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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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i Exod. 15. 11. Leuit. 19. 2. Psal 145. holinesse of God is his essentiall attribute whereby is signified that his nature is wholy and most perfectly iust infinite in all vertue iustice truth mercy and purity free from all vice iniquity and spot of any corruption and therefore a louer of all purity and sanctity in the creatures and a hater of all vice and impurity as being contrary to his most holy nature k Mat. 5. 45. Psal 145. 8 9. The beneficence of God is his essentiall attribute whereby he is knowne to be in himselfe the fountaine of all bounty and infinitely and absolutely good to the creatures towards whom he exerciseth freely his beneficence and goodnesse l 1. Iohn 4. 8 16. Iohn 3. 35 16. Rom. 5. 8 10. The loue of God is his essentiall attribute whereby is signified that he loueth himselfe chiefely as being the chiefe goodnesse and the creatures as they are good freely approuing rewarding and delighting in them and willing and performing all good vnto them The m Exod. 34. 6. Psal 86. 15. Rom. 11. 6. grace of God is his essentiall property whereby he is known to be in himselfe infinite in grace and extendeth his fauour and benignity freely vnto his creatures The n Exod. 34. 6. Iud. 10. 16. Micah 7. 18. mercy of God is his essentiall property whereby hee is knowne to be most pitifull in himselfe and in his owne nature delighteth to helpe them that are in misery The o Exod. 34. 7. Ezrah 18. 23. 33. 11. clemency of God is his essentiall attribute whereby is signified that he is in his nature most gentle and benigne towards his creatures in anger remembring mercy and graciously pardoning vs when we deserue punishment willing rather the conuersion then the death of sinners The p Esa 30. 18. Rom. 2. 4. long-suffering and patience of God is his essentiall property whereby is noted that he is patient in bearing with sinners expecting their repentance that he may haue mercy vpon them The q Psal 48. 11. 145. 17. Rom. 1. 17. Iustice of God is his essentiall attribute whereby hee is knowne to be infinitely iust in himselfe and exerciseth Iustice towards the creatures being also the Authour of all righteousnesse which is in them The r Iohn 3. 36. Rom. 1. 18. anger of God signifieth his iust and free will in punishing sinne and all iniury offered against himselfe or his Church and people The ſ Psal 5. 4. 44. 8. hatred of God signifieth his iust will whereby he disalloweth detesteth and decreeth to punish euill and sinne in his creatures §. Sect. 7 Of the persons in Trinity And so much concerning Gods attributes whereby his nature is made knowne vnto vs that wee may accordingly serue him and so carry our selues as that we may bee acceptable in his sight Now further we must know him in his persons namely that howsoeuer he is but one in nature and essence yet he is distinguished into three persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost For the better vnderstanding whereof we are to know that a person in the deity is a subsistance in the diuine essence comprehending the whole diuine nature and essence in it but distinguished by an incommunicable property from other persons vnto which it hath relation Matth. 3. 16 17. 28. 19. Ioh 14. 16. 1. Ioh. 5. 7. Or it is the Godhead restrained or distinguished by his personall propertie And therefore euery person containing in it the whole diuine essence it followeth that whatsoeuer agreeth absolutely to or is spoken of the whole diuine nature in respect of its outward actions and workes towards the creatures doth alike agree to euery distinct person and whatsoeuer agreeth to or is spoken of euery of the persons that likewise agreeth to the whole diuine nature And from hence also it followeth that these three diuine persons are in glory and all other attributes coequall and in respect of time coeternal but yet euery one is distinct frō other by their personall propertie So that the diuine nature being considered with the personall property of begetting is the Father and not the Sonne nor holy Spirit being considered with the personall property of being begotten is the Sonne and not the holy Ghost nor Father and with the personall property of proceeding is the holy Spirit and neither the Father nor the Sonne The Father then is the first person in Trinity who hauing his being of himselfe hath communicated his whole essence vnto the Sonne and so hath begotten him by eternall generation The Sonne is the second person in Trinity who is begotten of the Father The holy Spirit is the third person in the Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Sonne who is therefore called the Spirit because he proceedeth and as it were is breathed from them both and the holy Spirit because he doth immediately sanctifie the elect and make them holy and the Father and Sonne doe it mediately by him §. Sect. 8 Of the knowledge of Gods works and first of his decree And thus haue we briefly spoken of the knowledge of God in respect of his nature and persons now with like or more breuity we are to intreate of the knowledge of God in and by his workes and actions The which are either internall as the actions of the diuine persons one towards another or externall which are his operations and workes towards the creatures And these are principally two First the decree of God And secondly the execution of his decree The decree of God is an act of the diuine will whereby he hath from all eternity purposed that all should be done which is hath beene or shall bee done ordaining all things to a good end and the meanes also with all circumstances whereby they attaine vnto it And this is either common to all or speciall to the reasonable creatures as Angels and men Gods decree which respecteth men and Angels is called predestination which is Gods eternall purpose whereby hee hath ordained the reasonable creatures to certaine ends and to the meanes which conduce vnto them Of which there are two parts election and reprobation Election is Gods eternall decree whereby of his free grace he hath purposed in Christ to bring some to euerlasting life and to the vse of the meanes whereby they may attaine vnto it to the praise of the glory of his grace Reprobation is Gods eternall decree whereby he hath purposed in his election to passe by some men and to leaue them in their sinnes that they may iustly be condemned to the praise of the glory of his iustice §. Sect. 9 Of the execution of Gods decree in mans creation fall and misery The execution of Gods decree is an action or worke of God whereby in time he bringeth to passe all that he hath eternally decreed according to the counsell of his will The which is either temporary or eternall Gods temporary decree is generall
