use for our improvement in Sanctification We must attend upon him and expect him in his own ways and not in wayes wherein he useth not to go 5. We must do most when this blessed Spirit helps us most If he extraordinarily help us at any time in prayer we should not break off so soon as at other times 6. We must be very thankful for the assistances he is pleased at any time to afford us And above all if he hath convinced us of the evil and danger of our sins hath wrought in our hearts true Godly sorrow and contrition for them and a real hatred and loathing of them and hath drawn our hearts to Christ Jesus to seek pardon and reconciliation with God in and through his merits and Intercession and hath begun a work of Sanctification in us then we ought to admire and to be for ever thankful for the free and efficacious grace of this Holy Spirit SECT II. Of the Holy Catholick Church The Holy Catholick Church THat which we are bound to believe concerning the Holy Catholick Church is this viz. that Christ hath a Church upon the earth which for the latitude and extent thereof may be called Catholick and for the Piety of the Professors thereof may be called Holy In the treating of which I shall speak 1. Of the name 2. Of the nature of the Church 3. Of the distinctions of it 4. Of the notes of it 1. Of the name Church is a name not found in all the writings of the Old Testament in which the body
But does not the annexing of such a condition as this unto forgiveness lessen the grace and bounty of it Answer No in no wise For consider these things 1. The dispensing of pardon and forgiveness upon such a condition as faith in Christ which includes Gospel obedience is one of the most effectual means to introduce sanctity and holiness into the World For what more effectual way can there be to do it than to make it conditionally necessary to justification and salvation 2. Gods immutable holiness and justice is hereby made more illustrious and his solemn hatred and dislike of sin is more manifested For hereby 't is evident that God will save no man in his sins but from his sins Whom he justifies he will sanctify No mans sin is so forgiven that the least allowance is vouchsafed to it None but such as are sanctified can be accepted of him 3. Whatever is by the Gospel conditionally required of us is fully and freely given us Faith and every other grace is the gift of God We perform the condition required of us solely by the power of his grace freely given unto us And all the rewards of the Gospel are but the gracious remunerations of Gods own gifts and graces Free grace and divine bounty is the root that bears all And therefore the holiest men on earth have the greatest cause to be most humble For having received most they ought most to abase themselves 4. 'T is fit that all who shall be saved should be rationally satisfied of the excellency of that life the Gospel calls them unto For the precepts of the Gospel are framed and calculated for our advantage and benefit The commands of Christ are in no wise grievous to any man truly and rationally informed of his own interest The Gospel commands us to be sober righteous and godly and 't is rationally best for us so to be both in order to our own good and the good and benefit of others among whom we live And therefore 't is fit we should make a solemn choice of this life for our selves and seriously resolve as men of truth and fidelity to pursue it There ought to be sincerity of intention and endeavour in us to live this life though we do not arrive at perfection of action We should therefore examine what is the deliberate choice of our wills whether to be Sanctified by the Spirit of Christ as well as to be justified by his merits Christ will not judge of us by a suddain passionate choice but by our rational and advised choice And we must especially take heed of all degrees of insincerity and hypocrisie which of all sins under the Gospel does most dangerously border on a breach of the condition required Believe it those things that keep people usually from the good things of the Gospel are either a direct refusal of Christ or a sloathful carelesness unconcerned neglect of him or a prevailing falseness in the course of Gospel obedience I shall conclude all that I shall say upon this argument with these four particulars 1. Our Lord and Saviour did certainly perform all things that were required to be performed by him as our mediator 2. By reason of the high dignity of his person his obedience and sufferings are of more value and worth than the obedience and sufferings of all mankind would have been 3. These things being performed by him in our nature and wholly upon o●r account God accepts them for us though not as done by us and reckons all the benefits and advantages of them to us 4. If we desire to partake of the benefits of Christs active and passive obedience we must sincerly believe in him and take him for our Lord and Saviour and if our Faith be a true justifying Faith it will purify our hearts and reform our lives Having thus explained this Doctrine of the forgiveness of sins let us now consider what improvement we should make of it 1. Let us admire the infinite goodness of God that there is a possibility of pardon for the children of men who are naturally under wrath There is none for the Angels that fell 2. Let us often meditate upon and admire the way of it 1. No pardon to be obtained for man without a Mediator And where could fallen man have found a Mediator that would have undertaken his cause 2. No ordinary Mediator would suffice If all the holy Angels had joyned together it would have not been sufficient Only the eternal Son of God could effect it 3. Let us consider that Christ obtained our peace not by a bare mediation but by paying a price for us and making full satisfaction to the Will and Justice of God by his obedience and sufferings 3. Let us often admire the benefits of it 1. It is not only a great mercy in it self but the foundation of all other mercies 'T is the Queen of mercies that hath a glorious train of other mercies attending it Psal 32.1 Blessed is the man whose sins are forgiven whose iniquities are covered to whom the Lord imputeth not transgression None of the antient Philosophers ever gave such a definition of happiness 2. The sense of this mercy makes all afflictions more easie to be born What can hurt us if God be reconciled to us 3. Pardoning mercy brings healing with it unto the Soul Christ Sanctifies those by his Spirit whose pardon he procures by his Merits 4. It affords great comfort against death which is otherwise terrible of terribles 4. If pardoning mercy be so great a mercy let us often consider how vile and wretched those persons are who slight this mercy But who are they 1. All careless ones who neglect this great salvation and prefer the things of the World before it 2. All wicked and prophane ones who go on daily increasing their guilt not minding to make peace with God 3. All that rest on any thing besides Christs righteousness and intercession for the procuring their pardon with God 5. Let us all examine our selves whether we have obtained this blessedness or no. Many content themselves with weak grounds on which they build their hopes of pardon 1. They are not so bad as others They think they are sinners yet guilty but of few sins in comparison of what others are guilty of I answer Possibly they may not be so bad as others yet they may be in a very bad condition for all that out of which if they do not get they will be everlastingly miserable 2. Others think well of them Be it so But we shall not stand or fall by mans Judgment 3. They live civilly so they may do and yet be unconverted and without true conversion and regeneration no salvation is to be expected 6. Seeing God is ready to forgive let us all endeavor to secure this blessedness to our selves 1. Let us seek it as earnestly as ever we sought any thing in the World 2. those that must shortly be arraigned If a guilty Malefactor knew
A SUPPLEMENT TO Knowledge AND PRACTICE Wherein the main things necessary to be known and believed in order to Salvation are more fully explained and several new Directions given for the promoting of real Holiness both of Heart and Life To which is added a serious Disswasive from some of the reigning and customary sins of the Times viz. Swearing Lying Pride Gluttony Drunkenness Vncleanness Discontent Covetousness and Earthly-mindedness Anger and Malice Idleness By Samuel Cradock B. D. late Rector of North-Cadbury in Somerset-Shire Useful for the Instruction of private Families Quod de Scripturis authoritatem non habet pari facilitate rejicitur qua accipitur Hieron LONDON Printed for Thomas Simmons at the Princes Arms in St. Pauls Church-yard 1679. To the INHABITANTS of NORTH-CADBURY in SOMERSETSHIRE My Loving Friends SOme years since when I stood in the Relation of a Pastor to you I wrote my Book of Knowledge and Practice aiming therein more especially at your benefit Which Treatise I hope through the Lords blessing hath been of some use to you I have since thought that it would not be a service unacceptable to you to add by way of Supplement a more full explication of the Main Principles of the Christian Faith and some Further Directions for regulating of your Practice and to send them unto you to supply my Personal absence God only knows whether I shall ever see your Faces again in this World Providence having fixed my Habitation at so great a distance from you However my hearts desire and prayer to God for you is that you may be saved and if this poor Book may in any measure contribute thereunto I shall heartily rejoyce The holy Apostles no doubt in writing their Epistles aimed at the Spiritual good of the Church in general yet we may well suppose that those particular Churches to whom their Epistles were directed read them with more especial regard and possibly reaped more signal benefits by them than others did So though I design these instructions for your Spiritual good and benefit of all those into whose hands they shall come Yet I hope they shall be more especially minded and regarded by you to whom they are particularly directed and in contemplation of whose necessities and with an aim at whose benefit they were particularly framed I know many of you are such of whom the Apostle speaks Heb. 5.12 Who have need that one teach you the first Principles of the Oracles of God and have need of milk and not of strong meat I should be glad to have you all rightly instructed in the main fundamentals of Christianity and that not for your sakes only but for my own that I may give up my account with joy and not with grief Heb. 13.17 But yet I must tell you that it is not enough to save any of you that you are of the true Religion except you be true to it and live agreeably thereunto God hath indeed made sufficient provision by the obedience and death of his Son to save Mankind But you must earnestly leg of God to inable you to do your part which is unfeignedly to repent of all your sins savingly to believe in Christ and to accept him for your Lord and Saviour and to deliver up your souls to him that you may be pardoned through the infinite merit of his active and passive obedience and sanctified by his Spirit and inabled by his grace to lead a holy and good life And as I earnestly desire you all to have an especial care of your own Souls so do I with some importunity intreat all that are Parents or Masters of Families among you that they would take great care to instruct their children and servants in the main Principles of the Christian Religion I have often thought that if ever real Piety and Christianity flourish in England more must he done by Parents and Masters in instructing those under their care than is now ordinarily done I hope this short Treatise may with the blessing of God something assist and help you in performing that part of your duty May the God of all grace lead you and guide you in ways of truth and holiness and inable you to live in love and peace one with another And though I should never see you again in this life yet may the Father of Mercies through his infinite goodness grant that I may meet your Souls in Heaven This is the earnest desire and prayer of him who was once your unworthy Pastor and is still your very loving and affectionate friend Wickham brook Novemb. 6. 1678. SAM CRADOCK The CONTENTS of the FIRST PART CHAP. I. Of God SECT 1. Of the Nature of God and his Divine Attributes page 1. SECT 2. Of the Trinity of persons in the unity of the Divine Essence page 18. SECT 3. Of the works of God page 31. 1. Creation where Of good Angels page 32. Of evil Angels page 40. 2. Particular page 48. CHAP. 2. Of Man Page 62 SECT 1. Of the happy State wherein Man was created and the Covenant of Works made with him in that State p. 62. SECT 2. Of his Fall and the consequents thereof p. 66 SECT 3. Of the Covenant of Grace made with Man immediately after his Fall which shews the only way of his recovery to be by Jesus Christ p. 73 CHAP. 3. Of Jesus Christ Page 80 SECT 1. Of his Titles which in the Creed are four 1. Jesus p. 80 2. Christ where of his three Offices Prophet p. 83 Priest p. 86 King p. 88 3. His only Son p. 91 4. Our Lord p. 93 SECT 2. Of his Natures Divine and Humane p. 95 SECT 3. Of his birth p. 96 SECT 4. Of his Life p. 100 Here a short and methodical History of our Saviours Life is exhibited and the particular Times in which he instituted Baptism and the Sacrament of his Supper are pointed at Vpon both which Sacraments there are distinct discourses added at the end SECT 5. Of his Death and Burial p. 137 SECT 6. Of that Article in the Creed He descended into Hell page 131 SECT 7. Of his Resurrection and ten several appearings after it in the space of forty dayes he continued on the earth p. 143 SECT 8. Of his Ascention and sitting on Gods right hand p. 149 SECT 9. Of his coming to judg the World p. 154 CHAP. 3. SECT 1. Of the Holy Ghost p. 162 SECT 2. Of the Catholick Church 166 SECT 3. Of Communion of Saints p. 175 SECT 4. Of forgiveness of sins p. 178 SECT 5. Of the Resurrection of the body p. 193 SECT 6. Of Life everlasting Of Baptism p. 200 Of the Lords Supper p. 205 Of the Lords Prayer p. 220 The second part contains a serious disswasive from some of the reigning and customary sins of the Times viz. Swearing Lying Pride Gluttony Drunkennness Vncleanness Discontent Covetousness and Earthly-mindedness Anger and Malice Idleness ERRATA IN page 267 after the eighth Direction add Ninthly Take heed of saying ●s
Of good Angels and then of the Angels that fell There are Four things the Scripture holds forth to us concerning good Angels 1. Their Number 2. Their Titles 3. Their Nature and Properties 4. Their Functions and Ministery First Their Number The Scripture teaches us that they are very many Dan. 7.10 A fiery stream issued and came forth from before him Thousand Thousands ministred unto him and Ten Thousand times Ten Thousands stood before him the Judgment was set and the Book was opened Rev. 5 11. And I beheld and heard the voice of many Angels round about the Throne and the Beasts and the Elders and the Number of them was Ten Thousand times Ten Thousand and Thousands of Thousands Matth. 