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A30242 The Scripture directory for church-officers and people, or, A practical commentary upon the whole third chapter of the first Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians to which is annexed The godly and the natural mans choice, upon Psal. 4, vers. 6, 7, 8 / by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1659 (1659) Wing B5656; Wing B5648_CANCELLED; ESTC R3908 509,568 411

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moved so swiftly because the Spirit was in them Oh then as she said If thou hadst been here my brother had not died So doe thou Oh Lord if thy Spirit had inlivened me and moved in me I had not ●ad such dead duties such a dead profession Oh where is thy Spirit When will it breathe heavenly life and vigour into me Thirdly The Spirit of God doth enable us to kill and mortifie sinne Rom 8. If ye through the Spirit mortifie the deeds of the flesh Through the Spirit There is no sinne so deare and beloved to thee so strong and imbred in thee that is as thy owne soule to thee but by the Spirit of God thou mayest mortifie it Never then be afraid of those great Anakims Oh thou cryest out I cannot believe I cannot be heavenly minded Indeed thou canst not but the Spirit of God doth lift up his people to these things Men by natural conscience may leave many outward sinnes but they doe not or cannot mortifie them this is done by Gods Spirit onely As onely by him they could cast out Devils from the possessed thus onely by him can they subdue such sinnes We see then why it is that so many resolve never to sinne again to be such beasts any more and and yet are overcome Alas they goe out in their owne strength against these Goliahs Oh therefore pray and againe pray for the Spirit of God! O Lord here is a lust or a sinne dwels in me as the Jebusite in Canaan I know not how to be freed from it gladly would I be heavenly I cannot I would be believing I cannot give that holy Spirit of thine unto me Pray thus for the Spirit of God more than for health life or any worldly advantage whatsoever Fourthly The Spirit of God doth bestow a filial and ingenuous spirit upon believers whereby they are carried out upon Evangelical and Gospel grounds in their obedience to God And this is a most precious worke to be desired more than all the world An heart with slavish feares is an hell where a man is a tormenting Devil to himself and the guilt of sinne is a gnawing worme that never dieth but Galat. 4.6 He hath sent his Spirit in our hearts whereby we cry Abba Father There is earnestnesse and a Gospel holy boldnesse Hence it is called The Spirit of Adoption Now how admirable and desirable is this when we through feare were subject to bondage to have this Evangelical freedome of Spirit The people of God should pray and seek for this Spirit of Adoption as well as of Sanctification This would be oyle to the wheel this would be wings and legs to thee Fifthly The Spirit of God workes comfort and joy in the hearts of the godly Hence he is called The Comforter John 15.26 As the Devil delights to keepe us in darknesse and feares therefore he had almost swallowed up the incestuous person with immoderate grief 2 Corinth 2. So the Spirit of God delighteth to turne water into wine Joy is a fruit of the Spirit of God Galat. 5.22 Yea it 's called Vnspeakable joy in the Holy Ghost Doe not therefore thinke that the Kingdome of Grace and Godlinesse lieth in a dejected spirit in a troubled soule No it 's in joy as well as in righteousnesse Rom. 14.17 Those doubts and sad thoughts that do lie like a burden and load upon thee came not from the Spirit dwelling in thee Sixthly That we may have this boldnesse and joy the Spirit of God hath another effect which is To witnesse and seale unto our spirits that we are the children of God Grieve not the Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed Ephes 4.30 The Spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.16 Oh what a blessed life is this when all these works of Gods Spirit go along together teaching sanctifying and comforting This is the Mount of Transfiguration It 's good to be here Doe not think these things are too great and too good to be had in this life For if we be not wanting to our selves if we bring our cruises he is ready to pour in his oyl Seventhly The Spirit of God worketh wonderfull support and even glorious rejoycing in all afflictions and tribulations Then if ever it 's admirable to see what the Spirit of God doth in believers The Spirit of glory shall rest upon you 1 Peter 4.14 If you reade of the Martyrs burning at the stake if of the persecutions and torments they did with such invincible joy and patience endure it was from the Spirit of glory resting on them Alas we think if God should exercise us with such straits bring us into such troubles we could never bear them Oh consider there is Gods Spirit as well as thy spirit Lastly The Spirit of God doth worke the prayers of Gods people Rom. 8. It 's