and ashamed in our selues that we can shoot no higher of which we haue the holy Apostle as a patterne for our imitation who forgetting those things Philip. 3. 13 14. which were behind namely the former part of his race in the way of godlinesse and reaching foorth vnto those things which were before to wit that Christian perfection vnto which he had not yet attained did presse towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ And this is that Euangelicall and Sonne-like obedience which God now vnder the Couenant of grace requireth of vs which if we labour to performe he will accept of vs in Christ and remember our sinnes no more but will Ier 31 34. Mal. 3. 17. 2. Cor. 8. 12. spare vs as a man spareth his sonne who serueth him accept of the will for the deede and couering the imperfections of our obedience with Christs perfect righteousnesse and washing away the pollution and corruption of it in his most precious blood he will be well pleased with vs and approoue of vs as though we had attained to perfect righteousnesse §. Sect. 2 That a godly life chiefely consisteth in Euangelicall and filiall obedience and what this is And in this filiall obedience doth that godly life principally consist which we now intreate of for it is nothing else but a feruent desire sound resolution and sincere indeuour to conforme our whole liues in all holy obedience to Gods will that we may please him in all things and glorifie his holy name by our Christian conuersation or if we would haue a more full description of it A godly life is the life of a Christian who being regenerate quickned and illuminated by Gods Spirit and ingrafted into Christ thereby and by a liuely faith assuring him of Gods loue and his owne saluation doth in loue and thankefulnesse towards him desire resolue and indeuour to please him in all things by doing his will reuealed in his Word and to glorifie his name by walking before him in the duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety with faith a pure heart and good conscience all the dayes of his life In which description we are to consider two things First the person that leadeth this godly life and secondly the actions in this life performed by him the person is first named and then described by his state and properties Concerning the first he that leadeth this life is the Christian onely For as for the life of Heathens and Pagans seeme it neuer so strict iust and glorious as of Socrates Aristides Cato Seneca and such like it is voyd of all true godlinesse and not accepted of God because it is ioyned with ignorance of the true God and Iesus Christ idolatry will-worship infidelitie and all kind of heathenish impiety §. Sect. 3 That the regenerate onely can lead a godly life Neither doe all that beare the name of Christians leade this godly life but they who are so not in name and profession onely but in deed and truth that is such only who are in that state and qualified with those properties which are set downe in the former description As first that he be regenerate for they that are vnregenerate cannot performe any dutie of a godly life which is pleasing and acceptable to God because being out of the Couenant their persons and consequently their actions are not accepted of him but are the slaues of Satan held captiue to doe his will the 2. Tim. 2. 26. Eph. 2. 1 3. children of wrath and enemies vnto God and his grace dead in trespasses and sins and therefore no more able to doe the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse then a dead man is able to doe the actions of the liuing In which respect the Apostle saith that we are not of our selues able to thinke a good 2. Cor. 3. 5. Phil. 2. 13. thought nor so much as to will that which is good because it is God onely which worketh in vs both the will and the deed Neither can we better our estate by our own strength for as the Prophet teacheth vs as well may the Aethiopian Ier. 13. 23. change his blacknesse and the Leopard his spots as we doe well that are accustomed to doe euill So that the regenerate man alone can lead a godly life or performe any dutie acceptable vnto God for first Abel was accepted and then his sacrifice and our persons must first be sanctified before they Gen. 4. 4. can please God by our works of holinesse For as in the ceremoniall law the touching of holy things did not sanctifie and clense the polluted person but the person polluted did make the holy things to become vncleane as Haggai speaketh so the workes which in themselues materially Hag. 2. 12 13. are good and holy doe not sanctifie the vnregenerate man that doth them but through the taint and pollution of his sinne they also are polluted and defiled Now vnto this regeneration two things are necessarily required First that we haue the Spirit of God dwelling in vs And secondly the sanctifying and sauing graces of the Spirit which alwayes doe accompany it for the Spirit of God is the Author of our regeneration which begetteth vs vnto God according to that of our Sauiour Except a man be borne of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God And that Iohn 3. 5. of the Apostle But ye are washed but ye are sanctified but yee are iustified in 1. Cor. 6. 11. 2. Cor. 3. 2 3. Tit. 3. 5. the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God It is the Spirit which mortifieth our sinnefull corruptions by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and so by destroying the kingdome of sinne raiseth vs out of the state of death and which giueth vnto vs the spirituall life of grace by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs resurrection which inableth vs to doe the actions of the liuing It is the Spirit that leadeth vs into all Iohn 16. 13. Rom. 8. 14. truth and hereby assureth vs that we are the sonnes of God seeing wee performe vnto him filiall obedience And therefore they who will walke in the wayes of godlinesse must haue this holy Spirit to bee their guide They who would outwardly mooue in the actions of piety and righteousnesse must haue this inward cause to stirre strengthen and support them for as well may a blinde man trauaile vncouth wayes without a leader or the body mooue without the soule as we goe in this Christian way or doe the workes of God vnlesse his holy Spirit be our guide and strength The which must mooue vs in the first place to labour earnestly to haue this Spirit dwelling in vs and to vse to this purpose that powerfull meanes of effectuall prayer seeing our heauenly Father hath promised to giue his holy Spirit to them that aske him as our Sauiour hath Luke 11. 13. taught
and that they know his voyce and are able to discerne it from the voyce of a stranger And as it makes vs strangers from God and the Couenant of grace so also from the life of God or the godly life which he commandeth as we see in the example of the Gentiles who hauing their vnderstanding darkned were alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that was in them because of the blindnesse of their heart And contrariwise thrusts vs headlong into all manner of sin for as the Apostle saith in the same place When the Gentiles through their ignorance were thus estranged frō the life of God they became past feeling and so gaue themselues ouer to lasciuiousnes Eph. 4. 18 19. to worke all vncleannesse with greedinesse So Hosea hauing set downe a Catalogue Hos 4. 1 6. of many grieuous sins which made the Iewes liable to Gods heauy iudgements doth after shew that the cause of all their sin and punishment was because they lacked the true knowledge of God in the land Whereof it also is that sinners of all kinds are included vnder the name of ignorant persons who know not God So the Psalmist Powre out thy wrath vpon Psal 79. 