26.53 Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to my Father and he shall presently send me more then Twelve Legions of Angels Heb. 12.22 But ye are now come unto Mount Sion and unto the City of the living God the Heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels Psal 68.17 The Chariots of God are Twenty Thousand even Thousands of Angels 2 Kings 6.17 And Elisha prayed and the Lord opened the Eyes of the young man and he saw the Mountain was full of Horses and Chariots of Fire round about Elisha that is that a great multitude of Angels were sent from God to defend and protect the Prophet Secondly Their Titles Their general name is Angels or Messengers Sometimes they are called Cherubim and when they appeared in a visible shape or were pictured they had the resemblance of a young man in the excellency of his beauty vigor and strength and had Wings as we read Exod. 25.18 20. Sometimes they are called Seraphim importing their fervent Zeal in executing the will of God Sometimes Sons of God Job 38.7 When the morning Stars sang together and all the Sons of God shouted for joy Sometimes Thrones Dominions Principalities Powers as we read Col. 1.16 And so much of their Titles Thirdly Their Natures and Properties 1. They are Spirits of great Knowledge and Wisdom 'T was said of David 2 Sam. 14.20 That he was wise according to the Wisdom of an Angel of God They are admirable in knowledge both natural experimental and revealed 2. Of spotless purity and integrity Our Saviour says Mark 8.38 Whosoever shall be ashamed ●f me and of my words in the adulterous and sinfull Generation of him shall the Son of man be ashamed when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the Holy Angels When they appear'd to the World their garb wherein they appear'd represented their innocency As at Christ's Sepulchre there appeared two Angels in white the one sitting at the Head the other at the Feet where the body of Jesus had lain Joh. 20.12 3. Of exceeding great power and strength Psal 103.20 Bless the Lord ye his Angels that excel in strength 4. Of great celerity and quickness of motion in which respect they are said to have wings Isai 6.2 Above it stood the Seraphims each one had six wings importing their chearfulness and readiness and celerity in the service of God Fourthly Their Function and Ministry which is of Three sorts 1. In reference to God 2. In reference to Christ 3. To the Saints and People of God I In reference to God 1. They attend his glorious presence They are his chief Servants and principal attendants the bright Courtiers of Heaven They are called the Host of Heaven 1 Kings 22.19 They are called the Chariots of God viz. Such as attend him for his service Psal 68.17 The Chariots of God are twenty Thousand even Thousands of Angels 2. They are especiall Instruments to praise and magnifie him Rev. 7.11 12. And all the Angels stoood round about the Throne and fell before the Throne on their faces and w●rshipped God saying Blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honour and power and might be unto our God for ever and ever Amen 3. They are Messengers to carry and reveal his mind and will By the glorious ministry and proclamation of Angels God delivered his Law on Mount Sinai Act. 7.53 Compared with Gal. 3.19 Christ the Head of Angels proclaimed his Law by the voice of an Angel as a Herald in presence of the King publishes his Proclamations And so on sundry other occasions God used to make known his will by Angels Dan. 9.21 Whiles I was speaking in prayer says Daniel the man Gabriel whom I had seen in the Vision at the beginning being caused to fly swiftly touched me about the time of the evening Oblation And Luk. 1.11 There appeared unto Zacharias an Angel of the Lord standing on the right side of the Altar of Incense and said unto him I am Gabriel that stand in the presence of God And am sent to speak unto thee and to shew thee these glad tidings And v. 26. in the Sixth Month the Angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a City of Galilee name Nazareth to the Virgin Mary And Luke 2.9 10. An Angel was sent to the Shepherds keeping watch over their Flock by Night to bring the joyful tidings of the Birth of the Messias 4. They are Ministers to execute and perform what God will have done in the World Psal 103.20 Bless the Lord ye his Angels that excel in strength that do his Comma●dments They bring Lot out of Sodom Gen. 19.1 They bring Israel out of Egypt Numb 20.16 They stop Balaams course Numb 22.22 They stop the Lyons Mouths Dan. 6.20 22. They execute the Judgments of God upon wicked men Thus we read how Two Angels destroyed Sodom and that an Angel defeated the Host of Sennacherib 2 Kings 19.35 And that an Angel smote bloody persecuting Herod Acts 12.33 And thus much of their Ministry in reference to God I come now to consider II. Their Ministry in reference to Christ 'T is said Joh. 1.51 That the Angels ascend and descend on the Son of man That place has relation to Gen. 28.12 Where Jacob dreamed of a Ladder set upon the earth whose to preached to Heaven and the Angels of the Lord ascended and descended on it by the Ladder Christ is meant who by his humane Nature touched the Earth and whose Divine Nature reached up to Heaven The Angels ascending and descending imported the continual service they are re●dy to perform unto him and that they are deputed thereunto of the Father as the Apostle proves Heb. 1.6 When he bringeth his first begotten into the World he saith Let all the Angels of God worship him But to d●scend to Particulars 1. They foretell his conception Luke 1.30 3● And the Angel said unto her fear not M●ry for thou hast found favour with God And shalt conceive in thy Womb and bring forth a Son and shalt call his name Jesus 2. They declare his Birth Luke 2.9 10 11. And lo the Angel of the Lord came upon them and the glory of the Lord shone round about them and they were sore afraid And the Angel of the Lord
suggests good for evil ends or evil for good ends 3. Good Angels comfort strengthen and support in times of distress and trouble Thus they ministred to our Saviour after Satan had fiercely assaulted him with Temptations Matth. 4.11 So like wise when he was in his agony Luke 22.43 There appeared an Angel unto him from Heaven strengthening of him And what they did for Christ the Head they do for his Members in measure and proportion and as far forth as God sees good for them 4. They convey the Souls of the departed Saints into Heaven Luke 16.22 And it came to pass that the Begger died and was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosom And thus much of their Ministry in relation to the Saints There are many usefull instructions that arise from this Doctrine of good Angels 1. Hereby we may see the great priviledge of the Saints of God They have the Guardianship of the Holy Angels Whether every Saint of God every Heir of Heaven have a peculiar and proper Angel to attend him is much disputed and canvassed by the Schoolmen But there seems no ground in the Word of God to appropriate a single Angel to every single Saint 'T is surely a greater dignity and benefit that every one of the Faithfull have many Angels appointed by the Lord for his Guard whereof the proof is manifest from the 91 Psalm 11. For he shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy ways and from 34 Psalm 7. The Angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him and delivereth them As for that place Acts 12.15 Where they said concerning Peter It is his Angel the meaning of it probably is this they hearing the Maid persist in it that Peter was at the door they apprehending that very unlikely thought some Holy Angel had assum'd his shape and voice and stood at the door in his resemblance But this proves not that every Saint hath a peculiar Angel Guardian The Angels indefinitely have charge over Gods People as God is pleased to assign th●m their Province and to imploy them in that Ministry But yet they execute this Ministry as superiour Guides not as inferiour Attendants Properly they are not Servants to us but to God for us There is no ground for our worsh●ppi●g of them th●y being our fell●w Creatures Rev. 19.10 I ●ell at his feet to worship him But he said See thou do it not I am thy fellow servant and of thy Brethren that have the Testimony of Jesus worship God 2. We may take notice of Gods wonderfull goodness in so graciously providing for his Saint● and Servants Lord what is man that thou art so mindful● of him Ther● is more in Holiness than the World doth see The Saints have Gods Power Christ Med●ation t●e Spirits conduct the Ministry of Angels all ingaged for their benefit 3. We may observe the great humility and condescention of these Holy Angels and their great love to mankind They rejoyc●d when the World was made for man Job 38.7 They rejoyced at the coming of Christ for mans Redemption Luke 2.13 They rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner Luke 15.10 4. We should labour to imitate these Holy Angels in their readiness and willing obedience to Gods will If we would be like Angels h●reafter in glory and bliss let us labour to imitate them here in a chearfull service of God 5. Let us labour to secure our interest in Christ that so we may be under the Protection of these Holy Angels For they Minister only for the good of them who are Heirs of Salvation 6. Let us take heed of depriving our selves of their help and Ministry Pride Lust Vanity are offensive to them And so are all impurities and indecencies in Gods Worship as the Apostle intimates to us 1 Cor. 11.10 Let us therefore take heed lest by any of these ways we grieve or drive from us these blessed helpers and Assistants Of Evil Angels Of Evil Angels Having thus spoken concerning good Angels we come now to speak concerning the Angels that fell Concerning whom these things are to be inquired into 1. The Names and Titles by which they are set forth in the Scripture 2. Their sin 3. How they came to sin being created pure 4. The time when they sinned 5. The number of them that sinned 6. Their nature properties and employment 7. Their punishment Present and Future 8. What instructions their fall wickedness and misery do afford unto us 1. The Names and Titles by which they are set forth in the Scripture The general and comprehensive Name of evil Angels in the Scripture is Devil Diabolus wich signifies an accuser or slanderer He is called also the wicked One the old Serpent the Adversary the roaring Lyon the Abaddon Appollyon or destroyer the great Dragon a lyer and the Father of lyes a Murderer a Murderer from the beginning the god of this World 2 Cor. 4.4 The Prince of the power of the Air Eph. 2.2 The Angel of the bottomless Pit Satan Rev. 12.9 The Spirit that worketh in the Children of disobedience Eph. 2.2 The Tempter Psal 78.49 And Eph. 6.12 We read of evil Angels that they are called Principalities Powers Rulers of the darkness of this World Spiritual wickedness in High places 2. Let us consider what was their sin The greatest evidence of the Nature of their sin we find in that place of the Apostle 1 Tim. 3.6 where he shews that a Person to be ordained should not be a Novice lest being lifted up with Pride he fall into Condemnation of the Devil that is be guilty of that sin viz. Pride which young men are so prone unto for which the Devil was Condemned and rejected of God Pride therefore seems to be as I may so speak the Original sin of those Apostate Angels But envy malice slandering c. are their actual sins Yet what kind of pride it was and how it discovered it self is not easie to determine Whether it was an affectation to be as high as God himself or a seeking to be higher than God had made them is not easie to be resolv'd Certain it is the Temptation they spred before our first Parents was ye shall be as Gods Or whether they refused the Work Office and Ministration God design'd them unto in reference to Men. Or whether it was too great a confidence and glorying in their own gifts and received excellencies or whether it was an affectation of Worship from men as we see they now delight in it or whether it was any other Rebellion against Gods Majesty and Empire 't is hard to determine Some learned men make it a compounded sin For as there were many sins in that sin by which Adam fell viz. Vnbelief Pride Ingratitude Disobedience so this first sin of the Angels might be compounded of many other sins though Pride were cheif in it Whatever their first sin was this is manifest they abode not in the truth They kept
governing and over ruling their inclinations and actions and that both good and evil Under this head I shall first shew how the Providence of God is exercised upon the good inclinations and actions of men and Secondly How 't is exercised about sin and evil For the First of these observe these Rules 1. God assists and co-operates with men in the doing of all good * Aristotle doth in his Ethicks acknowl●dge that for a man to have a Soul virtuously inclin'd is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gift of God Tu●ly in his Second Book De Natura deorum sayes Nemo vir magnus sine aliquo afflatu divino unquam suit And the Learned among Christians say Orsus bonae voluntatis sunt Deo Voluntas tum libera est quando per gratiam est liberata he works in him both to will and to do that which is good Phil. 2.13 'T is from God that men have any heart or will or power to do any thing pleasing in his sight But Gods co-operating with and assisting man in the doing of good is not in any thing more remarkable then in the coversion of a sinner He savingly inlightens the mind he freely bowes and inclines the will he circumcises the heart as we find Deut. 30.6 he gives a new heart as 't is Jer. 24.7 He takes away the heart of stone and gives a heart of flesh he puts a new Spirit with them as 't is Ezek. 11.29 2. As to sin and evil God neither is nor possibly can be the Author or Approver of it Yet his Providence is exercised about it as may appear by these particulars 1. He permits sin Without his permission and sufferance it could not be in the World God is so good that he would never permit sin but that being Omnipotent he knows how to bring good out of it Now he may be said to permit sin in these respects First By way of Negation not giving grace to prevent it which he is not bound to do being a Debtor to no man or by not giving a People softning means or by denying his blessing on the means Deut. 29.4 Moses says of the hardned Israelites Yet the Lord hath not given you an heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear unto this day God is said to harden says Austin when he saftens not and to blind when he enlightns not He doth it not by imparting evil or wickedness but by not imparting grace 2. By way of privation by withdrawing upon provocation the restraining grace before given Time was when Pharaoh had a restraint upon him and while that lasted there were no violent hands laid upon Moses or Aaron by whose ministry all the Plagues were brought upon him But this is no sooner withdrawn from him but his cruelty vents it self and Moses is threatned with death if he came again into his presence 3. By presenting Objects which mans corruption makes a bad use of Thus Psalm 78 from 27 to 31. The Israelities abused their Quails which God so mercifully gave them to the pampering of their lusts and so brought his wrath upon them 4. By delivering them up to Satan to be by him blinded and misled because they refused to be guided by the good Spirit and word of God Thus John 13.2 We read that the Devil put it into Judas his heart to betray his Lord and Master 5. By delivering them up to their own lusts Psal 81.11.12 God sayes my People would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of mee So I gave them up unto their own hearts lust and they walked in their own counsels 6. By way of punishment One sin is very often the punishment of another Thus Pharaoh when he saw that the Rain and Hail and the Thunders were ceased he sinned yet more and hardned his heart he and his Servants Exod. 9.34 And Austin speaks very pertinently to this purpose Expedit superbo ut incidat in peccatum God often suffers a proud man to fall into a shamefull sin to punish his pride and to bring him to a sober sence of himself 2. God limits sin and sets bounds to it Psalm 76.10 Surely the wrath of men shall praise thee the remainder of wrath thou wilt restrain Thus Gen. 31.42 He with-held Laban from his wicked purpose of hurting Jacob. He that sets bounds to the Sea sets bounds also to the sins of men 3. He makes sin it self serve to his own glory and so over-rules it that he brings good out of it Thus the unnatural usage which Joseph received from his Brethren God ordered to his high advancement and his Family's preservation Thus the Jews malice in persecuting the Disciples and sending them out of Jerusalem by Gods over-ruling tended to the propagating and dispersing of the Gospel Having thus shewed the extent of the Divine Providence to the several Beings in the World it remains now that I speak something of his special Providence which he exercises in a more singular way over his Church and People Which will plainly appear if we consider these particulars 1. Sometimes he hinders and prevents evil intended against them And this he does sometimes by weak means sometimes by strange means and sometimes without means See a remarkable instance of this 2 Chron. 14. from 9. to the 14. An Army of a Thousand Thousand Aethiopians came out against Asa and Verse the 11th he cried unto the Lord saying Lord it is nothing with thee to help whether with many or with few we have no power help us O Lord our God for we trust in thee and in thy name we go against this multitude O Lord thou art our God let not man prevail against thee So the Lord smote the Aethiopians before Asa and before Judah and they were overthrown Thus also 2 Chron 20. When the Children of Moab Ammon and Mount Seir came against Jeh●shaphat he proclaimed a Fast and cried unto the Lord. Vers 12. O our God we have no might against this great Company that cometh against us neither know we what to do but our eyes are upon thee Then upon Jahaziel came the Spirit of the Lord and he said unto the King and the People Be not afraid by reason of this great Multitude for the Battle is not yours but Gods To morrow go down against them you shall not need to fight in this Battle set your selves stand ye still and see the Salvation of the Lord. For the Lord will be with you And Jehoshaphat said unto the People believe in the Lord so shall ye be established believe his Prophets so shall ye prosper This done the Lord immediately sent a Spirit of division or strife among their enemies whereby those Nations falling out among themselves destroyed one another and sheathed their Swords in one anothers bowels See also to this purpose the whole 124 Psalm 2. Sometimes he moderates and takes off the rage of Enemies and makes them of Enemies to become Friends Thus when Esau