a Spirit of prayer and mourning he teacheth what to pray and how to pray for spiritual and heavenly things with zeal faith and importunity It helps our infirmities many sins and corruptions are apt to spoil our prayers he helpeth against them yea he worketh groans unutterable he moveth the very foundations of the soul and those prayers cannot but speed because the Spirit knoweth the mind of God All prayers are dead carkasses without the Spirit moving upon them Vse of Examination Try whether thou art one who hast the Spirit of God thus dwelling in thee Oh where is the man or woman that heareth us that knoweth the meaning of these things When Christ spake about eating his body the Capernaites had a grosse understanding therein but saith our Saviour The flesh profiteth little the Spirit giveth life John 6.63 If Christ said thus of his own body than how much rather may we say parts duties an outward Religion profiteth little The Spirit giveth life Rom. 8. Paul saith If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Thou speakest of Christ and thou hopest he died for thee see what the Scripture saith If thou hast not his Spirit thou art none of his Verse 17. If any man defile the Temple of God him shall God destroy THe Apostle in this seventeenth verse aggravates that Argument which before he had propounded viz. The temple of God wherein the Spirit of God dwels ought to be kept pure and not defiled by any corruptions of Doctrine or lives 1So that the Apostle makes all false Doctrines and corruptions in Gods worship to be a sacriledge And therefore in this verse he doth further amplifie the hainousnesse of this sinne wherein you have 1. The malum culpae supposed If any man defile the temple of God 2. The malum poenae proposed Him will God destroy For the sinne supposed If any man defile the temple This is an allusive expression to the custom among the Jews If any man defiled their Temple the crime was capital what accusations were brought against Paul because he brought in Greeks uncircumcised
up the affairs of the Church in one common place which his Rhetorick and Logick had not and that was faith The godly were more than men in Hosea 14.3 when being ashamed of their carnal confidence they said Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon horses Fourthly To walk like men is to be full of falshood deceitfulnesse or hypocrisie to have no truth in heart or word one to another Thus David saith Every man is a liar and he makes that sad complaint Help Lord for the good and faithfull man perisheth every man speaketh vanity to his neighbour Psal 12.1 Oh this is the way of men upon the earth Hence the Scripture exhorts us Not to put trust in men Psal 146.3 no not in Princes or the great ones of the world Oh but all such lying hypocrisie and dissimulation should not be named among Christians Christiana fides should be farre more firm and resolved than Romana fides Let us love saith the Apostle not in word only but in heart and deed also 1 John 3.18 The Christians at first did meet together with one heart and one accord The very Poet said he hated him even to hell who spake one thing with his mouth and thought another thing in his heart Know then that cunning Artifices and lying dissimulations are farre from that truth that God desireth in the inward parts Christs sheep must not be the Devils foxes It was the Heathens desire That his brest might be as transparent as glass that so all his thoughts within him might be seen How should this shame the guile dissimulations and falshoods that are in men one to another Fifthly To walk as men is here in the Text to be in anger hatred and revengefull thoughts one against another whereas all beasts agree among themselves even the savage Bears and Tygers yea the Devils are not divided one against another Man naturally finds nothing so sweet as revenge upon others Therefore our Saviour to shew that we must be more than man bids us Love our enemies do good to those that hate us and despitefully use us Mat. 5. This is a lesson or duty that cannot be found in Tullies Offices he thought it lawfull to be revenged upon enemies Yea Aquinas a great Schoolman thinketh That to love and forgive our enemies is not a precept or command to all but a counsel of perfection to some of more perfect and admirable excellencies Oh then when you see men full of back-bitings uncharitablenesse envyings and revengefull purposes you may see those walk as men When Jacob expected nothing but cruelty and bloudy revenge from Esau and finding the clean contrary he saith He saw his face like the Angel of God above a meer man Sixthly To walk as men is to make a mans self the Alpha and Omega the center wherein all the lines must meet The Apostle reckoning up a Catalogue of monstrous sinners he puts this in the front Men shall be lovers of themselves 2 Tim. 3.2 And Christ on the other side requireth it as the fundamental qualification in every Disciple To deny himself and take up his cross Luk. 9.23 Now for a man to deny