6. Ier 10. 25. the heathen that haue not knowne thee and vpon the kingdomes that haue not called vpon thy name And the Apostle saith that the Lord Iesus shall come with 2. Thes 1. 7 8. his mighty Angels in flaming fire to take vengeance on them that know not God And therfore if we would haue any portion in Gods sauing graces or part in heauenly glory if we would not be strangers from God and aliants from his Church if we would performe any duty of a godly life or not be caried headlong into all wickednesse if we would not be subiect to Gods iudgements and fearefull destruction nor exposed to the imprecations of the faithfull in this life nor to the vengeance of a terrible Iudge when Christ shall appeare at his second comming let vs not liue in ignorance but vse all our indeuour to attaine vnto the sauing knowledge of God and his will Neither let vs with ignorant people content our selues with our own good meanings and blind deuotions as our guides in godlines for then our seruice of God will be but will-worship and the carnall conceits of our owne braines and all our Religion being nothing else but bodily exercise and Esa 1. 12. 29. 13. ignorant superstition will be reiected of God as odious and abominable §. Sect. 4 That God is the chiefe Author and efficient cause of sauing knowledge Seeing therefore knowledge is so necessary vnto a godly life we will a little further insist vpon it shewing what it is and the nature and properties of it whereby we shall be the better able to labour after it in the vse of all good meanes and know to our comforts when we haue attained vnto it Sauing knowledge then is a grace of God wrought in vs by his holy Spirit which inlighteneth our minds to know those things which are reuealed of God and his will by his Word and workes that we may make an holy vse of it for the sanctifying of our hearts and direction of our liues in all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse Whereby we may perceiue that not nature but God onely is the Author and efficient cause of this knowledge and so much onely doe we know of God as we are taught of God According to that couenant of grace in which God promiseth that hee Ier. 31. 33 34. will put his Law in our inward parts and write it in our hearts and that wee shall know him from the least to the greatest So our Sauiour speaking of his Elect saith that they all shall be taught of God And againe No man knoweth the Iob. 6. 46. Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and he vnto whomsoeuer the Sonne will reueale him Neither is this knowledge a naturall habit of the minde but a grace of God which is not purchased by vs or our owne merits or therefore bestowed vpon vs rather then others because God foresaw that we would vse it when we had it better then they but Gods free gift promised in the couenant of grace The which he worketh Ioel 2. 28. in vs first by sending his Sonne his true essentiall wisedome who hath reuealed vnto vs his Fathers will and being the great Prophet of the Church hath made knowne vnto vs the counsels of God and all things necessary for our Saluation and that not onely nor chiefly to the wise of the world but to the weake and simple according to that of our Sauiour I thanke thee O Father Lord of heauen and earth because thou hast hid these Matth. 11. 25. things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them vnto babes And secondly his holy Spirit who was and is sent from the Father and Sonne to teach and lead vs into all truth as our Sauiour promised his Apostles And this is that holy anointing of which the Apostle speaketh whereby wee Iob. 16. 13. know all things and neede not that any teach vs but as this anointing teacheth vs of all things And that Collyrium or precious eye-salue which Christ Apoc. 3. 18. promiseth to giue to the Angell of the Church of the Laodiceans to inlighten their blind eyes in the knowledge of the truth So the Apostle telleth vs that we cannot see nor conceiue the things which appertaine to Gods Kingdome but God hath reuealed them vnto vs by his Spirit for the 1. Cor. 2. 10. Spirit searcheth all things euen the deepe things of God And hence it is that he is called the Spirit of wisedome reuelation and illumination and the Ephe. 1. 17. Iohn 16. 13. Spirit of truth because he is both light and truth himselfe and also inlighteneth our mindes which are naturally full of darkenesse and leadeth vs into all truth needefull for our saluation And therefore if we would haue this sauing knowledge we must goe to the chiefe Fountaine and Author of it and pray often and earnestly that he will for his Sonne and by his holy Spirit take away our naturall blindnesse and open our eyes that we may see the wonderfull things of his Law Psal 119. 8. §. Sect. 5 Of the instrumentall causes of sauing knowledge The instrumentall causes of this knowledge are first the Booke of nature secondly the Booke of Grace The Booke of nature for euen this light being sanctified by Gods Spirit is helpefull to the regenerate for the reuealing of God and his will vnto them And that both the eternall booke of nature which is the conscience and the externall Booke which is the great volume of the creatures For if there be in all men some reliques of the light of nature shining in their consciences which conuince them that there is a God and that this God is most
good powerfull iust bountifull a liberall rewarder of good and reuenger of euill according to the saying of the Apostle That which may be knowne of God is manifest in them for God hath shewed it vnto them then how much more clearely doth this light Rom. 1. 19. shine in the faithful when as it is renewed and made much brighter and clearer by Gods holy Spirit The Booke also of the creatures doth conuince all men that there is a God and that he is infinite in wisedome and power omnipresent and full of goodnesse according to that of the Apostle The inuisible things of him from the creation of the world are cleerely seene Rom. 1. 20. being vnderstood by the things that are made euen his eternall power and Godhead so that they are without excuse And therefore how much more may the faithfull profit by learning and reading this Booke who haue the holy Spirit for their Tutor which openeth their eyes that they may see Gods wisdome goodnesse and power shining in them and their hearts that meditating on them they may make an holy vse of this knowledge for the stirring of them vp to render vnto God prayse and thanksgiuing The Booke of grace also is either the internall writing of Gods Law and will in the heart and inward parts by the Spirit of God which the Lord promiseth to doe in the couenant of grace or the outward Booke of the Ier. 31. 