stone rolled to the door of the Sepulchre Matth. 27.60 Thus the design of the Jews made his Grave with the wicked intending he should be buried with them who were crucified with him But the design of Heaven placed him with the rich in his death and caused a Councellor and a Ruler of the Jews to bury him So that we may interpret that place of Isaiah thus He was buried nigh to the wicked yet with the rich when he was dead Our Saviour notwithstanding the malice of the Jews being thus honourably buried The Chief Priests desired of Pilate that the Sepulchre might be made sure lest his Disciples should steal him away which was accordingly done the Stone being sealed with the publick Seal and then a watch was set upon the Sepulchre We come now to consider what improvement we are to make of this Article 1. Then seeing Christ did really die and was buried let us testifie our communion with him in his death by dying unto Sin 2. In his Burial by the burial of the old man 3. In his Resurrection by rising unto newness of life This the Apostle hints to us as our duty Rom. 6.4 Therefore we are buried with him by Baptism into death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newness of life SECT VI. Of that Article in the Creed Descended into Hell He descended into Hell AFter Christs Crucifixion Death and Burial the Creed subjoyns He descended into Hell In treating of which I must in the first place suggest this that this Article of Christs descent into Hell was not in the antient Creeds 'T is not found in the Rules of Faith delivered by Irenaeus lib. 1. c. 2. by Origen lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Tertullian Adversus Prax. cap. 2. 'T is not in those Creeds that were made by the Councils as explications of this Creed particularly not in the Nicene where the words are these He was Crucified for us under Pontius Pilate He suffered and was buried and the third day he rose again according to the Scriptures It was not in the Roman or any of the Oriental Creeds This being premised we come to consider this Article which cannot with any shew of reason be understood of Christs Divine nature which is every where present and cannot be said either to ascend or descend It must therefore be understood of his humane nature And here it will be needful to enquire whether it be to be understood of his Soul or of his Body If it be to be understood of his Soul it must be meant either Metaphorically or really Some understand it Metaphorically and so by Christs descent into Hell they understand those inexpressible sufferings of his Soul a See Calv. Instit lib. 2. c. 16. which of all his sufferings were the most grievous by which he felt the wrath of God in his Soul for our sins But these sufferings were all antecedent to his death he having suffered part of them in the Garden and part on the Cross and all before he commended his Spirit into the hands of his Father and said it is finished and gave up the ghost But the descent into Hell as it now standeth in the Creed seems to signifie something done after his death Besides the torments of the damned are surely such as these 1. Remorse of Conscience or the never-dying worm 2. A bitter sence of an utter rejection from the favour of God 3. Despair of ever being eased of that unsupportable misery Now certainly none of these could befall our Saviour He did not endure so much as for a moment any of the Hellish torments Therefore surely in this sense Christs Soul did not descend into Hell Others hold that Christs Soul did really and by a local motion descend into Hell This they pretend 1. To prove and that from three places of Scripture And 2. To assign the ends for which he did thus descend We shall examine both First They say that though these words are not formally expressed in the Scriptures that Christ descended into Hell yet they are contained virtually in them which they will prove 1. From Eph. 4.9 Now that he ascended what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth by which they understand Hell For answer by the lower parts of the earth I humbly conceive is meant the earth it self which is the lowest part of the World as Heaven is the highest For before Christ could ascend unto Heaven it was necessary he should descend to the Earth by his incarnation but there was no necessity of his descending into Hell And further the Grave may be called one of the lower parts of the earth in opposition to the surface or upper part of it on which we live And this is all that seems to be meant in this place 2. They pretend to prove it from 1 Pet. 3.19 where 't is said that Christ being put to death in his humane nature was quickned or raised up again by the power of his Spirit or God-head by which he preached to the Spirits in Prison whence they infer that he descended into Hell to preach to the Spirits there in torments Answer From these words it appeareth 1. That Christ preached in the dayes of Noah by the same Spirit by the vertue and power of which he was raised from the dead But that Spirit was not his Soul but something of a greater power 2. those to whom he preached were disobedient all that time the long-suffering of God waited for their repentance and return while the Ark was preparing And 3. Their Souls or Spirits for their disobedience are now in Hell and for refusing of that mercy that was offered to them by the preaching of Christ 'T is true indeed this was not performed by an immediate act of the Son of God as if he had personally appeared on earth and actually preached to the old world but it was performed by the Ministry of Noah who was guided and inspired by his Spirit and accordingly is called a preacher of Righteousness 2 Pet. 2.5 The third place they alledge for the maintenance of their opinion is Acts 2.25 26 27 a place that relates to Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not leave my Soul in Hell c. Therefore say they surely Christs Soul did locally descend into Hell I Answer Soul is sometimes taken properly only for the Soul or Spirit of a man sometimes improperly for the whole person as Acts 27.37 We were in the Ship two hundred threescore and sixteen Souls Sometimes the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nephesh which signifies a Soul doth also signifie a dead body as Levit. 19.28 Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead Levit. 21. v. 1. There shall none be defiled for the dead among his people Numb 6.6 All the days that he separateth himself unto the Lord he shall come at no
practice of these things 1. Betake thy self to some retired privacy and sequestring thy self from worldly cares and business labour to bring thy mind into a good calm sedate frame and fitness for this great work 2. Earnestly beg of God to give thee the assistance of his holy spirit to inable thee to fit thy self for this solemn Ordinance 3. Seriously consider the danger of receiving this Sacrament unworthily that is without such a disposition of mind and such a preparation of heart and such reverence and devotion as is agreeable unto so holy an Ordinance Such persons as are not so fitted and yet approach to this holy Table are guilty of profaning this Sacrament which is the commemoration of Christs death and of vilifying the signs and pledges of his body and blood and so incur the danger of temporal Judgment and chastisement here and without repentance of eternal hereafter 4. Seriously consider what is required to a worthy receiving And here a twofold caution is to be observed 1. That the pitch of worthiness is not to be set too high so as none shall be thought sit to partake of this Table but such as have a high and eminent degree of grace For this ●●dinance was appointed for the ben●fit of the lowest Believers and s● such as are weak in the Faith 2. That it be not set too low so ●hat a●● person though very ignorant of the true nature and end of this ordinance if he be free from gross open and scandalous sins may be thought fit to come and be admitted to it That we may therefore avoid both these I shall set down 1. What qualifications are requisite to a worthy Receiver 2. What are insufficient The qualifications requisite are these 1. Knowledge The fundamental principles and grounds of Christianity and the nature signification end and use of this Sacrament must be known by every one that would be a worthy receiver Ignorant persons therefore are totally unfit for the present and must first be instructed before they be admitted to this holy Ordinance But by the knowledge required we do not mean the profound knowledge of a Scholar who knows how to dispute upon any of these points and knows all the distinctions about them but the savoury knowledge of a Christian which hath these properties 1. 'T is not a meer speculative floating or swimming in the brain but a knowledge that affects the heart and works upon the affections 'T is such a knowledge of God as causes the heart to fear him such a knowledge of sin as works in the heart a hatred and loathing of it 2. 'T is an humbling knowledge Knowledge not sanctified puffeth up 1 Cor. 8.1 But the more any Soul is savingly inlightned the more it sees and is sensible of its own folly and corruption and great depravedness 3. 'T is a knowledge that is operative for the drawing the Soul to Christ and for the mending of the heart and reforming of the life Never let any man tell me that he has knowledge enough he knows as much as the Minister can teach him he knows the way to Heaven and Salvation as well as any body can shew him when I see him going on in paths leading down to Hell Shall any man perswade me that he has a sufficient skill in Physick and yet when he is dangerously sick he is neither sensible of it nor applies any fit remedy for himself Certainly that knowledge of the things of God is not right which does not affect the heart nor reform the life 2. Repentance They that are truly penitent have wrought in them by the Spirit of God 1. A Conviction of the evil and danger of their sins 2. True contrition and godly sorrow for them 3. A hatred and loathing of them 4. They are brought humbly to confess them with sorrow and shame unto God And 5. To turn from them unto God by sincere amendment of their lives 3. Faith in Christ This is a main qualification requisite to a worthy Communicant The main acts of Faith are these two 1. A serious owning and acknowledging Christ for the only Saviour of the World 2. A sincere giving up of the soul to him to be pardoned in his blood and sanctified by his Spirit and a solemn trusting and depending on him for all the benefits purchased by his death and passion And such a faith as this is operative for the purifying of the heart and reforming the life 4. Love Of this grace there are several acts required 1. We ought to excite a great love in our Souls to God our Creator and constant benefactor who sent his Son to redeem us 2. We ought to excite and stir up in our souls a great love to Christ Jesus who humbled himself to the death for us In contemplation of which transcendent love of Christ the Apostle cries out If any man love not the Lord Jesus let him be Anathema Maranatha 1 Cor. 16.22 Q. But you will say how may we know whether there be in us a sincere love to Christ or no 1. Have we been deeply wounded with a sence of our sins and have we betaken our selves to him as our only Physician to be cured and have we found him curing our accusing condemning consciences Hath our love to Christ any such foundation as this 2. Do we own Christ and love him as considered in all his Offices Do we love Christ not only as a Priest that has made atonement for us but as a Prophet and a King Do we love the guidance of his holy Spirit and the guidance of his word Do we love his Soveraignty as well as his Saviour-ship 3. Do we love him for his deep humiliation and bitter sufferings which he so readily underwent for us and for the great redemption and salvation he hath wrought for us 4. Are we willing to obey Christ If you love me sayes our Saviour keep my commandments 5. Is the interest of Christ dear to us Are we concerned in his honour and dishonour Are we suitably affected when his interest prospers or is trampled upon when it goes well or ill with his Church 6. Do we love him for those eminent graces which were so conspicuous in his life 7. Are we willing to be serviceable to him and to suffer for him when he calls us to it 8. Do we love him for his constant intercession for us at Gods right hand Let us try our love to Christ by these marks 3. We ought to have in our hearts a true love and charity to all Christians We should excite in our Souls a true love to all those that are real members of Christ We should love their persons graces and fellowship These we should love with a complacential love But besides these we should love our very enemies with a love of benevolence wishing well unfeignedly to them and praying for them The proper offices and effects of this Charity are 1. Forgiving injuries 2. Doing good against evil 3. Speaking
3. Consider our tongues should be our Glory The proper end for which God hath given us the use of speech is to glorify and honour him our Creator and to profit one another Our words therefore should be good sound and savoury Let no corrupt communication sayes the Apostle Eph. 4.29 Proceed out of your mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying that it may minister grace to the hearers And our Saviour tells us Mat. 12.36 that of every idle word which is frivolous and fruitless we shall give an account in the day of Judgment And therefore a much more severe account surely men shall give of their wicked swearing blaspheming and cursing which are no proper works for them to imploy their tongues in but a horrible depraving perverting and defiling of so excellent a member 4. Consider what a high pitch of wickedness it is for any to deprave such an holy institution as an Oath is which should always be used reverently and only upon great and serious occasions and to prostitute it to the venting of every base passion and uttering of Pride and Presumption and fearlesness of God and to make that which should be a tremendous Ordinance to us a common slight and familiar thing 5. Consider how dishonourable it is to our Christian profession that those that call themselves Christians should live in such a flat contradiction to the Laws of Christ and should make nothing of familiar and customary swearing which he so severely prohibits Matth. 5.33 James 5.12 Is not this one of the sins for which the name of our Lord Jesus is blasphemed among Turks Jews and Infidels 6. Consider this is one of those sins for which God hath a controversie with a Nation and which hastens down Judgment upon it Hos 4.1 2. Hear the word of the Lord ye children of Israel For the Lord hath a controversie with the inhabitants of the Land because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the Land By swearing and lying and killing and stealing and committing Adultery they break out and blood toucheth blood Jer. 23.10 Because of swearing the Land mourneth see also Zech. 5 1 2 3 4. Amos 8.14 Zeph. 1.4 5. 7. Consider how highly this sin is aggravated and the guilt of it inhaunced in that there is so little temptation to it Other sins have an external bait and motive either pleasure profit or credit but in swearing and cursing there is none of these O the unreasonableness of this sin What sence is gratified by it or what is there to incite or move a man to it but meerly pride and audaciousness of spirit presumtion and fearlesness of the Almighty Now the less temptation there is to any sin the greater is the contempt of God in the committing of it This sin is therefore much worse than Epicurism * Take not his name who made thy mouth in vain It gets thee nothing and hath no excuse Lust and Wine plead a pleasure avarice gain But the cheap swearer through his open sluce Le ts his Soul run for nought as little fearing Were I an Epicure I could bate swearing The cheapest sins most dearly punish'd are Because to shun them also is so cheap c. Herberts Church-porch for though that be more bestial yet this is more diabolical and proceeding from an obstinate pride and wilfulness more conforms a man to the Devil than other sins do O what a height of wickedness is it for men to sin meerly because they will sin and to transgress the more audaciously because God forbids it 'T is a dreadful doom passed by the mouth of the holy Prophet on such persons Psal 25.3 Let them be confounded that transgress without cause Blessed Lord How infinite is thy patience to bear so long with those hellish Oaths and direful imprecations that the tongues of wretched mortals daily belch out against thee To what a strange pitch of wickedness is the world come that it should be counted a point of bravery and gallantry to swear stoutly and to interlace their language with broad and full mouthed oaths Nay the daring fellows of our dayes as if they were loath to go to Hell the ordinary way have invented new wayes of sinning and such dreadful forms of swearing as may make the heart of any serious Christian to tremble at ●●e very mention of them These Sons of Belial if they be but crossed in their business or pleasure many times curse and swear like Devils and swear so madly that when they are reproved for it they will swear they did not swear Who is there now that walks abroad especially in our great Towns and Cities but shall here these hellish oaths God damn me or sink me belched out of the mouths of men whose tongues are set on fire of Hell O should we rend our garments every time we hear the name of God blasphemed as the Jews did of old how few sober serious Christians would go in whole apparel Ah besotted Wretches that you should thus sell your selves to do wickedly that you that are but crawling worms should dare thus to set your mouths against Heaven and impudently affront as much as lyes in you the Majesty of the most High Let me speak to you in the language of the Prophet Isay 57.4 Do ye know against whom ye make a wide mouth and draw out the tongue What could your wit wit said I I mean your madness find no cheaper way to undo your selves Are you resolved to try the patience of God and to see how long he can forbear you Are you affraid you shall miss of hell except you sin at a higher rate than ordinary and therefore are resolved by your damning provocations to force your entrance into it and take it by violence Do you fear the Devil will not torment you enough except you do supererogate of him by being more wicked than you had any temptation to be that so you may have a double portion in Hell Could you find out no other way of Damning your selves but by sinning directly against that precious blood and wounds of the Son of God by which others are saved Do you thus perform your Baptismal Covenant whereby you stand ingaged to renounce the Devil and all his works and to fight faithfully under Christs Banner all your dayes What aileth you ye blind wretches Are you in such hast to be with your everlasting companions the Devils and the Damned that you will needs hasten your Judgment and bring on your Damnation with a swifter pace Are you now inuring your selves to the language of Hell and the infernal Tophet that you may not have it to learn when you come thither Poor Wretches what will become of you how soon to your sorrow will your imprecations fall on your heads The Devil whom you have so often wished might fetch you stands eagerly waiting for his commission to do it and then you shall know to your cost whether Gods