himself pleasures his self-interests his self-advantages this doth argue men to be of God It 's noted as the great admirable perfection in Christ whose copy we are to write after That he emptied himself and became of no reputation Phil. 2. That he pleased not himself In nothing did he seek his own glory his own ease his own exaltation And there is nothing can more demonstrate Christians to be above men then to be as Christ was in this respect It was a sad complaint of old All seek their own and not the things of Jesus Christ Phil 2 21. Lastly To walk as man is to commit any sinne rather then to be persecuted for the truth of God To swear or forswear to turn into all shapes to avoid danger This Christ aimed at when Peter would have him decline his sufferings Get thee behind me Satan said Christ Thou savourest not the things of God but of man Mat. 16.23 What is it to savour the things of a man To do any thing or to use any unlawful and unwarrantable wayes to escape the present danger such are counted wise men and crafty men whereas this is dishonesty and ungodliness and no wisdome for such forsake their own mercy Vse of Examination How are all our Congregations How live they How walk they Do they not live as men yea how many like bruit beasts how many like Devils Oh whose image and superscription is this Doth God require this Doth his Word command such things Did Christ live thus in the world Are ye not called to be holy as God is holy Are ye not to do Gods will on earth as Angels in heaven Why then are ye as men Who are you then that say you will do as others you will not be singular you will not be strict and precise Thy Christianity doth inforce thee to these things if thou dost hearken to it If ye will be Christians indeed you must not live according to the fashion of the world yea the world most wonder that you runne not in the same excesse with them that you will not swear curse riot it and live loosely Do not please your selves with a meer title Vse 2. of Exhortation to the godly Oh see to what exactness circumspection you should rise Be ashamed and blush if thou art as men of the world proud as they earthly as they peevish and discontented as thee Oh when thou art overtaken with such distempers go and chide thy self Lord how have I been a foolish and ignorant man to day I am like others of the world I have not behaved my self as one that is born of God that hath a more divine Spirit As it 's a great shame to see a grown man speaking and doing like a child so it is here As Michal in a sinful scornfull way said of David in a good action we may of thee in a sinful action Thou hast made thy self as one of the vile ones to day that frowardness discontent passionateness argueth thee to be like one of the world Verse 4. For whereas one saith I am of Paul and another I am of Apollo are ye not carnal THe Apostles scope is as you have heard to repress the pride and contentions that were in the Church of Corinth And now in this fourth Verse he describeth the particular factions and divisions among them One saith I am of Paul and another I am of Apollo Paul was the first Apostle that preached the Gospel to them who though unskilful in speech as he saith speaking as some think only by way of conception yet was mighty in power through God to them Apollo he came after Paul and was more eloquent and so more apt to affect the hearers this some maketh the ground of the faction but it is first disputed Whether indeed the Corinthians set
thee to false wayes know God will make it manifest yet this corruption is wonderfull pleasing The Pharisees loved the high places and to be called Rabbies Nestorius and many others broached heresies because they missed of such great preferment as they desired Donatus was so admired of his Disciples that they would swear by him as by a god Thus men with Herod love to have acclamations The voice of God and not of a man though his terrible judgement might be a warning 5. Discontents and impatiencies at some things which have fallen out in the Church hath been a great cause to make divisions and to sow tares amongst the wheat Marcion because he was censured by Church-Officers for his misdemeanours he cried out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will throw fire into the Church and divide it Thus men by way of revenge to grieve and vex others have taught false wayes Paul complained of such That thought to a●de afflictions to his bonds Phil. 1. But this will not alwayes be under the ground 6. Envy and si●full emulation to the gifts and abilities of others that have been above them This hath made men bring in strange Doctrines This worme is apt to breed in the finest spirits You see John Disciples were soured with it Master say they Him to whom thou bearest witnesse baptizeth and all goe after him That this was envy appeareth by the remedy John giveth He must increase and I must decrease John 3.31 Thus among the Disciples there was often emulation Who should be greatest amongst them Oh this