34. holy Scriptures in which are contained all things necessary to be knowne of God and his will for the saluation of our soules And lastly Gods Ministers are his instruments whereby he reuealeth himselfe and his will vnto vs who doe expound vnto vs his written Word and vnfold the mysteries and difficulties thereof that we may vnderstand them And therefore if we would attaine vnto the knowledge of God and his will we are to vse the helpe of those instruments which he hath ordained for this purpose especially we are to desire that inward writing of the Spirit in our hearts and to make vse by reading and meditation of the Scriptures and by often hearing of them expounded and applied vnto vs by Gods faithfull Ministers CAP. VI. Of the obiect of sauing knowledge namely God himselfe and his attributes his Word and workes §. Sect. 1 That there is a God and how we may know it ANd these are the causes of sauing knowledge The obiect of it is God his will and workes Where first we are to know that there is a God who is to be worshipped and serued of vs. Vnto which we attaine by the light of nature which reuealeth this principle vnto vs and conuinceth all men of this truth by the Booke of the creatures in which the infinite wisedome power and goodnesse of the Creator shineth by the terrours of conscience following the commission of heynous sinnes though neuer so secret by the series and dependancy of causes one vpon another in the disquisition whereof there is no end till we come to the cause of causes who hauing his being of himselfe giueth being vnto all things by the goodly order which may be obserued in the creatures and the motion of the heauens and the celestiall bodies by the finall causes one thing being referred to another till wee come to the summum benum and supreme end of all things which is God by the accomplishment of Prophecies foretold long before their euents by the consent of all Nations in acknowledging this principle and finally by the iudgements and punishments executed vpon the wicked euen in this life by all which we come to the cleare vnderstanding of this truth that there is a God although in truth it is so euident in it selfe that no argument can be brought to illustrate it seeing nothing is so cleare and manifest §. Sect. 2 Who this God is and how he may be described Secondly we are to know what this God is or rather who he is For what he is in his owne essence he hath not reuealed in the Scriptures neither are we capeable of this knowledge nor any other creature seeing he is infinite and we finite But who he is he hath made knowne in his Word namely that he is Iehouah Elohim a Spirit infinite in all perfection one in nature and three in persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost By which description it appeareth that God is primum ens and the first being who hath his essence of himselfe and giueth being to all things as his name Iehouah signifieth that he is vncreated and a Spirit as our Sauiour John 4. 23. the wisedome of the Father hath made him knowne vnto vs not so much thereby shewing his essence what he is which is ineffable and incomprehensible as distinguishing him from all corporeall substances That he is but one because he is infinite in all perfection wisedome power presence and the rest and it is against the nature of infinitenesse to bee more then one because hee made and gouerneth all as supreme Monarch in which Monarchy there can be no copartners and because he is the cause of causes from which all things haue their being and vpon which they wholy depend §. Sect. 3 Of Gods attributes and how they are ascribed vnto God Thirdly we must know that this diuine essence is infinite in all perfection The which perfection is seene in his properties which are not properly in God who is all essence and no qualities for whatsoeuer is in God is God but according to the capacity of our shallow vnderstanding neither doe they differ from his essence nor one from another for God is one and of a most simple nature admitting no diuision into parts faculties or properties nor yet any essentiall distinction but onely in our comprehension or maner of vnderstanding So as we must not take his properties to be any parts of his essence seeing euery essentiall propertie is his whole essence and therefore howsoeuer distinguished in respect of his diuers manner of working towards the creatures yet not in themselues but are inseparable one from another In which respect the wisedome of God is the wise God the power of God the powerfull God and so in the rest And his wisedome power mercy goodnesse iustice truth are all one in their essence there being in God but one most simple and pure act vnto which diuers names are giuen in the Scriptures to shew vnto vs how it is diuersly exercised towards the creatures §. Sect. 4 Of Gods primary attributes and how they may be described Now these Attributes are of two sorts First primary Secondly secondary Primary are those which declare vnto vs the essence of God as he is absolutely in himselfe of which there being no similitude in the creatures they are attributed vnto God alone without communication to any other And in this number are Gods Simplicity Infinitenesse Eternity Immensity Immutability and Omnipresence all-sufficiency and omnipotency His simplicity is an essentiall attribute by which
to come earnest-pennies of euerlasting ioy and happinesse Nor doth this holy Spirit giue vs these graces in the first and least degrees onely but doth dayly nourish and increase them in vs from one degree to another till from infancy to child-hood and from thence to youth wee Psal 92. 14 15. doe at last grow vp vnto a perfect age in Christ bringing forth most Eph. 4. 13. fruit in our latter end For being assisted and comforted by the Spirit wee ouercome all difficulties and those duties which at the first seemed hard and almost impossible become familiar and pleasant that yoke of Christ which at first galled vs doth not hurt Matth. 11. 29. vs at all when we are anoynted with this oyle and his burthen which seemed intolerable hauing this Companion to helpe and assist vs becommeth light and easie yea sweet and delightfull And so on the other side when wee submit our selues to be guided and gouerned by the Spirit in the duties of a godly life and doe not grieue it by quenching the good motions which it suggesteth vnto vs we cause the good Spirit of God to take pleasure in his habitation and to delight in vs to doe vs good multiplying and increasing his graces in vs of which we haue brought forth such good fruits and redoubling our talents when as we haue rightly vsed them to our Masters aduantage according to that of our Sauiour To him that hath shall be giuen and he Matth. 25. 29. Luk. 8. 18. shall haue aboundance and from him that hath not shall be taken euen that which he seemeth to haue CAP. XLIIII Other singular priuiledges wherewith God in this life crowneth the godly which are the fruits and effects of his holy Spirit §. Sect. 1 That God sealeth vnto the godly the assurance of their adoption THe fifth priuiledge peculiar to the godly is the fruits and effects of the Spirit the first and chiefe whereof is this that the Spirit witnesseth and sealeth in their hearts and consciences the assurance of their adoption whereby of the children of wrath and firebands of hell they become the children of God and coheires with Iesus Christ of their heauenly Inheritance For as many Rom. 8. 14 15 16. as are led by the Spirit they are the sonnes of God For ye haue not saith the Apostle receiued the spirit of bondage againe to feare but yee haue receiued the Spirit of adoption whereby wee cry Abba Father The Spirit it selfe beareth witnesse with our spirit that wee are the children of God And if children then heires heires of God and ioynt-heires with Christ And againe Because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into Gal. 4. 