2. When Magistrates Parents or Masters do maintain the honour and decorum of their place and degree and do keep that distance from their inferiours which is needful for their good and that the inferiours may pay them that reverence and respect which is required of them This is not to be accounted Pride but the behaving a mans self worthily in his place 3. When a man does prefer the commands of God before the commands of men and is more fearful of offending God than incurring the displeasure of men this is not to be accounted Pride but a duty The Papists and possibly some others will call those persons proud and despisers of Government who will not obey them in all their usurpations And thus proud men call others proud who cannot crouch and yield to them in the exercise of their Pride 4. When a man hath a due and honest care to maintain and uphold his credit good name and reputation not meerly for it self but as it may make him more useful and serviceable to God in his generation This is not to be accounted Pride but a duty that Christian prudence requires of him 5. When a Minister or private Christian does plainly and seriously reprove an offending brother out of a true desire of his amendment and reformation This is not to be accounted Pride or Pragmaticalness but the discharge of an excellent Christian duty which is by so much the more excellent because it is so much neglected and is so hard to perform in a right manner And so much for the first particular 2. I come now to shew what Pride is and wherein the nature of it con●●sts and what are the signs and evidences of it In the general Pride is an inordinate self-exalting and overvaluing of our selves * Su●erbia est appetitus inordinatus propriae excellentiae Superbus dictu● est quia super vult videri quam est and esteeming our selves to be wiser and better than indeed we are and an eager desire that others should so think of us so speak of us so treat us And this vanity of mind this inordinate self-esteem manifests it self in sundry Particulars 1. When men assume that glory and honour to themselves which ought to be reflected and ascribed entirely to God As Herod did when the people applauded him and cried The voice of a God and not of a man The Texts sayes Acts 12.20 c. The Angel of the Lord immediately smote him because he gave not God the glory and he was eaten up of worms 2. When they are too highly conceited of their own wit wisdom care and contrivance and ascribe their successes unto that and so Sacrifice to their own net not owning or acknowledging the special favour and providence of God therein as they ought to do Deut. 8.13 14 17 18. When thy herds and thy flocks multiply and thy silver and thy gold is multiplied and all that thou hast is multiplied then beware lest thy heart be lifted up and thou forget the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Aegypt from the house of bondage And thou say in thine heart my power and the might of my hand hath gotten me this wealth But thou shalt remember the Lord thy God for it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth c. 3. When they brag and boast and are conceited of their own knowledge worth parts and excellencies and their acceptance with others Thraso-like * Illud profecto mihi datum est ut sint grata quae facio omnia Thraso in Eunuch Pride often times puffs people up with a conceit of their great knowledge whereas alas how little do we know of what is knowable and of what we may and ought to know 4. When they contemn slight scorn and undervalue others and their performances crying up what they do themselves but despising and vilifying what is done by others 5. When they are apt to be very angry and cholerick at any thing that agrees not with their own humor and are impatient to be contradicted be their speech right or wrong Proud and haughty scorner is his name who dealeth in proud wrath Prov. 21.24 6. When they are apt to be contentious and quarrelsom and that upon small matters Only by Pride cometh contention but with the well advised is wisdom Prov. 13.10 He that is of a proud heart stirreth up strife Prov. 28.25 7. When men are headdy self-willed head-strong and unperswadable though never so great reasons be offered them thinking themselves wiser than other men 8. When they affect singularity without reason and go in by-paths by themselves not ordinarily trodden by others that they may be the more taken notice of A sober traveller that rides in the ordinary road is not so much observed as he that jumps over hedge and ditch and rides in wayes untrodden by others Indeed good men in evil dayes are sometimes compelled to be singular as Lot was in Sodom but they do not affect it could they avoid it without sin 9. When they are censorious and uncharitable and love to carp and find fault with others They are not so quick-sighted to see their own failings as the failings of others 10. When they will not confess a fault nor retract an error though convinced of it but out of pride and height of Spirit justifie and defend it 11. When they think diminutively and slightly of great mercies and undervalue them because they see others injoy greater 12. When they are apt to be discontented to murmur and repine if they have not all they desire and if all things go not according to their wills 13. When they are apt to fret and be impatient under the afflictions God layes upon them not considering what greater punishments their sins deserve 14. When they envy the parts and gifts or the imployments and places or the credit and reputation of others thinking themselves diminished or lessened thereby 15. When they are more careful about the outside than the inside of their duties and are more solicitous how they are liked and approved by men after a duty than how they have approved their hearts and consciences to God in the duty 16. When they are impatient of reproof and of that discipline Christ hath appointed in his Church Our Saviour Mat. 18.15 hath appointed that an offending brother should be first dealt with by private admonition If that will not reform him then he is to be admonished by two or three If he do not amend upon that then he is to be admonished more publickly by the Church If he still continue obstinate and unreformed then the Church is to excommunicate him and the members of it are to shun him as a Heathen man or a Publican that seeing himself looked upon for the present as an incorrigible person he may be ashamed of his sin and folly Now proud persons of all others are most impatient of living under this discipline and are apt to think it a
over this Jordan and now I am become two bands In David 1 Sam. 7.18 And David said who am I O Lord God and what is mine house that thou hast brought me hitherto 8. Look upon the Devils themselves that tempt you to be proud See what Pride hath brought them unto A proud man is the very image of the Devil Pride Malice Hatred and Lying are the Devils peculiar sins And can it be pleasing to you to be like unto him 9. Consider how God does usually leave proud persons to themselves at one time or other and suffer them to fall into some sin or miscarriage that so they may be abased and humbled One indiscreet action of a man left to himself may throw down the reputation that he has by great caution and circumspection been many years in raising and make him vile in the eyes of the world 10. Consid that those that are proud are usually near some dreadful fall or heavy judgment God himself hath made Pride a symptom or prognostick of it Luke 14.11 Whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted and Chap. 1.51 He hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts He hath put down the mighty from their seat and exalted them of low degree 11. Reason thy self into a loathing of this sin Ask thy self what art thou what hast thou what canst thou do that thou shouldst be proud 1. Is it thy birth thou art proud of If thy Parents were of great quality and of great virtue thou oughtest to look to it that thou imitate them in their worthy behaviour and vertuous life else thou wilt be a dishonour to them If they were great in this world and vitious thou hast no cause to boast of thy descent from them but to take heed of treading in their steps lest a curse be intailed upon thee from them Besides consider that personal merits render any man imcomparably more valuable than his relalation to very deserving Ancestors 2. Is it Riches The more thou hast the greater will be thy account Our Saviour tells us 't is hard for a rich man especially such an one as trusts in his riches to enter into the Kingdom of God Mark 10.23 24. Few rich men escape the snare Thy account and danger should rather make thee fear than thy riches lift thee up Or if thou hast riches 't is very uncertain whether thou wilt carry them to thy grave There are many accidents that may impoverish thee Or if thou dost carry them to thy grave thou canst carry them no farther but there must leave them and possibly either to a fool or a prodigal 'T is often seen the faster men gripe and think to hold their wealth the sooner they loose it like him that gripes Callice-sand in his fist the harder he gripes it the faster it slips away from him 3. Is it Power thou art proud of So great will be the account that men in power must give how they have improved that Talent whether for God or against him that the very thoughts of it may affright any considering man Thou hast need well consider how thou hast improved thy power whether for the interest of God and the good of the world or only to serve thy own or other mens lusts as too many do 4. Is it thy learning thou art proud of certainly the more learned thou art the more humble thou oughtest to be True knowledge discovers the folly and pernitious tendency of Pride and affords abundant matter for Humility The heaviest and most weighty heads of corn bow down themselves the empty ones perk up themselves Consider also how little thou knowest of what is knowable and of what thou mightest and oughtest to know Alass Thy learning is but a pitiful narrow thing in respect of the amplitude of things that are to be known 5. Is it Beauty or bodily strength thou art proud of Alass possibly a disease at this very moment is breeding in thee that will suddenly pull down thy strength and deface thy beauty And observe it who will that strength and beauty that raises Pride is commonly short lived For vain-glory commonly putteth great strength upon dangerous and perilous attempts and undertakings which usually do indanger and hurt it if not destroy it And that beauty which is set forth to be a temptation to lust and dishonesty is commonly the ruiner of its owner That beauty is best set off which is attended with the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price If God hath given thee beauty let it stir up thy gratitude and not be a ground of pride to thee 6. Is it Wit or good natural parts that thou art proud of Alass how soon may a fever or apoplexy deprive thee of thy memory wit and understanding Besides observe it wit is never sooner foiled than by Pride Pride casteth a ridiculousness and a kind of blot upon the greatest parts Such an one hath good parts saith the common by-word but he knows it too well Pride also often times draws up into the brain such hot cholerick vapours and fumes as disorder and discompose it But humility and lowliness of mind is a great advantage for the improving of all our faculties It cools and qualifies the blood and spirits and keeps the whole man in a good frame and temper Besides those that are conceited of their wit do usually at one time or other run into some extravagancy renders them despicable and ridiculous 'T is ten to one but their Pride will carry them into some ridiculous action so that they will receive more reproach and censure for their pride than they received before applause for their parts 'T is far more desirable to be a wise man than a witty man When therefore thou art apt to swell with Pride at the reflexion upon thy parts think how many there are in the world more wise and learned and worthy than thy self * Cum superbia tentat cogita me●iores Bernard Think how many brave men there now are and formerly have been who have done more for God and for the good of the world than ever thou hast done 7. Is it Credit or applause or honour or esteem thou art proud of The wind is not more uncertain Thou thinkest thou hast honour thou deceivest thy self thou hast it not He hath it that gives it thee and he may detain it from thee when he pleaseth * Honor magis est in honorame quam in Honora●o A mans credit is least in his own keeping of any thing 8. Is it fine cloaths thou art proud of All Pride is a very foolish thing but that which arises from such mean things is the most irrational of all Alass you must shortly change all your finery for grave-cloaths and that vile body of yours that now you endeavour with so much art and cost to deck and adorn must shortly be laid in the