hath eaten like a Gangrene in the body of the Church and hath made the Church to have such a deformed face as envy it self is said to have Pallor in ore sedet macies in corpore toto So then as some sharp thorny bushes have pleasant blossomes on them so many specious and fair opinions that are set out with much glory may yet grow upon such thorny and corrupt causes 7. A contemplative delight in a mans own notions and conceptions he hath This hath caused more errours than any thing especially in learned men Therefore heresie is called from chusing when a man doth voluntarily chuse such a way to go in and the Scripture doth excellently call it Going a whoring after a mans heart No adulterer finds more pleasure in those delights of the flesh then the minde of a man corrupted doth with its owne notions No woma● is more fond of her childe than the understanding is of its owne conceptions The second thing to be manifested is The nature of every mans Doctrine and if false than the vizor will be pulled of It will appear counterfeit coin and you know to be guilty of that is a capital crime pro thesauro ca●bones Gods authority and stamp will not be ●ound on it Rehobo●m when the golden vessels were taken out of the Temple he put brasse ones in the stead It 's not so well in the Text for here is stubble for gold so an Ancient did well expresse it as if a man should ●●e an Image all over guilded and touch it you shall find nothing but mouldring d●st though it may be ae aurata yet it is not aurea it 's but earth guilded over If the● God would never bring our assertions to his touchstone we migh● be the more bold but that cannot be I shall say no more to this head because enough was spoken when we shewed why errours are compared to hay and stubble In the last place God will manifest every mans work In the cunning subtilty he hath managed it with For the Scripture speaks of the great crafty and subtil wayes men use that they do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Corinth 2. adulterate and mix the word of God he cals it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 4.14 such jugling and cheating as men use with their dice. For 1. Before hearers are publickly prepared for them they go privately and secretly vent their ware So they are said Privately to bring in damnable heresies 2 Pet. 2.1 They are said To creep into houses 2 Tim. 3. They are the moles that creep under ground whereas Christ said He taught nothing but what he did publickly all did hear 2. Their craft is seen In mingling some truths with their errour that while we take one we may swallow down the other and this is worse than palpable heresie in some sense Pejus est veneno oceidere quam gladio they mingle their wine with water Thus some false Apostles they preached Christ as well as the works of the Law but this craft God will manifest when ●e shall separate the precious from the vile and that is the reason say some why Christ would not own the confession that the Devil made That he was the Sonne of God lest speaking some truth he should also vent his lies by owning him 3. This craft is seen Either in sweet and winning words full of love and kindnesse or else in pretence to deep and sublime mysteries Some men are most taken with moral and popular discourses therefore Paul saith they have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 16.18 good sweet honey words Others a●e more taken with subtil and philosophical Arguments therefore the Apostle bids them Beware of philosophy Col. 2.8 and saith it 's knowledge falsly so called Philosophi fuerunt Patriarchae haereticorum Yea these Nani that hay and stubble we find in some of the Greek Fathers about Free-will and Grace is attributed to their Platonical Philosophy which was soaked too much in them and so continued though Christians as Aristotles Philosophy infected the fountain in the Schoolmens time 4. Their circumspection to observe the fit seasons to disseminate their errours Thus while all were asleep tares were sown upon the fittest subjects women as being more affectionate They leade captive silly women 2 Tim. 3.6 Tender and soft hearted men upon whom specious pretences will easily work These and thousand of other subtil and artificial wayes God will make manifest Vse of Instruction to us Ministers Take we heed how we build and that is by avoiding the causes of error pride ambition envy discontent Oh it 's an happy thing when we can say O Lord we have served no parties drawn on no designes ingaged in no factions but plainly and faithfully desired to know thy will and to preach the truths of Christ This will be a crown of rejoycing unto us at our death Not as pleasing men but God saith the Apostle 1 Thes 2.4 As of God and in the presence of God 2 Cor. 2. Vse of Admonition to People Take you heed of those causes likewise for the same sins that spread errours the same sins make hearers to receive them Be not proud self conceited though you have got some understanding and can conferre with better gifts than others Alas thou hast cause enough to be humbled the more thou knowest thou wilt see thy ignorance the