6. your hearts crying Abba Father So the Euangelist Iohn saith that as many as receiued Christ to them he gaue this priuiledge to become the sonnes of God Ioh. 1. 12. euen to them that beleeue on his name So that whosoeuer lay hold vpon Christ by a true and liuely faith and bring forth the fruits thereof in holinesse and newnesse of life thereby approuing themselues to be such as are led by the Spirit they haue this high and honourable priuiledge that they are the sonnes of God and coheires with Christ in his Kingdome of glory The which should be a most effectuall regument to perswade vs to flee all maner of sin that we may not grieue the holy Spirit of God whereby we are sealed vnto the day of Redemption and to Eph. 4. 30. leade a godly Christian life that wee may walke worthy this high calling approue our selues to be Gods children by resembling our 1. Cor. 9. 25. heauenly Father in holinesse and righteousnesse For if wee would thinke no paines too much in the seruice of an earthly King if thereby wee could be assured that he would adopt vs for his sonnes yea make vs heires apparant to his Crowne and Kingdome though corruptible and momentany how diligent should wee be in seruing and pleasing God who hath of his free grace assured all those that feare and serue him that they shall be his adopted sonnes and heires of his incorruptible and glorious Kingdome which shall haue no end seeing this Crowne bringeth no care with it but all security and such surpassing ioy and glory as neither the eye hath seene the eare heard nor the 1. Cor. 2. 9. heart of man can possibly conceiue §. Sect. 2 The second speciall priuiledge is spirituall illumination The second speciall priuiledge and fruit of the Spirit peculiar to the godly is that he openeth their eyes blinded with naturall ignorance Psal 119. 18. Matth. 11. 25. 1. Cor. 2. 14. so as they see the wonderfull things of Gods Law and inlighteneth their darke mindes with supernaturall spirituall and heauenly Wisdome and prudence so as they not onely conceiue of the high and hidden mysteries of Gods Kingdome which the wisest of the world that are not thus illuminated are not capable of but also in a sauing manner are able to bring all they know to vse for their spirituall direction in all the waies of godlinesse which will bring them to heauenly happinesse For it is the oyle of the Spirit wherewith our eyes being anointed doe see and know all things It is this comfortable 1. Ioh. 2. 20 27. Ioh. 14. 26. Schoole-master that teacheth vs all things as our Sauiour speaketh without whose instruction wee remaine ignorant of Gods will For as no man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of man which is in him 1. Cor. 2. 10 11. euen so the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God And whatsoeuer God maketh knowne vnto vs of his secret counsels he reueyleth it vnto vs by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deepe things Apoc. 3. 18. of God He is that spirituall eye-salue wherewith Christ anoynteth our eyes that wee may see It is he which by his secret whisperings as it were a voyce behinde vs teacheth vs the way of saluation saying Esa 31. 21. This is the way walke yee in it But yet this voyce is not heard of all but the faithfull onely whose eares God hath opened This heauenly Light shineth not to all in all places but onely in Goshen to the true Israel of God all others still remayning in a more then Egyptian darkenesse and to whomsoeuer it appeareth it teacheth them to denie Tit. 2. 11 12. vngodlinesse and worldly lusts to liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world This spirituall and diuine Schoole-master teacheth not all men but those that truely feare God according to that of the Psalmist The meeke will he guide in iudgement and the meeke will he teach Psal 25. 12. his way And againe What man is he that feareth the Lord him shall he teach in the way that he shall chuse And to such alone who medirate in Psal 117. 99
his holy and pure nature cannot sinne or doe any euill which is contrary vnto it And as well may we say that the glorified Saints who are crowned with ioy and happinesse haue lost all their liberty because they are so confirmed by supernaturall grace that they cannot sinne as that we are depriued of it because wee are restrained by Gods Word and holy Spirit from all manner of wickednesse or that a sonne hath lost his liberty when hee liueth according to his Fathers will that dearely loueth him and is freed from the gouernement of some base slaue who egged and thrust him on in all wicked courses which in the end would depriue him of his fathers loue and iustly disinherite him of his desired patrimony Yea let vs know that as sinne is the greatest bondage so the seruice of God is the greatest and best liberty when as we are stablished in all grace and goodnesse by his free Spirit Psal 51. 12. and submit our selues to be guided directed by it in all our wayes as the body by the soule For as the Apostle speaketh Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty Let vs know that as our Sauiour Christ came amongst vs 2. Cor. 3. 37. to take away the sinnes of the world both in respect of the guilt punishment and corruption so also as our Redeemer to free vs out of bondage and to purchase for vs perfect liberty which is that being deliuered out of Luk. 1. 74 75. the hands of all our spirituall enemies wee should worship and serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse before him without feare all the dayes of our liues Of which liberty himselfe speaketh If the Sonne shall make ye free ye shall bee Ioh 6. 36. free indeed And therefore let vs not hearken to the flesh which abuseth and deludeth vs by giuing vnto things false names gracing the bondage of sin and thraldome vnto our owne lusts with the glorious title of liberty and disgracing our Christian liberty and freedome from sinne with the name of bondage but knowing that this was one speciall end of Christs comming and dying for vs that hee might destroy the workes of 1. Joh. 3. 8. the deuill and free vs out of the bondage of sinne let vs stand fast in Gal. 5. 1 13. the libertie wherewith Christ hath made vs free and not bee intangled againe with the yoke of bondage And seeing he hath called vs vnto liberty let vs not abuse it for an occasion to the flesh as the Apostle exhorteth §. Sect. 2 That a godly life doth not take away friendship and good society but rather increaseth it The fifth obiection against a godly life is that it taketh away all familiar friendship and good fellowship all merry meetings and ciuill conuersation from amongst men estranging their minds one from another and making them to delight more in solitarinesse then in company To which I answere that if by these glorious names of friendship good fellowship and ciuill conuersation bee meant the common commerce which worldly wicked men haue one with another in the workes of darkenesse and pleasures of sinne in gluttony and drunkennesse in May-games misrule and madde merriments in carnall reuellings Stage-playes Wakes and Morrice-dances in swaggering swearing backebiting and corrupt and filthy communication in dycing carding and spending both their time and states in vnlawfull gaming then is it no blemish or aspersion vnto a godly life but rather an high praise and commendation that it breaketh off such wicked and dangerous societies and reformeth such pernicious disorders as alwayes end in griefe and vexation But if hereby bee vnderstood true friendship and Christian familiarity and acquaintance lawfull meetings and ioyfull feasting with one another in the true feare of God then doth not a godly life abolish them but rather confirme and increase them among all true Christians For purging away the corruptions and rectifying the disorders of societies and conuersation and making them truely ciuill and religious it causeth them to be much more comfortable and profitable and consequently more frequently to bee affected by all those who taste the sweetnesse and benefit which commeth of them without any sting of sinne or after-tang of bitter griefe As wee see in the example of those Christians which liued in the first age of the Act. 2. 