dust Fine cloaths may make Children and young folks proud but wise and considering persons are not usually affected with such things Be cloathed with humility sayes the Apostle 1 Pet. 5.5 that is the best cloathing of all 9. Is it grace or goodness that thou art apt to be proud of This is a thing very irrational and absurd For predominant pride cannot consist with grace but is a great sign of a graceless state If thou hast grace so far as thou art proud of it thou dost abuse it contradict it and act against the very nature of it For Pride is to grace what a consumption is to health Be not high minded but fear sayes the Apostle Rom. 11.20 When you think you stand take heed lest you fall 1 Cor. 10.12 And thus much of the eleventh Direction namely that we should reason our selves into a loathing of this sin 12. Look on the humbling judgments of God that are abroad in the world and turn them all as so many Cannons against thy Pride Methinks every serious Christian should think it unreasonable and unsuitable in such a calamitous time as this is when God calls to humbling and abasing our selves and to sympathize with others that are in an afflicted condition now to lay it out in pride and vanity and garish garbes and attire more than formerly We have seen many humbling sights and felt many humbling strokes and have heard many dismal cries of our afflicted Brethren and shall we now be proud I know the world is at that pass that a Minister will be thought to do more wisely to save his breath than spend it upon so hopeless a design as to think by all his arguments to reform people in this particular The pride of the world is now too high to be born down by Sermons or the most earnest and serious exhortations Alas 'T is a monster that has not been conquered by War nor Plague nor Fire And do you think it will be born down by the breath of a poor Minister though exhorting never so seriously However we must do our duty and lift up our voice like a Trumpet and shew Israel their sins whether they will hear or whether they will forbear And if I can bring but one sinner who is concerned in this reproof to consider his wayes and to forsake his pride and vanity I shall not repent me of this pains 13. Consider how God in the contrivance of mans redemption designeth the humbling of all whom he intends to save For he hath ordained that no man shall be justified by a righteousness of his own performance but by the satisfaction merits and intercession of the Redeemer Therefore he prepareth men for the reception of this pardon by humbling them and making them vile and mean in thir own eyes 14. Read what Christ expects from them whom he intends to save and then you will see what a great measure of humility and self-denial is required of them Except ye become as little Children ye cannot enter into the Kindom of Heaven Matth. 18.3 15. Treasure up some Scripture precepts against Pride and have them alwayes ready in your minds such as these he that humbleth himself shall be exalted God resisteth the proud Pride goeth before a fall Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord Prov. 16.5 A mans Pride shall bring him low but honour shall uphold the humble in spirit Prov. 29.23 16. Earnestly beg of God to give you the grace of Humility Concerning which excellent grace that I may treat the more profitably I shall shew 1. The Counterfeits of it 2. Wherein the true nature of it consists 3. The great benefits and advantages of it 4. The means to attain it For the First The counterfeits of it There are four things that carry a shew of humility but are at a great distance from it 1. When men vilifie and discommend themselves or their own performances on purpose to draw others to praise them He that doth so cozens himself into Pride by a shew of Humility A man would be ashamed if he were told he used that mean stratagem to procure his own praise But so glorious a thing is humility that pride to hide its own shame does sometimes put on the vizor and semblance of it 2. When men effect to wear some unusual habit or some mean and sordid cloaths or to use some clownish unhandsome and uncivil behaviour which may make them taken notice of and observed by others This may look like Humility but is far from it There may be a russet Pride and a leathern Insolency 'T is not alwayes couched under silk and sattin Many times there is a very ugly pride under mean cloaths The Capuchins among the Papists go in poor cloaths with naked legs and Sandals Who hath required these things of them I think the Apostles rule is here to be observed whatsoever things are honest pure lovely and of good report and praise-worthy among men Phil. 4.8 These we should follow and not affect a vain signularity not warranted by the word of God 3. When they choose to converse for the most part with their inferiours that they may bear sway and be the chiefest among them this is no argument of Humility but rather of Pride 4. When men live basely meanly in no degree answerable or according to the estate and condition God hath put them into this is not humility but an argument of a covetous and sordid spirit And so much of the counterfeits of humility 2. I come now to shew wherein the true nature of Humility consists and in what particulars it evidenceth it self In the general True Humility is a lowly frame and temper of Soul arising from wise serious and deliberate consideration 'T is principally rooted in the mind and evidenceth it self in these Particulars 1. The Soul that is truly humble is deeply sensible of its manifold weaknesses wants and imperfections 'T is sensible of the darkness of its mind the depravedness of its will the disorder and irregularity of its affections * Humilitas est animi demissio orta ex vera status conditionis suae agnition● Camer 2. 'T is very sensible of its great sinfulness and manifold transgressions against God O sayes such a Soul who have I in the whole course of my life too much neglected my Creator who gave me my life and being and in many things how grievously have I sinned against him And the wages of every sin being death how obnoxious and liable have I made my self to the wrath and curse of God What a mercy is it that I am out of Hell who have so many wayes broken the holy and righteous Law of God 3. As a consequent hereupon 't is very sensible of its great unworthiness of those mercies it enjoyes from God The humble soul sayes as good old Jacob did Gen. 32.10 I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies which thou hast shewed to thy
Servant 4. The humble Soul is filled with an high admiring and affectionate gratitude to God as the free giver of all the mercies it enjoys 'T is very thankful for temporals but much more for spirituals and owns all to the free bounty and goodness of God The humble Soul is a great admirer of free grace and highly prizes our Lord Jesus Christ and his great undertaking for the redemption of Mankind 5. The humble Soul is patient under afflictions and clears God of any hard dealing in his proceedings against him He charges not Good foolishly how sharp soever his afflictions be 6. The humble person is patient under the neglects and disrespects he meets with from men 'T is not for me saith the humble Soul to expect or look for respect and esteem in the World 'T is enough for me if among those few good men I am acquainted with I find a tolerable kind acceptance 7. An humble person doth carefully watch over his thoughts words and actions lest Pride or vain-glory should steal in upon him and especially he fears lest he should be puffed up on the account of those actions that meet with some applause and acceptance in the world A man should alwayes endeavour to do things that deserve honour and esteem but then he should not assume the glory of them to himself If he do any thing tending to the honour of God and the good of the world he is very glad of it and heartily thankful to God for inabling him to do it But he gives God intirely the glory of it 8. The humble Soul hath a charitable opinion of others which he is the more induced to upon consideration of his own weaknesses and manifold failings Where there is the greatest humility commonly there is the greatest charity but where there is the highest Pride there usually is the greatest censoriousness and uncharitableness 9. An humble person strictly animadverts upon and observes his failings and defects in the good duties he performs He takes notice of the deadness coldness formality and the degrees of vain-glory that are apt to creep in upon him in the performance of them and all these are matter of humiliation to him And thus much of the nature of humility and the particulars wherein it evidenceth it self 3. I come now in the next place to shew the fruits benefits and advantages of this eminent grace 1. The humble man obtains grace favour and a blessing from God He gives grace that is he manifests his grace and favour to the humble The humble man doth not usurp the glory due to his Creator nor intercept the Tribute which ought to be paid to God but payes it willingly to the right owner And God hath declared that those that honour him he will honour The favour of God is alwayes accompanied with bounty and beneficence But his Favour is not to be measured by his heaping temp●ral things on us but by his blessing us with Soul-mercies and spiritual blessings which have a reference to the life that is to come 2. The humble soul shall be sure of Gods direction Psal 25.9 He shall be guided first in the right way to Heaven which those that are wise in their own eyes many times miserably err from What did many of those that were knowing and learned among the Jews and Gentiles being full of their own wisdom and learning account of the Gospel That which was in it self the wisest and most profound contrivance that ever was in the world and most efficacious instrument of mans conversion and salvation seemed to these men of wisdom meer foolishness 2. But it was the power of God unto Salvation Rom. 1.16 to all those that were brought thereby to believe in our Lord Jesus 2. The humble person God will guide in his worldly affairs and business whereas proud men who usually lean on their own understanding and disdain all counsel but what suiteth with their own wisdom very frequently miscarry Let us call our own experience to witness whether when in a deep sense of our own weakness and distrusting our own ability and wisdom to grapple with the difficulties we were to meet with we have humbly implored the divine directions and guidance and have committed our selves thereto I say let us consider whether we have not found God helping of us and casting our affairs better for us than we could have imagined or contrived our selves 3. An humble person is usually well thought of and spoken of by all that know him whereas a proud man is the mark of common obloquy If a man be proud almost every body is ready to pull him down Nay they that are proud themselves are ready enough to pull down others that are proud But the humble almost every body is willing to lift up 4. Not one dispensation of God will pass without doing us some good if we be humble Prosperity will better us and adversity will better us All winds will drive us on towards the haven of eternal happiness if we be truly humble 5. Humility keeps the soul in great tranquillity The passion of pride and haughtiness how it vexes and disquiets the minds of men but humility makes the Soul very submissive to the will of God shall not I submit sayes the humble soul to the will of my heavenly father whose will I pray daily may be fulfilled The cup that my heavenly Father giveth me to drink shall not I drink it What am I that I should not be crossed or reproached It is but what I deserve nay much less than I deserve by reason of my sins My present condition is not so troublesome or painful or uneasie but I deserve much more And shall not I be patient and content and submit to my Soveraign Lord to his wisdom as well as to his will who orders all things for the good of them that love and fear him And so much of the third particular the benefits and advantages of humility 4. I come now in the last place to prescribe some means for the attaining of it 1. Consider how highly God values and prizes this temper He dwells in the highest heavens and in the lowest hearts Isa 66.2 Isa 57.15 The ornament of a meek and quiet spirit is in his sight of great price 1 Pet. 3.4 And Mic. 6.18 sayes the Prophet He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requires of thee namely to do justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God God takes no pleasure in us till he hath brought us to this frame and temper * Descendendo coelum ascenditur Cassiodor Nothing makes us so precious in Gods sight as Humility We are most precious in Gods eyes when we are most vile in our own An humble and a contrite spirit is more valued by him than all burnt-offerings and sacrifices 2. Consider the various means that God uses to work this so necessary a grace in the hearts of his own people
Sometimes he visits them with afflictions sometimes with temptations * 2 Cor. 12.7 nay sometimes he suffers them to fall into sin and all to humble them Expedit superbo ut incidat in peccatum as he said of old And if God so much desires we should be humble shall not we comply with his will therein 3. Con. how our blessed Lord and Saviour recommended humility to the World 1. By his precepts Mat. 11.28 2. By his example John 13. He washed his Disciples feet And John 6.15 When they went about to make him a King he utterly refused it There is not any one vertue that he commandeth and commendeth more than humility nor any one vice that he sets himself more against than pride In his Beatitudes Matth. 5. Poverty of spirit hath the first promise and meekness and humility the third And if we look through his whole life we shall find there is not any one grace he did more signally exercise or by his example more commend to the imitation of Christians than Humility Let the same mind therefore be in us that was in Christ Jesus as the Apostle exhorts us Phil. 2.5 4. Earnestly pray to God to help thee in the humbling of thy heart pour out thy soul to the Lord in some such petitions as these Lord take from me I pray thee all vanity and foolish complacency in my own person or actions and help me to reflect all gl●ry to thy self suffering nothing to adhere to mine own heart but a sence of my imperfections and thankfulness to thee for all thy free and undeserved mercies Lord keep me from sin folly and indecencies and then inable me to receive all lessenings and diminutions ro m men patiently and contentedly 5. Converse often with humble and afflicted persons that so thy heart may be affected with their condition and that thou mayest sympathize with them in their sorrows and sufferings 6. Consider what a great influence humility hath into many other graces Repentance Faith Love to God and man are much quickned and enlivened by humility None more truly penitent none more joyfully and thankfully repose and rely on the great satisfaction of Christ none have their hearts more inflamed with love to God and man than humble persons Lord what am I saith the humble Soul that ever thou shouldst place thy love on one so unworthy What am I or what is my fathers house that thou shouldst deal so bountifully with me 7. Meditate often on thy own failings and weaknesses and reflect on the worst things in thee that so thou mayest be abased and not only on the best to puff thee up The Pharisee in Luke 18. cried out I thank thee O Lord I am not as other men are an extortioner unjust an adulterer or as this Publican but the poor Publican cried out Lord be merciful to me a sinner 8. Meditate on thy own death and celebrate thy own Funeral in thy serious thoughts and meditations Methinks some serious thoughts of death and the grave should be able to pull down the pride and plumes of the vainest spirit CHAP. IV. Of Gluttony IN handling of this subject I shall proceed in this Method 1. I shall shew what Gluttony is 2. I shall inquire into the causes of it 3. Shall shew the great evil and danger of it 4. Shall propound some helps and remedies against it For the First I shall first shew in the general what gluttony is and then come to speak more particularly of it Gluttony may be thus described It is a voluntary excess in eating for the meer pleasing of the appetite or some other carnal end But here I must interpose three cautions 1. The same quantity may be an excess in one that is not in another A strong and labouring man may eat a great deal more than a student or a man of a sedentary life Therefore the excess is not to be estimated by the quantity eaten but by the condition of the person eating Ordinarily that is to be called and accounted excess when a man to please his appetite eateth more than is profitable and convenient for his health or to help him on in his duty And here that excellent rule of Aristotle is to be observed who maketh vertue to consist in the mean or measure and that distance from the extremes which the prudence of a prudent man determines * Virtus consistit in ea mediocritate quam vir prudens defini verit And so in this case the prudence of every particular man must determine for him what must be his measure as to eating 2. 'T is not all delight in meat or pleasing the appetite that is a sin but only that which is made a mans ultimate end and is not referred to an higher end When the delight it self is not directed to health and more alacrity in our duty towards God and in serving of him 3. A difference as to diet ought to be allowed to persons and to times 1. To persons Some persons may have better diet and more costly than others The same diet that is fit for one man is not fit for another A great man may have those sorts of meats which would be unfit ordinarily and too chargeable for a poor man 2. To times Times of Thanksgiving and rejoycing may be allowed a more liberal provision and large exceedings than is convenient at other times As we see our Saviour at a Wedding in Cana in Galilee turned water into wine that the guests on such a day of chearfulness and rejoycing might have a more plentiful provision Yet temperance is then also to be observed excess being never allowable but alwayes to be avoided Having thus spoken of Gluttony in the general I come now to shew more particularly wherein it consists 1. 'T is sometimes an excess in quantity when more is eaten than is meet and fit or than the stomach can well carry off or digest And so by imperfect concoction abundance of crudities and vitious humors are bred which prepare and dispose the body to sicknesses 2. Sometimes in quality when the meats that are eaten are too young or too delicate and costly and when there is too great a curiosity in dressing and saucing of them or when such meats are delighted in which are apt and proper to excite and pamper lust and wantonness or when they are such as are intended to revive the appetite after it is well satisfied and needs no more 3. Sometimes in the manner of eating As 1. When men eat too eagerly and with too much greediness and too voracious an appetite 2. When they eat too often and too soon before their former meal is digested not allowing nature sufficient time of concoction And so much of the nature of Gluttony 2. I come now to inquire into the causes of it There are several causes of it 1. An inordinate appetite and a mind too much set upon Flesh-pleasing They that are after the flesh do mind the the