of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 To be baptized into the name of one argueth that one to be a Person And how absurd would it be to say the Father and the Sonne are Persons but the holy Ghost is an attribute or operation So There are three that dear witnesse in Heaven the Father the Sonne and the Spirit 1 John 5.7 Three he doth not say three things but three viz. Persons as appeareth by the personal operations These bare witnesse in Heaven Some reade The Spirit of God descended in the shape of a Dove which plainly denoteth a thing subsisting not an attribute We are said To sin against him which must needs imply a person Thou hast lied to God Act 5.4 That which is here said to be God is called the holy Ghost vers 3. Thou hast lied to the holy Ghost And the sinne against the holy Ghost shall never be forgiven Matth. 12.31 Lastly There is attributed understanding and will to him Vnderstanding the Spirit of God searcheth the deep things of God and the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God 1 Cor. 2.11 And Will 1 Cor. 14. where he reckoneth up several operations Even as the same Spirit giveth to whom he pleaseth So that you see the Texts are so clear that were not men sadly forsaken by God they could not deny these things In the second place Let us prove that it 's not a chief spirit among Angels but in deed and in truth of the same Nature with God Now some choice Arguments to prove this may be reduced into these heads First The Name of God is directly and properly not metaphorically attributed to him Thus God is said to speak by the holy Prophets which have been ever since the world begun And if you ask What Person it is in the God-head 2 Pet. 1.21 The Prophets spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost So that the holy Ghost was that God who enlightened and moved all the Prophets that were from the beginning of the world Thus Acts 5.4 Why hath Satan filled thy heart thou hast not lied to man but to God Ananias he thought he had only to do with men but mark the opposition not man but God especially 1 Cor. 12.3 4. There are diversities of gifts but the same spirit the same Lord the same God Spirit Lord and God So that by what Texts we can prove God the Father to be God the same we can prove the holy Ghost to be God Secondly The holy Ghost hath those works attributed to him which do onely belong unto a God Such as God only can do as Creation Sanctification and Redemption and miraculous operations These things do demonstrate and prove a God Creation Psal 33 6. By the word of the Lord the Heavens were made and by the Spirit or breath of his mouth th●y were created Job 33.4 The Spirit of God made me Thus in the Creation at first The Spir●t moved on the waters as the Hen on the eggs giving vivifical influence For Redemption the holy Ghost concurreth to that in preparing and fitting the body of Christ and sanctifying it to be an oblation Hence Christ is said To be conceived of the holy Ghost which could not be an Angel for then an Angel would have been greater than Christ And secondly In the application of the Benefus of the Redemption to the godly The holy Ghost both applieth them and assureth thereof The Spirit of God that heareth witnesse with our spirit Rom. 8.16 And we are sealed by the holy Spirit of God Ephes 4.30 Thirdly In the works of miraculous operations So 1 Cor. 12. all those extraordinary and miraculous gifts are attributed to the holy Ghost Hence he is called The finger of God Luke 11.12 by which Christ is said to cast out Devils And on the Feast of Pentecost He descended in a mighty rushing wind and cloven tongues of fire filling all the Apostles with miraculous gifts Acts 2.3 4. Lastly The works of Sanctification Faith Repentance and all other graces are wrought by him Yea he is called The holy Spirit because that is his peculiar Office to work holinesse and to sanctifie men by the Ministry Now Divines say It is a farre greater work and argueth more power to sanctifie the natures of men then to make a new world yet this is constantly applied to the holy Ghost though not so as to exclude the other Persons in their order Hence likewise all the means of Sanctification viz. the Ministry and the gifts thereof are also given to the same Spirit Acts 25. Over which the holy Ghost hath made you overseers Thirdly The attributes and properties of a God as well as the works of a God are also in Scripture given to the holy Ghost omnipresence filling the whole world Whither shall I go from thy Spirit None can flie from it Psal 139.7 His Omniscience in that he searcheth the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2.11 His Omnipotency as you heard His Eternity called the Eternal Spirit Heb. 9 14. Though some understand that of Christs Divine Nature and being before the world in that he made it Unity with the other Persons These three are one So that having the