46. Primitiue Church who tooke exceeding ioy in the Communion of Saints in mutuall conuersing one with another and in their frequent meetings to eate and drinke and reioyce together And therefore vnlesse any will presuppose that sinne is the only bond of all good fellowship and that we cannot take pleasure in one anothers company vnlesse wee ioyne together to displease and dishonour God and that we can neuer be merry so long as he is with vs And vnlesse we account that onely to be ciuility when as we shew no dislike of sinne but soothe and bolster yea incourage and thrust on all that beare vs company in the wayes of wickednesse let vs not falsly affirme that a godly life is any hindrance to ciuill conuersation or that it depriueth vs of the mutuall ioy and comfort which wee might otherwise take in friendship and fellowship one with another §. Sect. 3 That a godly life doth not bring with it want and pouerty The sixth obiection is that godlinesse bringeth with it want and pouerty as appeareth first by common experience and innumerable examples of those who being most religious and conscionable in all their courses come as far short of other men in worldly wealth as they exceed and go before them in piety and honest dealing in so much as it is growne into a common yet wicked Prouerbe that plaine dealing is a Iewell but he that vseth it shall dye a begger And secondly it standeth with reason that it should bee so seeing piety letteth passe and refuseth many aduantages by which those that want it doe increase their wealth and improoue their worldly estate For their thoughts lesse runne vpon earthly things being taken vp with heauenly their indeuours are more faint and weake in pursuing them then theirs who haue set their hearts vpon them their time and strength is not so wholly imployed in getting and keeping riches They lose much which they might get because they will not vse vnlawfull meanes as fraud and deceit extortion and oppression because they will not lye and confirme it with an oath for their aduantage nor prophane the Sabbath by selling and buying and labouring in their callings nor keepe seruants vnder them who make no conscience of these things though they bee neuer so profitable nor follow the bent of the times and soothe euery one in their humour of whom they may make any aduantage And finally because they will not stoope to euery baite of profit which is cast before them vntill by due examination in the Court of Conscience it may appeare to bee honest and lawfull To which I answere first that
haue in the first place our hearts purged and purified from the filth of sinne For naturally our hearts are full of all vncleanenesse fountaines of maliciousnes and sinkes of sinne spiritually blind and foolish but vnto all impiety witty sharp-sighted and as the Prophet speaketh wicked and despightfull aboue all things auerse vnto all Ier. 17. 9. good and prone to all euill dead and dull to Gods seruice and full of life and vigour to the seruice of the diuell the world and our owne carnall concupiscence Finally they swarme with all noysome lusts as pride hypocrisie couetousnesse voluptuousnesse ambition malice enuie disdaine worldly loue and all manner of carnall corruption And therefore it is most necessary that our hearts be first cleansed and purged before wee can offer vnto God any acceptable seruice for what can issue out of these sinks and puddles of corruption but all manner of sinfull impiety and what streames of Gods seruice so pure in themselues which will not bee polluted if they runne thorow these dennes and ditches of all abominations Now this purging of the heart consisteth in the mortification of the flesh and its sinfull lusts and in spirituall renewing vnto holinesse and new obedience whereby we begin to hate all that euill which we formerly loued and to loue that good which we formerly hated to loath the tyranny of sinne and Satan vnto which with all willingnesse we subiected our selues in time past and to imbrace the true seruice of God in all sincerity which before we eyther neglected or performed after a formall cold and careles manner And finally haue our hearts and affections weaned from the loue of the world and earthly vanities vpon which in the dayes of our ignorance wee wholy doted as on our chiefe delight and treasure because we now see that they are vncertaine momentany and mutable worthlesse and vnprofitable yea to those that set their hearts vpon them hurtfull and pernicious And contrariwise adhere and cleaue vnto the Lord with all our soules as being all-sufficient and infinite in all perfection chusing him for our portion and inheritance our rocke and refuge and farre preferring him before all earthly treasures and delights And thus the Lord when he called Abraham out of Vr of the Chaldeans to bee his seruant withdraweth his heart from the loue of worldly things as being insufficient to preserue him from euill or to furnish him with any true good by promising that he himselfe would be his shield and exceeding great reward And thus he perswadeth him vnto vprightnesse of Gen. 15. 1. heart and to walke before him in holinesse of life because if hee would chuse him for his portion he should finde him almighty and all-sufficient and therefore able to preserue him from all danger and to relieue and Gen. 17. 1. supply all his wants though for his profession and practice of Gods true Religion he should be abandoned of all worldly helpes exposed to the malice of many and mighty enemies And thus Moses contemned the world and refusing the pleasures of Egypt and the honours of Pharaohs Court adhered vnto God and his pure Religion chusing rather to suffer Heb. 11. 25. affliction with his people then to inoy the pleasures of sinne for a season So Dauid being in his heart and affections like a weaned child and lothing the worlds brests from which he had formerly sucked the sweet milk of earthly Psal 131. 2. vanities with so much delight doth with all his heart and soule cleaue vnto the Lord chusing him for his portion and inheritance and esteeming him as his sole treasure The Lord saith he is the portion of mine inheritance Psal 16. 5 6. and of my cup thou maintainest my lot The lines are falne vnto me in pleasant places yea I haue a goodly heritage And when he was forsaken of all worldly helpes in the day of trouble hee was not like worldlings as a man forlorne and desperate but he cryed vnto the Lord and said Thou Psal 142. 