company-keeping maintains kindness and friendship and love among neighbours To this I answer can any rational man imagine that the helping to destroy the soul the body the estate the good-name the family of their neighbour is any argument of kindness to him Surely such persons as draw one another into such courses are the greatest enemies to one another imaginable 2. They will alledge that those holy men Noah and Lot fell into this sin I answer Noah fell into it but once and that as it seems upon ignorance and surprize not knowing at first the property quality and operation of the wine * Gen. 9.20.21 which was the fruit of the Vineyard he himself had planted And possibly he was the more easily overtaken as being over-joyed when he tasted such excellent fruits of his own labours and allowing himself a little more freedom in drinking thereof than in all likelihood he would have done had he known the power and vertue of the wine And accordingly we do not find that he was ever overtaken so again As for Lot indeed we read that he was twice overtaken but both times by the perswasion of his own Daughters * Gen. 19.33.35 to which he was possibly the more ready to give ear because their hearts being oppressed with grief for the destruction of Sodom the loss of their goods and sudden death of his wife he thought they might take a little more liberty in the use of wine at that time for their comfort and refreshment and supporting their spirits under such great and sore afflictions And we know that they that venture to go near the brink do sometimes fall into the water So that however those holy men were overtaken once or twice yet they were no drunkards They fell into this sin by surprize it was not their usual practice And these examples no more justify those who live in this vice than Peters once denying his Lord and Master excuseth those who make a total and final Apostacy from him The spirit of God hath purposely recorded the * Sunt cavendi non cadendi exempla slips of these holy men to shew us how frail our nature is and to caution us not to presume upon our own strength but to be the more watchful and also to shew us that they who fall through infirmity into the like sins should not despair of Gods mercy in Christ if they seriously repent of them and forsake them No Pilot in his wits when he sees Sea-marks purposely set up to give warning of rocks sands or shelves upon which others have made Ship-wrack will take occasion thereby to run his Ship upon them but rather will imploy all his care and skill to avoid them that he may escape the like danger And this is the use we should make of these examples 3. They say they do it to drive away care and trouble of mind and melancholy For answer to this I desire first to know what cares and troubles they are they desire thus to drive away Perhaps they are some checks and rebukes of their consciciences for their sins If so they may possibly by such divertisements stop the mouths of their consciences for the present but they will roar louder upon them hereafter It were a thousand times better for them to go alone than into such wild company and to think soberly of their condition and of their misery and the true way of coming out of it To go into merry and vain company is but a bad remedy to drive away melancholy or to stop the mouth of an accusing conscience We may say to such persons as Solomon does Eccles 2.2 I said of laughter it is mad and of mirth what doth it And Chap. 7. Verse 4. The heart of the wise man is in the house of mourning but the heart of fools is in the house mirth If we saw a mad man whoop and hollow and make a great noise we should not envy but pity such mirth The vain and foolish merriment of wicked company is that which a sober and serious mind can never be pleased with And therefore they that seek such company to divert and drive away their melancholy take the direct way to increase it Now melancholy is of two sorts either such as arises from the mind or such as arises from the body As for that which arises from the mind the best way to drive it away is to clear the Soul of all guilt by true repentance and flying to the blood of Christ for pardon For they are happy and they only whose sins are forgiven and whose iniquities are covered and to whom God will not impute transgression Secret and fervent prayer also to God which gives vent to the mind and so eases it is an excellent remedy in this case To which I may add the imparting the troubles of our mind if they be urgent to some wise and faithful friend and craving his advice and counsel as a good way and means also to obtain ease But if the Melancholy arise from the body by reason of darksome fumes and vapors it casts up into the mind some proper Physick is then requisite and the moderate use of such things as may exhilerate the spirits Yea business and imployment is a great remedy in this case For standing waters stagnate and gather mud whereas running waters are clear and sweet Good company also I mean of wise and sober Christians is a great help against this malady And striving to be chearful in an innocent and inoffensive manner that our pectorals may be shaken and fumes dispersed is of great use likewise But as for going to the Ale-house or Tavern and consorting with such company as usually frequent those places in my opinion it is far from being a proper remedy for Melancholy but ordinarily does more increase it especially when people come to reflect how greatly God has been dishonoured and their souls hurt by such meetings 4. They say they do it to pass away the time * Damna fleo rerum sed plus fleo damna dierum Blind wretches Are you so near Eternity and know not how better to improve your time Can you sit tipling and prating away your precious time over your Pots when the mudwalls of your bodies are daily crumbling down and when you know not how soon you may be summoned to appear before Gods dreadful Tribunal But it may be you will say you are Gentlemen and so have more time and leisure at your own disposal than other men have who must earn their bread before they eat it But hark you in your ears Where there is much leisure from worldly business God expects more time should be spent and imployed on the soul and not spent in idle merriment and sinful jollity 5. Some will pretend their heads are very weak and a little overturns them and so they hope they are the more excusable I answer they that know their own weakness should be more especially watchful
gladly welcome what he doth afford Not grudging that thy lust hath bounds and stayes Continence hath its joies weigh both and so If rottenness have more let heaven go CHAP. VII Of Discontent IN treating of this Argument I shall speak to these six Particulars 1. I shall shew what Discontent is 2. The great sinfulness of it 3. The Folly of it 4. Shall shew what true Christian Contentment is and wherein the nature of it consists 5. Shall shew the amiableness and excellency of it 6. Shall give some directions and means for the attaining of it For the First Discontent is an unquiet frame of heart under our present condition and expresses it self in murmuring and repining thereat For commonly inward vexing and repining and outward complaining and murmuring go together 2. The great sinfulness of it may appear to us in these Particulars 1. 'T is a quarrelling the wisdom of God and a secret accusing and taxing his Providence * Non judicandum de providentia divina ante quintum actum as if he did not wisely order the Lots and Conditions of his People Holy Job under his great afflictions was far from this temper For though he suffered so deeply yet he charged not God with folly in that severe dispensation towards him But said the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away blessed be the name of the Lord Job 1.21 22. 2. 'T is a quarrelling his Fatherly care over us as if he had not any love or affection to us or any regard of us 3. 'T is a quarrelling his Faithfulness as if he would not perform the many gracious promises he has made for our good 4. 'T is a secret accusing of his Justice as if he dealt hardly with us and punished us more than our sins deserved * Qui in poenis murmurat ferientis justitiam accusat 5. 'T is a carriage very unworthy of the hope and expectation of a Christian He that hath his Peace made with God in Christ and a title to an heavenly inheritance should endeavour from that consideration to calm and compose his soul under his greatest sufferings 6. 'T is unanswerable to the experience we have had of Gods former gracious dealing with us and helping of us out of straits and difficulties 7. 'T is a great gratification to Satan We cannot gratifie the Devil more who is a Male-contented Spirit than to murmur against our Creator To be of a discontented unquiet Spirit is to be like the Devil He is restless and unquiet always in opposition to God alwayes fretting at his dispensations 8. 'T is a betraying and exposing us to great temptations The Devil scarce ever has so great power over any as over those that are discontented Oh the direful things he draws such persons unto My heart even akes when I think of them and my hand is ready to tremble while I write of them Some of them he draws to make a formal Covenant with himself Others to do such things against themselves that even nature abhors So that all that love themselves should beg of God to keep them and should watch over themselves as to this particular sin For let them assure themselves that nothing betrayes us sooner into the Devils hands than discon●ent It is a stock he uses to graffe his temptations upon The Devil will desire no greater advantage against a soul than to find it in such a temper He is never more busie about any than such persons and usually makes dangerous use of the unquietness and repining of their spirits 9. 'T is such a temper as exceedingly unfits us for holy duties and for the service which otherwise we might do for God And so much of the sinfulness of Discontent 3. I come now in the third place to shew the folly of it 1. 'T is vain and bootless For as one of the Antients well said the miseries and evils we suffer and at which we are so apt to be vexed and troubled are either such as we can remedy or such as we cannot remedy If they be such as we cannot remedy then what a folly is it to vex and fret at them seeing it is impossible to help them Our Lesson then is Patience and Submission * Levius fit patientia quicquid corrigere est nefas But if the evils we suffer be such as are remediable then let us not vex or fret at them but let us use all care and diligence to help our selves and to remedy them And this is good advice though given by a Heathen Philosopher 2. It takes away the comfort of what we enjoy If a man enjoyes a thousand mercies in which he ought to rejoyce and for which he ought to be thankfull yet if his mind be discontented they will all seem as nothing to him So that no one thing bereaves a man more of the comfort he might enjoy in his life than discontent 3. It makes our afflictions worse A discontented person is like a man in a feaver that by his tossing and tumbling more increases his heat Or like a Bird in the lime-twigs which the more it flutters the more it intangles it self 4. It provokes God oftentimes to send new and more afflictions upon us What did the Israelites get by mumuring in the Wilderness but a longer stay in the Wilderness Children that sob and are stomachful after whipping commonly get another another whipping for their pains 5. It makes a mans life very uneasie both to himself and his relations and to all that are about him No body cares to be near such persons as are alwayes murmuring and complaining And so much of this folly of Discontent 4. I come now in the fourth place to shew what Christian Contentment is and wherein the nature of it consists 'T is a sweet quiet gracious frame of Spirit freely submitting to Gods alwise and fatherly disposal of us in every condition There are some things that this gracious frame may consist with and some things that are opposite to it 1. It may consist with a due sensibleness of Gods hand in afflicting of us 'T is not a Stoical apathy or insensibility The Apostle gives us an excellent Rule taken out of the Proverbs of Solomon Prov. 3.11 how we should carry our selves under afflictions Heb. 12.5 My Son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him Some bold and secure sinners are apt to despise and disregard the correcting hand of God the weaker sort of Christians are apt to sink in spirit and faint under their afflictions Now the Apostle advises us to steer between these two namely to be sensible of Gods hand when it is upon us and yet not to faint or despond under it 2. It may consist with an humble complaint to God or man We may groan under our Afflictions but we ought not to grumble 3. It may consist with seeking out for help and ease in a lawful way For that is our duty and
God expects it from us But now the things opposite to it are 1. Inward fretting vexing and tumultuation of spirit and rising of the heart against the Almighty 2. Sinking of Spirit desponding and despairing of help 3. Outward murmuring complaining and repining 4. Sinful shifts to help our selves And so much of the nature of true Christian contentment 5. I come now to shew the amiableness and excellency of this frame of Spirit 1. True Christian contentment is not a single grace but a constellation a cluster of many graces particularly of Faith Patience Humility and self-denial As the perfumed oyl that was poured upon Aarons head was made up of several sweet ingredients so is this grace a compound of many other graces Where this is we may assure our selves there are many graces exercised 2. 'T is a frame and temper highly pleasing to God The Apostle tells us 1 Pet. 3.4 That a meek and a quiet spirit is in the sight of God of great price There is hardly a higher commendation of any grace in the Scripture That must needs be very excellent which is by God himself so highly esteemed 3. 'T is a frame of Spirit that gives God his due They that are endued with it do acknowledge God as their Lord and owner They acknowledge his plenary dominion over them And 't is fit and comely that we who received our life and being from God should own his Soveraignty and dominion over us 4. 'T is a frame of Spirit that will be greatly rewarded For the more contented any man is the greater is his obedience to God and the greater his obedience the greater will be his reward Besides even in this world a placid quiet sedate frame of heart makes our life easie and delightful and so carries its reward along with it whereas a turbulent discontented frame of Spirit disorders and disquiets a man beyond all expression And so much of the amiableness of this s●● 6. I come now to give some Directions for the attaining of it 1. Mortify Pride which is the seminary of many sins especially of this of repining Compare your sufferings and your sins together and see whether your sins be not far more than your sufferings Consider therefore not so much what you feel as what you deserve 2. Consider how many mercies and blessings you daily enjoy and stir up your self to be exceeding thankful for them Thankfulness and discontent cannot stand together Therefore when ever you find your self tempted to unquietness of mind think of your mercies and provoke and stir up your heart to be thankful to God for them and that will drive away your discontent 3. Consider wherein the happiness of man consists and labour to secure that happiness to your self Do not estimate the happiness of man by the opinion of worldly men who think those men only happy who are rich and enjoy the pleasures and delights of the world But remember that mans true happiness consists in reconciliation with God through Christ in conformity of our natures to him in living holily and righteously and being serviceable to God in our Generation according to our several capacities If it be thus with us we are happy what ever our condition be in this world People are much mistaken in the nature of good and evil and have not the true measures of it That is good to a man which makes him better and that is evil to him which makes him worse Now ordinarily ten to one receive more hurt by prosperity than by adversity 4. Look downward on those beneath you and not upward on those above you 'T is a very ill natured thing for any man to think himself miserable because he sees another to have higher enjoyments than himself There is scarce a greater folly and unhappiness incident to humane nature than a fond admiration of other mens enjoyments and a contempt of and discontent at our own Look not upward therefore on those above you but look downward and you will find the world to be like a great Hospital full of poor sick distracted diseased pained afflicted persons and how many thousands will you find with whom you would be loath to change conditions 'T was a good speech of one of the Ancients who said if all mens sufferings were put into one common bank men would choose rather to go away with their own share than take their dividend of the common calamities Nay consider how many of Gods own Children have suffered for worse things than any you have suffered He that has his understanding and all his senses intire has in that an over-ballance to most outward adversities Consider therefore how many mercies thou dost still enjoy Murmur not at what thou hast lost but be thankful for what thou hast left 5. Consider no affliction comes out of the dust It is the Lord that brings us and our afflictions together No warrant comes to arrest our bodies with pain but it comes under the hand and seal of heaven No Habeas-Corpus to remove any friend or relation of ours but it comes under the hand and seal of the great judge No affliction happens to us but it is reached out by the hand of God our Creator to whom we ow subjection as having received our being from him Let us look therefore beyond instruments for they are but the servitors to put the cup into our hands which our heavenly Father hath given us to drink 6. Let us consider what part God hath appointed every one of us to act in this World and let us labour to act that part well not troubling our selves about the parts that others are appointed to act The world is a great stage 'T is not so much material what part we are to act provided we act it well He that is appointed to act the part of a Servant and does it well is as much commended and rewarded as he that acted the part of a Master In the body of man the foot is of great use though not of so much as the head It must not therefore complain because it is not the head Let every one duly consider the place and station God hath put him in and the part and particular duty he requires of him and let him set himself with all faithfulness to perform it not murmuring at the part given to another 7. A great help to contentment is to enjoy the present thankfully and not to be over solicitous about the future Wouldst thou live contentedly Be not over thoughtful for to morrow but cast all thy cares on God who hath promised that he will never leave nor forsake those that are his Heb. 13.5 8. Interpret all Gods providences so as intended to draw thee nearer to him and none of them to drive thee away from him In very faithfulness hast thou afflicted me saith David Psal 119.75 Consider God has very gracious ends in afflicting his own people 1. Sanctified affliction is one of the most awakening calls to repentance