properties of God he must needs be God Lastly The religious worship that is given to the Holy Ghost doth not onely argue he is a Person but a Divine Person equal with God And 1. We have the Angels giving worship unto him whereas John when he would have worshipped the Angel he is forbidden Worship thou God Revel 19.10 So that religious worship is only to be given to God And thus the Angels in that glorious vision sang Holy holy holy unto God Now it 's worth your observing that this vision is attributed both to the Father to the Sonne and to the holy Ghost To the Father that is without doubt Isa 6. for there he is described as a glorious Judge in all Majesty To the Son John 12.41 This spake Esaias when he saw his glory and spake of him viz. of Christ as the Evangelist applieth it Lastly To the holy Ghost Act 28.25 That men also are to give religious worship to the holy Ghost appeareth in their baptismal profession Being baptized into the Name of the holy Ghost As also by that form of prayer and blessing The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ the love of God and communion of the holy Ghost sometimes ●sed in the Epistles Thus you see the Scripture clearly determining this matter of faith And if we cannot comprehend how there should be one God and three Persons eve●y one of them God and yet but one God you must remember That faith is the captivating of the understanding unto a meer t●stimony It 's not science but faith that Christians professe In humane things Argumentum facit fidem in divine things Fides facit argumentum Neither is it any wonder that we cannot in the creatures find an exact comparison to
in our hearts that our gifts may be successefull that our graces may flourish And that the Spirit of God dwels in you The first sort of the Spirits inhabitation in us viz. by Gifts hath been dispatched We now come to the more noble and excellent way which doth inseparably accompany salvation and that is the sanctifying graces of Gods Spirit By which indeed we may gather That God dwels in us For as when Daniel could so wonderfully open and interpret the Kings dreames they said The Spirit of the most high God was in him So if you see a people heavenly mortifying sinne walking in close communion with God you must needs conclude the Spirit of the most high God is in that man It 's not nature or moral virtues could raise him up to such an high Pinacle as this is And before we come to the particular effects of Gods in-dwelling after this manner it 's good to observe the Emphatical expressions that the Scripture useth equivalent to this of dwelling in us As Rom. 8. there it 's called Being in the Spirit as here The Spirit is in us So there we are in the Spirit Now that phrase is very emphatical and doth denote that all our lusts and sinnes yea our very selves are as it were swallowed up and nothing but the Spirit of God works and moveth in us To be in the Spirit denoteth the great efficacy and powerfull dominion in us as men are said to be in sinne because they no longer live but sinne nothing but sinne doth appear so it should be with the godly The Spirit of God not flesh not corruption not carnal or worldly principles should appear in them As the Prophets in the time of their Prophesie were said to be in the Spirit in an extasie minding no earthly or worldly thing Thus ought we to be emptied of our selves and filled with the Spirit of God Therefore John 3. it 's said Whatsoever is born of the Spirit is Spirit in the very abstract We have also Gal. 4 pregnant expressions To live in the Spirit to walk in the Spirit to be led by the Spirit Oh let such expressions as these make you ashamed to see so much of a man or carnal affections stirring in you What believer hath these things in the full power thereof But to the Particulars First The Spirit of God dwels in us after a saving manner in the general By way of sanctification of the Spirit soul and body even the whole man 1 Thess 5. This is the general Every man is all over unclean filthy polluted full of enmity to what is holy Now the Spirit of God that makes an universal sanctification of all these Hence by way of Office it 's called The Spirit of sanctification and the holy Spirit as Creation is appropriated to the Father and Redemption to the Sonne so Sanctification to the Holy Ghost So then as Christ in respect of his body is said to be conceived by the Holy Ghost there was a preparing and sanctifying of it for the Personal Union and the work of Redemption So the Spirit of God sanctifieth the soul of every godly man it makes every part and faculty prepared for holy Duties in an holy man for as the soul is the life of the body that can doe no vital action without it So the Spirit is the life of the soul and that can doe no spiritual action without it Oh then consider this all ye that heare and ponder it in your hearts Have you thus been conceived and borne of the Spirit of God Thy other birth will availe nothing though borne rich or noble Yea Couldst thou be borne a