5. 119. 57. art my refuge and my portion in the land of the liuing So elsewhere he professeth that all his ioy and comfort was in the Lord and the assurance of his loue the which was better and greater then was incident to worldlings in all their posterity There be many saith he that say Who will shew Psal 4. 5 6 7. vs any good Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and their wine increased And thus the Church in the Lamentation was not in her greatest misery left hopelesse and helpelesse but cleauing to the Lord with her heart shee cryeth out The Lord is my portion saith my soule therefore Lam. 3. 24. will I hope in him §. Sect. 6 Of the causes of the hearts purity And these are the things wherein this purity of heart doth consist The principall efficient which worketh it in vs is the whole Trinity the Father Sonne and holy Spirit God the Father beginneth this sanctification and holinesse in our hearts by taking away their hardnesse and making them soft and tender and by giuing vnto vs his Spirit to purify them from the filth of corruption and to quicken them in the life of grace according to that promise I will giue them one heart and I will put a new spirit Ezech. 11. 19. 36. 26. within you and I will take the stony heart out of their bodies and will giue them an heart of flesh And againe After those daies saith the Lord I will put my Ier. 31. 33. Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts And therefore if we would haue this grace we must with the Apostle haue our recourse to God praying for our selues as he did for the Thessalonians The very God of peace sanctifie you wholy and I pray God your whole spirit and soule and 1. Thes 5. 23. body be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ God the Sonne purifieth our hearts by shedding his precious blood that it might be a Lauer of regeneration wherein our polluted hearts might be cleansed For so deepely are they engrayned in the skarlet dye of sinne that nothing else will take away their spots and staines and bring them vnto snowy whitenesse It is onely his Crosse that crucifieth these carnall corruptions and the vertue of his death that killeth and mortifieth sin in vs. And this is that Fountaine which the Lord promiseth should be opened Zach. 13. 1. to the house of Dauid and Hierusalem for sinne and for vncleanenesse in which if our hearts be not washed they will remaine in their naturall filthinesse God the holy Ghost purifieth our hearts by vniting them to Christ by dipping and washing them in this Fountaine of his blood and so maketh Ioh. 3. 5. the death and merits of our Sauiour which are sufficient
praised of men and not to bee approoued of God It maketh our prayers vnacceptable to God for if we regard wickednesse in our hearts the Lord will not heare vs. It polluteth all Psal 66. 18. our actions as the corrupted fountaine polluteth all the streames that issue from it and maketh all the creatures to become vncleane for vnto them Tit. 1. 15. that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their minde and conscience is defiled Finally it prophaneth all our vowes of holinesse and maketh all our desires resolutions and indeuours to leade a godly life vnsettled fickle and vnconstant like vnto the burning of an ague which proceedeth not from naturall heate but from distemper and therefore endeth in vnnaturall coldnesse the harbinger of death For these flushings and flashings of deuotion are not caused with that kindly heate of diuine loue but with the scorching fire of blinde and distempred zeale kindled with selfe-loue and worldly respects and therefore last no longer then they last Whereof it is that the righteousnesse which is grounded on it is like a goodly house without a foundation which falleth to the ground when the tempest of tryall ariseth like the Cake of which the Prophet Hos 7. 8. 6. 4. speaketh which though it may seeme outwardly scorched and more then enough yet is it not halfe baked and therefore heauy and not to be disgested by Gods stomake and as the morning dew or cloud which vanisheth away and like the blade springing from the seede sowne in stony ground which for want of earth and moisture withereth when the sunne of affliction and persecution riseth §. Sect. 4 The second meanes of a pure heart is a liuely faith And these are the arguments which may mooue vs to esteeme and seeke after a pure heart and to hate and auoide the contrary Now when our Act. 15. 9. hearts are inflamed with the loue of it the meanes to obtaine it is a liuely and iustifying faith which purifieth the heart as the Apostle speaketh not by any vertue that is in it selfe but by applying vnto vs the blood of Christ which alone is sufficient to purge our hearts from all corruption and to kill and crucifie the flesh with the lusts thereof And therefore seeing so long as wee continue in infidelitie our hearts will also cintinue in their impurity this must make vs labour to come out of this estate and to vse to this purpose all good meanes whereby this faith may bee begunne and increased in vs. Secondly let vs wash them in the teares of vnfained repentance bewailing those sinnes in which formerly wee delighted and hating those corruptions which in time past we loued And because we cannot at once purge the deepe sinke of our polluted hearts from all their filthinesse therefore wee must make it our daily worke and doe it by degrees And seeing we cannot in one assault ouercome these cursed Canaanites we must continually make warre against them and cast them out one after another as God by his Spirit shall inable vs. Especially let vs not out of feare and cowardize suffer the sonnes of Anakim our great and Gyant-like corruptions fortifie themselues in the castle of our hearts nor let those Agags which haue ruled and raigned most in vs liue out of any carnall respects but let vs euen at the first strike at these maine rootes which being cut off and plucked vp many of the branches will die for want of that sap of bitternesse which they sucked from them and let vs driue out these master Bees and whole swarmes of carnall lusts will issue after them §. Sect. 5 Of the meanes to preserue the purity of our hearts Now when our hearts are thus purified our next care must bee to preserue them in this purity and cleannesse for as the cleanest house will gather soyle if it bee not sometime swept and the brightest armour and weapons are apt to take rust if they be not often scowred and oyled so much more will our hearts remooue to their naturall vncleannesse and euen rust againe in their corruptions if wee once onely take paines to clense them and afterwards be carelesse to maintaine them in their puritie First therefore we must keepe a narrow watch ouer our hearts and as the Wiseman exhorteth aboue all obseruations obserue them that they bee Pro. 4. 