Souls How ready was he to comply with his Fathers will The Cup that my Father hath given me to drink shall I not drink it sayes he John 18.11 and Luke 22.42 Father if thou be willing remove this Cup from me yet not my will but thy will be done 1 Pet. 2.21 Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps who when he was reviled reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously 4. He teacheth this lesson by his Spirit Now the spirit teacheth contentment these wayes 1. By convincing the Soul of the reasonablnest of it He shews that it is most fit and reasonable that God being our Creator and having absolute soveraignty and dominion over us and being infinitely wise holy just and gracious we should submit to him and lie at his feet 2. By strengthning our faith in the promises of God 3. By strengthning our hearts to bear the burden of afflictions Eph. 3.16 We are strengthned sayes the Apostle with might by his spirit in the inner man And Col. 1.11 Strengthned with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long suffering with joyfulness And 2 Tim. 1.7 God hath not given us the Spirit of fear but of power of love and of a sound mind 4. By shedding abroad a sense of Gods love into our hearts Rom. 8.16 The spirit beareth witness with our spirits that we are the Children of God and if Children then heirs heirs of God and j ynt heirs with Christ And so we rejoyce in hope of the glory of God Rom. 5.2 And this hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the H●ly-Ghost which is given unto us And thus we see how Christ teacheth this lesson by his word by his example and by h●s Spirit Would yo● learn this lesson put your selves under Christs institution Particularly labour to practice these things 1. Break off your sins by true repentance and secure the pardon and forgiveness of all your transgressions by Faith in Christs blood A condemned man hath no contentment in any thing he enjoys But a man pardoned is content and well pleased with a Morsel The Apostle tells us Rom 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus There may be much tribulation to such but thanks be to God no condemnation 2. Labour to be holy in all manner of conversation For Godliness is profitable unto all things having the promises of this life and t●at which is to come 1 Tim. 4.8 Keep and cherish a good consci●●ce and a good conscience will cherish and comfort you 3. Prepare for afflictions and think it no strange thing when they happen to you And when they come meet them as discreet Abigal met David Let not my Lord be angry Beg of God that though he do chastise thee yet he would not be angry w th thee Earnestly implore him that though there be much bitterness yet there may be no wrath in thy Cup. And pray also that all your afflictions may be sanctified to you and may do you that good which God sent them for And be more careful of your carriage under afflictions than troubled at them 4. Moderate your desires after worldly things Though God cut you short as to the things of the world yet think often of your portion and inheritance in the other life Take Mr. Herberts pious counsel Pag. 131. Content thee greedy heart Modest and moderate Joyes to those that have Title to more hereafter when they part Are passing brave Let the upper Springs into the low Descend and fall and thou dost flow What though some have a fraught Of Cloves and Nutmegs and in Cinnamon sail If thou hast wherewithal to spice a draught When griefs prevail And for the future time art heir To the Isle of Spices is' t not fair 5. Be humble under a sense of your own weakness and earnestly beg strength from Christ to inable you to be content in every condition A Believers strength both for doing and suffering the will of God is from Christ Psal 131.3 When I cried unto thee saies the Psalmist thou strengthnedst me with strength in my Soul 6. When thou art strengthned to bear afflictions with a quiet placid and sedate mind give all the glory unto Christ and say as Paul did 1 Tim. 1.12 I thank Christ Jesus our Lord who hath enabled me 7. Be not secure but watch and pray lest you enter into temptation Moses though the meekest man upon the earth in his time yet once fell into such a fit of discontent and passion and spake so unadvisedly with his lips that God was angry with him and would not let him go into Canaan Now if a person of so eminent grace so failed what eruption of discontent may we be subject to if left to our selves CHAP. VIII Of Covetousness and Earthly-mindedness IN handling of this Subject I shall proceed in this Method 1. I shall shew what Covetousness it 2. In what particulars it discovers it self 3. The causes of it 4. The marks and characters of such as are covetous 5. The great evil of it 6. I shall give some directions and prescribe some remedies against it For the First Covetousness is an inordinate and excessive love of riches and an immoderate desire and hankering after them The simple desire so riches is not Covetousness but an inordinate and over-greedy desire of them And therefore this sin is especially in the heart One may have little and yet be Covetous One may be rich and yet free from Covetousness 2. Covetousness discovers it self in these Particulars 1. In getting wealth unconscionably without regard either to Piety Equity Justice Charity or Humanity When men have their hearts so bent and set upon the World that they use indirect means to get it such as are Oppression Over-reaching Cheating Lying Stealing And so in treasuring up Wealth they treasure up wrath to themselves 2. In an unduede taining and with-holding from the Poor through hard-heartedness and penuriousness what is fit to be given to them When a man is so strait-hearted and strait-handed in works of Charity so cruel so hard and miserable that he gives not at all to the poor or very little and only what is extorted from him with great difficulty and importunity When men are continually hoarding up for themselves but have no bowels or pity for the poor or their indigent relations and though they have enough and abound yet are inordinately carking and caring for more still being perplexed with an Infidel fear lest they should want when they are old Like Symonides who being asked why he was Covetous in his old age Answered I had rather leave riches to my enemies when I die than stand in need of my friends while I live 3. In spending too sparingly and niggardly when men that have plentiful estates have not hearts to allow themselves
should be rich or learned or healthful or have a great name in this World but 't is absolutely necessary to our happiness that we should break off our sins by true repentance that we should be converted that we should savingly close with Christ by Faith that we should be new creatures that we should live to the honour of God and good of the World If these things be found in us God hath given us the best portion and therefore we may well be contented though he give us not so large a portion of the things of this life Yea upon this account in a good cause we ought to take joyfully the spoiling of our goods or the loss of our estates remembring that God hath given us a better portion that cannot be taken from us 4. We should consider our Souls are Spirits and were made for higher things than meerly to grovel on the earth Our Souls are our best part and our greatest care should be to secure them If it go well with the soul it will go well with the body also But if the soul be lost and must suffer everlasting punishment 't were better we had been made Toads or Serpents than Men and rational creatures Certainly it argues the great depravation of mans Soul that it should take so much care for the body how it may be cloathed and fed and how it may injoy all the delights which are suitable to it and that it should take so little care of it self to secure unto it self eternal happiness In order therefore to the securing of our souls we should labour to possess our minds with right and sound principles such as these That the best part of man ought to have most care bestowed upon it That things of everlasting consequence ought to be sought before things of meer temporal concernment That things absolutely necessary ought to be sought in the first place That he is a wise man that takes due care to save his soul but he is a fool that to gain the World loses his Soul Such Principles as these laid deep in our minds may be a great means to preserve us from an eager and greedy pursuit of the things of the world 5. We should consider our time here is but short 1 Cor. 7.29 therefore we had not need act the part of children and only follow bubbles We have but a short winters-day of life to live If a man come to a great City and have a great deal of business to do and but a short day to do it in he had not need trifle but mind the business seriously for which he came thither Let us therefore mind our great business for which we came into the World let us look to the main whatever else be neglected 6. We should take heed of earthly-mindedness and pursuing the things of the World too eagerly lest that happen to us which sometimes happens to those that dig in the mines of the earth while they are eagerly digging and delving there the earth falls on them on a sudden and miserably buries them Let those that follow the World so hard with the wretched neglect of their souls and are loading themselves continually with thick clay take heed they be not at last crushed under it and perish by it 7. We should set before our eyes the examples of the most eminent Saints and servants of God in all ages They counted themselves but Pilgrims and strangers here Heb. 13.37 and yet they were such of whom the world was not worthy Scultetus observes that none of the Saints mentioned in the Scripture were spotted with this sin of Covetousness The Apostle tells us that Abraham sojourned in the Land of Promise as in a strange Country because he looked for a City which hath foundations whose builder and maker is God And the truth is they that have God for their Father Christ for their Redeemer the Holy Ghost for their guide and comforter the holy Angels for their Protectors the Promises of God for their present support and Heaven for their inheritance hereafter should have their hearts withdrawn from worldly things and should more mind and think of their Countrey that is above * Dum mala pungunt bona promissa ungunt 8. Those to whom God hath given riches in this World should consider that these are their particular duties 1. They should labour to get the spiritual riches of grace which they may carry with them into the other World 2. They should not over-value their riches nor esteem them too highly nor set their hearts upon them Psal 62.10 3. They should not put their trust or confidence in them 1 Tim. 6.17 4. They should not glory in them nor boast of them Jer. 9.23 5. They should not be tempted by their riches to scorn or despise the poor Jam. 2.6 6. They should not by reason of their wealth and power oppress the poor 7. They should honour the Lord with their substance Prov. 3.9 1. By promoting Piety and the service of God 2. By works of Charity * Quas dederis solas semper habebis opes Habeo quod dedi perdidi quod servavi and beneficence to the poor and so make to themselves friends of their riches Luke 16.9 Now riches are made friends when they are so used as they may be evidences and give testimony of our Piety Charity Justice and Mercifulness A poor mans hand whom we have relieved is a bill will be accepted in Heaven Prov. 19.17 He that giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord and he will pay him again 8. They should often and seriously meditate on the account they must give how they have used their wealth They should consider they are not absolute Lords of their estates but Gods stewards and to him they must give an account 9. They should be willing to let go whatever God shall call them to part with and that without regret or murmuring as if a piece of their heart were rent away with it And so much of the remedies and directions against Covetousness I shall now shut up this discourse with this one Caution that seeing Covetousness does especially consist in the inward desires of the heart which are best known to a mans self and which no man knows save the spirit of a man that is in him 1 Cor. 2.11 We should therefore be very wary and tender of charging Covetousness upon others We may more safely and securely judge our selves in this matter than we can others For we can better know the nature and qualification of our own desires than we can possibly of another mans Let us therefore take heed of evil surmizes and ungrounded suspicions of others Some persons are apt to surmize a man to be covetous upon such grounds as these 1. He will not be bound for a friend or relation though in never so great a strait I Answer I think no man ought to be bound for another any further than he finds himself able