thousand times in a naturall way thou wouldst still be a miserable wretched man What is a good or ingenuous nature What are excellent and choice abilities if thou art not sanctified by the Spirit of God Doe not thinke these things are fancies and notions The Spirit of God may as well be called a fancy as his operations fancies But more particularly The Spirit of God dwels in a saving manner First By Illumination and opening of the darke minde of every man Every man is darknesse it selfe he cannot discerne of spiritual things revealed in the Word till the Spirit of God enlighten him Therefore the worke of Gods Spirit is great upon the minde and understanding of a man it convinceth the soul of a man of those things it never believed before John 16.9 of sinne it makes a man see the woefull and damnable estate he is in It 's so plaine that he cannot deny it he believed and judged no such thing once in him but now such light shineth in his breast that he is a very dung-hill a very hell to himself and then he convinceth of righteousnesse viz. a Gospel-righteousnesse by Christ Now all his workes all his good duties are dung and drosse all that Religion he put confidence in is abandoned by him the Spirit of God convinceth him of a glorious righteousnesse without him which onely is able to cover his nakednesse Againe Another special worke on the understanding is To teach to guide and leade into all truth We cannot say Jesus is the Christ without the Spirit as you heard 1 Corinth 12.3 Spiritual things must have a spirituall ability to discerne them It 's true he leadeth in and by the use of meanes appointed but yet he onely doth efficiently dispell the darknesse and worke faith to holy Truths So then we see it 's the speciall worke of Gods Spirit not humane ability to be directed into truth And we must not onely study Books but pray to God and take heed of such sinnes which may drive Gods Spirit from us for then we are as a wilde horse without a rider like a ship in the midst of the sea without a Pilot. Secondly The Spirit of God quickens and reviveth those graces that by Regeneration were infused to us compared therefore to the winde as the blowing of that makes the flowers of the Gardens to send forth their sweet smels So it 's here It 's not enough to have the habit and principles of grace within us but we need a fervent and vigorous actuating of them And therefore is the Holy Ghost compared to fire and hence that phrase To be filled with the Holy Ghost which is applied to the godly sometimes doth as learned men observe denote some actual and vigorous impression upon their hearts Their graces were now put forth in a lively vigorous way Oh this is a blessed life when a Christian is constantly filled with the Holy Ghost that doth actually make his heart fervent and burning in all its duties towards God! If this were the life of the godly man there would not be such complaints such feares such doubts Oh they cannot tell what to say to themselves They are dull heavy earthly Alas all this is because the Spirit of God filleth not thy heart if this were working thou wouldst be like Ezekiels wheeles that
Of the Holinesse of the Material Temple p. 199 226 See Church Thoughts Thoughts not free p. 166 Evil thoughts shall be brought to light p. 166 Truth Truth of Christ precious p. 157 Compared to Gold c. ibid. Truth two-fold Increated and Created p. 182 The Effects of Divine Truths p. 183 V Vanity VAnity How the word used in Scripture p. 158 Unity Union Disunion Unity not a sure mark of a Church p. 41 In Ministers pressed in Doctrine fections p 98 The sad Effects of the contrary in Ministers p. 99 What people should do when Ministers are divided ibid W Watering WAtering by the Word what p. 82 Wisdome Wisdome Humane an enemy to the things of Christ p. 230 But a shadow compared with Scripture Wisdome p. 247 Contemptible folly before God ibid. True Wisdome but folly in the worlds account p. 239 Things to be believed hoped for and to be done are foolish to humane Wisdome p. 239 True Wisdome only in the Church or Christianity p. 243 Wise men Wise men How God delights to take wise men of the world in their own craft p. 254 The best of their thoughts vain p. 257 Wicked Wicked people spoken to p. 8 19 20 46 47 70 77 104 166 167. Wicked works though never so secret shall be brought to light p. 165 Workes All should do good workes p. 102 Doing good workes two-fold ibid. What to do a good work that God will accept and reward p. 103 Workers How Ministers are Workers with God p. 110 Why God will make use of them ibid. Worship Of the Worship of God p. 129 Word Word of God how that reclaims from sinne and errour p. 179 Of a durable nature p. 182 World World How it is the godly mans p. 275 Z Zeal FAlse Zeal p. 15 FINIS A CATALOGUE Of the Chiefest of those Books as are Printed FOR THOMAS VNDERHILL By Col. Edw. Leigh Esquire A Treatise of the Divine Promises in Five Books The Saints Encouragement in Evil Times Critica Sacra or Observations on all the Radices