mad at home displeased with Wife Children and Servants scarce any thing can please a covetous man when his profit and commodity is crossed Every little trespass or loss toucheth him to the quick and maketh him impatient 4. Overmuch niceness and delicateness * Nulla res magis iracundiam alit quam luxuria Tender and delicate persons are subject to be angry Any little thing is apt to put such persons into a fit of choler Those that are rich and great in this world many times take liberty from their greatness to give scope to their Passions and so not only disturb themselves but disquiet those about them and make their lives uneasie to them 5. Weakness and over much tenderness of Spirit We see that anger usually reigns most in weak persons as in old folks and sick folks in women and children A great imbecility certainly it is for a man to have too tender a sense * Dure tractandus est animus ut ictum non sentiat nisi grav●m Proprium est magnitudinis verae non sentire se esse percussum like a man whose arms and shoulders have the skin flay'd off every thing that touches him makes him winch and cry out Take heed therefore that your mind be not too delicate and tender and womanish and apt to be moved at every toy We should harden our minds that they may not have too quick a sense of injuries A man should not think his credit or reputation in danger by every idle word spoken against him The remedy of this is as a learned man observes to get telam honoris crassiorem a thicker web of honour that will not so easily ravel out 6. Gecundless suspitions * Suspitiosi omnia ad contumeliam acc piunt They that are apt to be jealous and suspitious are also very apt to be angry though commonly when matters are well examined they find no true cause or ground for it 7. Credulity and an easie belief of reports and listning to Tale-bearers is another cause of anger He that is very inquisitive and hath an itch to know what people * Non vis esse iracundus ne sis curiosus say of him will sometimes hear things that will dispose him to anger They therefore that desire to keep themselves from this disquieting passion must take heed of this and the other forementioned causes of anger 12. A twelfth direction is this Represent to thy self the odiousness and deformity of Anger * Quibusdam iratis profuit aspexisse s●eculum Difficile dictu an magis detestabice vitium an deforme Some of the Ancients advised an angry man to look himself in a glass O what a deformed sight is a man in a great fit of anger or rage His tongue stammering his eyes flaming his mouth foaming his heart panting his teeth gnashing his fists knocking his voice loud and clamorous Did an angry man with Narcissus see his face in a glass surely he would never fall in love with himself 13. Represent to thy self the mischievous nature and hurtfulness of intemperate Anger 1. 'T is a great enemy both to the mind and to the body It fills the mind with vexation and a bitter discontent It unfits it for any holy duty for prayer meditation hearing the word receiving the Sacrament or any communion with God And should not that be very odious to us which unfits us for the worship of God or receiving any benefit by his ordinances And for the body it inflameth the blood and stirreth up and awakeneth ill humors and so causeth diseases Nothing doth sooner cut the thread of life than the sharpness of fretting anger and grief So true is that common saying an angry man seldom wanteth woe 2. 'T is a great disquieter of private families and societies of men 'T is the Devils bellows to kindle mens corruptions and set the World on fire O how many dreadful sins do some angry men commit in one hour A high fit of passion makes men like Lyons and Tygers It may well be called a short madness It disarms the Soul of its chief defence which is reason and consideration It sets the tongue on fire causing it to vent it self in swearing cursing railing reviling and sometimes it flyes out even into Blasphemy An angry man aboundeth with transgressions sayes Solomon Chap. 29.22 How many thousands hath intemperate anger wronged and injured hurt and wounded Yea how many thousands hath it destroyed and murdered What villany hath not sinful anger at one time or other been guilty of 3. 'T is a great disquieter of the Church The anger that is vented about matters of Learning or Religion is commonly the most irreligious most outragious and worst of all The contentions about points of Learning or Religion are usually very hot and fierce and yet one would think Learning should civilize the minds of men 'T was said so of it of old Emollit mores nec sinit esse feros But alas who are they that write against one another with greater sharpness and keenness who are there that mingle more gall with their ink than learned men do And for Religion certainly where it is in reality it is the best principled and best natured thing in the world It breaths in meekness patience forbearance and forgiveness and yet so powerful is the Pride and Corruption of mans heart that there are no controversies managed with so much bitterness sharpness and exasperation as the controversies about Religion are Let any man look into the books that are witten by the Papists against the Protestants by the Lutherans against the Calvinists by the Arminians against the Anti-arminians or look into the several Sects and Parties that not long since prevailed in these Nations or let him cast his eye on the late disputes between the Conformists and Dissenters and he shall quickly see what abundance of intemperate heat and anger what abundance of disingenuity and incivility what abundance of ill will and uncharitableness doth appear in these writings No man cares to go to a Physitian who will rail upon him and revile him and tell him that he is not worthy to live and 't were better the world were rid of him And yet thus do some men treat their adversaries who pretend to write books for their information and to reduce them into the right way Certainly 't is the duty of all real Christians who agree in the main fundamentals of Religion to forbear one another in matters of less moment and which belong not to the vitals of Christianity For we are all apt to err and mistake in some things and we cannot see with any bodies eyes but our own And 't is a horrible uncharitableness to say that any man is wilfully blind who opens his eyes as wide as he can We must all see for our selves and judge for our selves and our own practice and make account to answer to God for our selves And therefore surely it would become us to be
more charitable one towards another than usually we are But 't is a vain thing to complain in this matter I shall rather turn my complaint into a fervent prayer unto God that he would please by the all-powerfull influence of his grace to change the hearts of men and to give them a better frame of Spirit 14. Let not anger rest in your bosom lest it putrify and turn into malice and hatred Anger resteth in the bosom of fools sayes Solomon Eccles 7.9 Anger lodged in the heart all night is very like to become malice by the morning Anger kept in the heart till next day doth putrify and corrupt like Manna save only that Manna corrupted not at all and anger doth most of all if kept to the next Sabbath Therefore sayes the Apostle Let not the Sun go down on your wrath neither give place to the Devil You need not open the door to him who is so apt to intrude himself Take heed therefore that thine anger by continuance do not turn into hatred For hatred is nothing but an old anger or grudge arising from several provocations and continuing long Anger is a sudden Passion and hath many times but a short course but hatred is more durable and lasting Anger often flies at the offence not at the person but hatred flies at the person whose hurt it earnestly desires 15. Take heed especially that your anger do not sour into revenge God challenges revenge as peculiarly belonging unto himself Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord. Rom. 12.19 For a creature to avenge himself is a plain intrenchment upon Gods Prerogative For he is the Judge as well as the Creator of the World Remember we all stand in need of Gods pardon and forgiveness and except we forgive we cannot expect to be forgiven Mat. 6.14 15. If ye forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you but if ye forgive not men their trespasses neither will your Heavenly Father forgive you There are some men that are slow to anger but being once incensed are hardly ever reconciled An irreconcileable temper is a dangerous sign or mark that a man is in a bad state towards God I have heard of a man lying upon his death-bed whom his Minister perswaded to be reconciled unto and to forgive a person whom he knew he had a great displeasure against The sick man answered yea I forgive him with all my heart if I dye but if I live I will be revenged of him I wish this wretched man did not speak the sense of too many others Our Saviour Mat. 18.23 shews us the necessity of forgiving one another by the Parable of a Servant to whom his Lord had forgiven Ten thousand Talents and yet took his fellow-servant by the throat for an hundred pence at which his Lord was wroth and delivered him to the tormentors till he should pay all that was due Even so likewise sayes our Saviour shall my Heavenly Father do unto you if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his Brother their trespasses One of the Ancients upon this Parable makes this remark Servi Parabolam utinam nos non faceremus historiam I wish sayes he that this that is related of the Servant in the Gospel were only a Parable and that our practice did not give too much occasion to have it related of us as a true history and a thing really done by us 16. Take heed of envy Be not angry or displeased at the prosperity * Nunquam erit foelix qnem torquebit foelicior Sen. of others To be pleased with another mans happiness is to increase our own But envy is as rottenness to the bones Prov. 14.13 17. Represent to thy self what a beauty and amiableness there is in meekness Divines speak of a three-fold meekness 1. Natural springing from a good temper 2. Moral springing from a good education 3. Gracious which is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.23 Now this gracious meekness hath reference either to God or Man Meekness towards God consists in patiently submitting to his will without murmuring or repining Meekness towards Man consists in having a heart ready to pass by offences to forgive wrongs and injuries and to do good against evil And there is not a greater magnetism or attractive in nature than such a frame of Spirit The great amiableness of meekness will appear to us if we consider these particulars 1. Meek persons are like unto our Lord and Saviour who expressed his great meekness in submitting to his Fathers will without any repining and in bearing patiently great injuries from men Mat. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and lowly of heart Our Saviour seems to say to us as Gideon to his followers Judges 7.17 Look on me and do as ye see me do And accordingly the Apostle 2 Cor. 10.1 obtests and beseeches the Corinthians by the meekness and gentleness of Christ which he uses as a powerful motive to them that they would not interpret his humble and mild carriage among them otherwise than they ought 2. Gracious meekness doth plainly shew the soul to have been under the forming and workmanship of the Spirit of God We may by the work know the workman 3. 'T is a temper highly prized by God himself 1 Pet. 3.4 A meek and a quiet Spirit is in the sight of God of great price Moses's meekness exalted him so highly that God spake unto him face to face as a man speaketh to his friend Exod. 33.11 4. 'T is a temper that much adorns our Christian Profession 'T is a walking worthy of our high calling Eph. 4 1● I Paul beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith you are called with all lowliness and meekness and long-suffering forbearing one another in love and Verse 31 32. Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and evil speaking be put away from you with all malice and be ye kind one to another forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you The Apostle also expresses himself to the same purpose Col. 3.12 13 14 15. 5. 'T is a temper to which many gracious promises are made Psal 25.9 The meek will he guide in judgement the meek will he teach his way and Mat. 5.5 The meek shall inherit the earth that is they shall enjoy that which God gives them here with much more Peace Quietness and Comfort than others do Meek persons are not given to Lawing and quarrelling as other men are if they be oppressed at any time God does usually interest himself in their quarrel Prov. 16.7 When a mans wayes please the Lord he maketh his very enemies to be at peace with him And if God does sometimes for gracious ends suffer the meek to be oppressed namely for the exercise of their faith and patience he will recompence them abundantly in the other life 6. 'T is a temper of great benefit and advantage to the life of man It
which we must account for As we must not vainly waste and mis-spend our estates so neither may we our time Time is an Universal Talent that every one that lives to the years of discretion is intrusted with Every man hath not a Talent of Learning or Wealth but every man who liveth to years of understanding is intrusted with a Talent of Time which he may improve to his great advantage if he be not wanting to himself How highly guilty then are those careless wasters of time and those voluptuous livers whose time lies upon their hands and if they have not almost every day a new divertisement to pass away their time as they wickedly phrase it they know not what to do with it O wretches do you study to pass away that which flyes away so fast You had need clip its wings or hang leaden Plummets upon it to stop its course and keep it from flying away so fast if you could possibly do it You say you are for a short life and a merry Surely you think to live in the World like Leviathan in the Sea meerly to sport and take your pastime therein Hark you in your ear you that are such prodigal spenders and wasters of your precious time This is the time that God hath allotted you to work out your salvation in with fear and trembling If a condemned Malefactor had but two or three dayes allowed him to sue out his pardon do you think that he would spend that time in sports and pastimes in feastings and merriments in idle visits and complements without any sense or regard in what condition he was and how his life was certainly and unavoidably at an end if he did not procure his pardon I suppose you would not think him in his wits if he should so do 'T was a woful speech of that dying person who cryed out on his death-bed call Time again O call Time again But that could not be done 6. Another reason why we should redeem time is that given by the Apostle Ephes 4.16 Because the dayes are evil 'T was not in our power to order in what part of time since the Creation we should be born God in whose hands our times are and who determines our times and the bounds of our habitation Acts 17.26 hath appointed us to live in these evil times and therefore we should now more especially endeavour to redeem our time and improve it for all those excellent purposes before mentioned There are three things that speak times to be evil 1. When iniquity abounds and little restraint is laid upon it but there are great examples to incourage it 2. When great troubles and sufferings befall the people of God and such as desire to walk in all good conscience towards God and man 3. When the times are full of snares and temptations whereby multitudes are intrapped And if these things be found among us at this day We had need from this consideration as well as the former endeavour to make the best improvement of our Time 5. I come now to give some directions as to the manner how time should be redeemed 1. Consider there is no part of your time you should be more careful well to improve than the seasons of grace which God affords you The Scripture speaks of a time of visitation Luke 19.44 Of a day of Salvation 2 Cor. 6.2 Of a time wherein the Lord may be found Isa 55.6 Of a time wherein the Spirit of God striveth with the children of men Gen. 6.3 And this time of all times ought to be well improved But you will say possibly how shall we know this day of Gods visitation and of the striving of his Spirit with us I Answer you may know it by these things 1. When he casts you by his providence under a powerful and awakening Ministry whereby you are shewed the great evil and danger of your sins and the absolute necessity of your conversion if you intend to be saved 2. When his holy Spirit co-operates with that Ministry and draws and perswades your hearts to break off your sins by repentance and to turn to God and to lay hold on the offers of his grace in Christ 3. When he sends some awakening afflictions either publick or private upon you whereby he makes your hearts soft and tender and ready to embrace good counsel 4. When he affords you the company and example of pious and faithful Chistians who are ready to help and forward and encourage you in the way to Heaven When God affords you these helps highly value and prize them as special favours from heaven and account that this is the day of your visitation this is your season of grace and therefore be very careful to make a right improvement of it All wise men are careful to lay hold on and to improve all fit seasons and opportunities for the effecting the business they design For that may be done in its fit season which cannot be done out of it How easie is it to sayl with the wind or to form iron while it is hot But these things cannot be done at another time The case is thus also in reference to the Soul Seasons of grace must by no means be neglected For as there is a time of visitation which God affords to the children of men so there is a time wherein men having outstood their visitation the Spirit of God will no longer strive with them And though we cannot certainly determine this time yet there are some things that are shrewd signs of it which it will behove us all well to consider and to examine our selves whether such signs be found in us or no. Those signs are such as these 1. When people have long lived under the powerful means of grace and are nothing bettered by them but are as ignorant or worldly as carnal and sensual as before Observe what our Saviour sayes Luke 13.7 These three years have I sought fruit on this fig-tree and have found none cut it down why cumbreth it the ground 2. When people have had many convictions and secret workings of the Spirit of God in their hearts and have resisted and quenched them Observe what God sayes by the Prophet Ezekiel Chap. 24.13 of that people because I have purged thee that is have used means to purge thee by sending my prophets unto thee and thou wast not purged thou shalt not be purged from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my fury to rest upon thee And dreadful are those words of the Lord also Hosea 4.17 Ephraim is joyned to Idols let him alone 3. When God sends affliction after affliction upon them and they are nothing amended by them Esay 1.5 Why should you be stricken any more you will revolt more and more 4. When they come to have a vile esteem of the Ministers of Christ and of his Ordinances 5. When they go on confidently and presumptuously in their sins notwithstanding all the warnings and threatnings