or Primitive Hebrew words of the old Testament in order Alphabetical Critica Sacra or Philological and Theological Observations upon all Greek words of the New-Testament in order Alphabetical By Samuel Gott Esquire Novae Solymae Libri sex Sive Institutio Christiani 1. De Pueritia 2. De Creatione Mundi 3. De Juventute 4. De Peccato 5. De Virili Aetate 6. De Redemptione Hominis Essayes concerning mans true Happiness Parabolae Evangelicae Latinè redditae Carmine Paraphrastico varii generis Morton His Touchstone of Conversion Mr Hezekiah Woodward Of Education of Youth or The Childs Patrimony The Lives and Acts of the good and bad Kings of Judah A Treatise of Fear A Thank-offering Mr Samuel Fisher A Love-Token for Mourners being two Funeral Sermons with Meditations preparatory to his own expected Death in a time and place of great Mortality Mr Herbert Palmer and Mr Daniel Cawdry A Treatise of the Sabbath in 4 parts Memorials of Godliness and Christianity in seaven Treatises 1. Of making Religion ones Business With an Appendix applied to the Calling of a Minister 2. The Character of a Christian in Paradoxes 3. The Character of visible Godliness 4. Considerations to excite to Watchfullness and to shake of spiritual Drowsiness 5. Remedies against Carelesness 6. The Soul of Fasting 7. Brief Rules for daily Conversation and particular Directions for the Lords-day His Sermon entituled The Glass of Gods Providence toward his faithfull ones His Sermon entituled The duty and Honours of Church-Rest Mr William Barton His Psalms His Catalogue of Sins and Duties implied in each Commandement in verse Mr Vicars Chronicle in four parts Mr Samuel Clark A general Martyrology or A History of all the great Persecutions that have been in the world to this time Together with the Lives of many eminent Modern Divines His Sermon as the Warwickshire mens Feast entituled Christian Good Fellowship Mr Kings Marriage of the Lamb. Mr Shorts Theological Poems The French Alphabet Jus Divinum Ministerii by the Provincial Assembly of London Mr Thomas Blake His Answer to Blackwood of Baptism Birth-Priviledge Mr Cook His Font uncovered Dr John Wallis His Explanation of the Assemblies Catechism Mr Austin's Catechism Mr Vicar's Catechism Mr Pagit's Defence of Church-Government by Presbyterial Classical and Synodal Assemblies Mr Tho. Pagit A Demonstration of Family-Duties Mr Anthony Burgess Vindiciae Legis or A Vindication of the Law and Covenants from the Errors of Papists Socinians and Antinomians A Treatise of Justification in two Parts Spiritual Refining Part 1. or A Treatise of Grace and Assurance Handling the Doctrine of Assurance the Use of Signs in Self-examination how true Graces may be distinguished from counterfeit several true Signs of Grace and many false ones The Nature of Grace under divers Scripture Notions viz. Regeneration the New Creature the heart of Flesh Vocation Sanctification c. Spiritual Refining the Second Part or A Treatise of sinne with its Causes Differences Mitigations and Aggravations specially of the Deceitfulness of the heart of Presumptions and Reigning Sinnes and of Hypocrisie and Formality in Religion All tending to unmask Counterfeit Christians Terrifie the ungodly Comfort doubting Saints Humble man and Exalt the Grace of God His CXLV Sermons upon the whole 17th Chapter of St John being Christs Prayer before his Passion The difficulty of and Encouragements to Reformation a Sermon upon Mark. 1. verse 2 4. before the House of Commons A Sermon before the Court Marshal Psal 106.30 31. The Magistrates Commission upon Rom. 13.4 at the Election of a Lord Maior Remes Cruelty and Apostasie upon Revel 19.2 preached before the House of Commons on the 5th of November The Reformation of the Church to be endeavoured more then the Common-wealth upon Judg. 6.27 28 29. preached before the House of Lords Publique Affections pressed upon Numb 11.12 before the House of Commons Self-judging in order to the Sacrament with a Sermon of the Day of Judgment A Treatise of Original Sinne. An Exposition with Practical Observations on the third Chapter of the first Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians The Godly mans Choice compared with the Natural mans and found to be transcendently the best and both being Characterized by their Desires and Delights this is clearly evinced That the Godly man is the only happy man even in this world Held forth in XIII Sermons upon Psal 4. vers 6 7 8. Mr Richard Baexter Plain Scripture-proof of Infant Baptism The Right Method for getting and keeping Spiritual Peace and Comfort The unreasonableness of Infidelity in four Parts 1. The Spirits Intrinsick witness to the truth of Christianity with a Determination of this Question Whether the Miracles of Christ and his Apostles do oblige those to believe who never saw them 2. The Spirits Internal witness of the truth of Christianity 3. A Treatise of the Sinne against the holy Ghost 4. The Arrogancy of Reason against Divine Revelation repressed The Christian Concord