23. not carried away from God with loose wandrings and so Dina-like be defiled with carnall and worldly lusts For these spirituall enemies are conquered but not quite killed they are beaten and expelled as it were out of this city but not quite banished out of our coasts For they lye lurking in secret corners and in ambushment and no sooner doe we neglect our watch and leaue the gate of our hearts vngarded but presently they take the aduantage and entring into them in whole troopes they surprize them at vnawares And therefore it behooueth vs to keepe daily our watch strong and to nourish and preserue the garrison of Gods graces in vs that they may either bee discouered and defeated before they approach or be repelled and beaten backe in their first assaults For if with loose Christians we neglect this watch and gard and let our hearts roue after worldly lusts and suffer them at pleasure to ryot in them if we keepe them vnder no gouernment but suffer them like masterlesse men to wander at their pleasure we shall neuer reserue them for Gods vse nor fit them for his seruice But like loose vagrants vnaccustomed to worke it will be death vnto them to take any constant paines saue onely by fits and starts and when we would settle them to prayer hearing reading and meditation with such like holy exercises they will by no meanes bee kept in vnlesse they be held strictly in their bounds by the strong chaine of some sharpe afflictions but euery hand-while they will start aside and according to their accustomed course wander abroad after worldly vanities Whereas if we keepe a carefull watch ouer our hearts we shall keepe them from wandring away from God or when they begin to stray after the pleasures of sinne and worldly vanities we shall checke them in their course and bring them backe vnto Gods seruice We shall be still in readinesse to repell and beate backe the tentations of Satan and to keepe out worldly and carnall lusts from entring at all and so preserue our hearts in their purity from their defilements or if they haue entred at vnawares they shall not haue time to fortifie themselues but being like secret traytors obserued and as it were taken in the watch we will examine them and finding out their treason and that they are come in to defile our hearts and to betray vs to our spirituall enemies we will kill and crucifie them and that pollution which they haue left behind wee will presently purge away by renewing our faith and repentance And thus by this carefull watch we shall either be
corrupted and disabled cannot be a sufficient ground of a godly life till after our regeneration it be renewed and restored in some measure vnto that integrity and perfection which it had in our first creation And this we call good conscience which is a maine foundation of godlinesse guiding and inabling vs to the performance of all good duties which God requireth In speaking whereof we will first shew what it is and then the causes of it the effects and fruits which spring from it the properties and signes whereby wee may know it and the meanes by which we may obtaine it if it bee wanting or preserue and keepe it if we already haue it Concerning the first A good conscience is that which being renewed by Gods Spirit and a liuely faith applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and obedience doth speake peace and truly testifie vnto vs according to the Scriptures that we are redeemed out of the hands of all our enemies reconciled vnto God iustified sanctified and shall perseuere in grace vnto saluation and that all our actions are warranted by the Word and accepted of God in Iesus Christ though in themselues imperfect whereby we are comforted in all things made cheerefull and diligent in Gods seruice and willing to doe all things which may be pleasing vnto him The causes of a good conscience are diuers The principall efficient is God the Father Sonne and holy Spirit The Father bestoweth this gift vpon vs who as in the beginning he first created and placed it in vs as an vncorrupted Iudge and vnpartiall witnesse betweene him and vs so it is he alone that doth renew and repaire the ruines thereof contracted through the fall of our first parents by which together with all other faculties conscience was corrupted and either so deadded seared and benummed that it had no sense and feeling at all or when it awakened out of this deadly swowne did nothing but accuse and terrifie vs or vniustly excuse and incourage vs in our sinfull courses by presenting vnto vs false comforts §. Sect. 2 Of the meritorious cause of a good conscience The meritorious cause of it is God the Sonne and our Sauiour Iesus Christ who satisfying Gods iustice and appeasing his wrath by his death and obedience freed vs from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes reconciled vs vnto God and made our peace with him vpon which followeth peace of conscience and freedome from the accusations and terrours of it For when by the Law of God or light of nature it is set a-worke to Rom. 8. 1 33 34. affright and disquiet vs in regard of our sinnes then shewing our pardon sealed by the blood of Christ it is calmed and quieted hauing nothing to lay to our charge which Christ our surety hath not satisfied for vs. Whereof it is that our Sauiour was prophetically named The Prince of peace and prefigured vnder the type of Melchizedech because hee is not Esa 9. 6. onely the King of righteousnesse by whom we are iustified but also King of Heb. 7. 2. peace as the Apostle speaketh who making our peace with God did thereby also procure for vs peace of conscience For the Iudge hath no authority to condemne nor the witnesse to accuse nor the Iaylour to imprison nor the executioner to punish and torment when the supreme Soueraigne King of heauen and earth being satisfied by the sufferings of his Sonne hath sent vs his free pardon and wee haue pleaded it in the Court of conscience Yea rather the Iudge doth then acquit and absolue vs and the witnesse saith nothing against vs but as a messenger of good things doth testifie vnto vs this ioyfull tydings And hence it is that our Sauiour was no sooner borne vnto vs but the holy Angels were sent as Gods Heralds to proclaime this peace Glory bee vnto God in the highest and in earth peace good will towards men The which peace our Sauiour Luk. 2. 14. wrought as a Mediatour betweene God and vs by satisfying his iustice and offering himselfe as an all-sufficient sacrifice for the sinnes of all his elect So the Apostle saith It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell And hauing made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him Col. 1. 19 20. to reconcile all things to himselfe And else-where he affirmeth that we were without Christ being alients from the Common-wealth of Israel and strangers Eph. 2. v. 12. to 18. from the Couenant of promise hauing no hope and without God in the world but that now in Christ Iesus we who sometimes were farre off are made nigh by the blood of Christ For hee is our peace who hath made both one and hath broken downe the middle wall of partition betweene God and vs Hauing abolished in his flesh the enmity euen the Law of Commandements contained in ordinances to make in himselfe of twayne one new man so making peace And that he might reconcile both vnto God in one body by the crosse hauing slaine the enmity thereby And came and preached peace vnto vs both them which were a farre off and to them that were nigh And thus working our peace with God he brought also peace to our consciences when as by his blood hee had clensed them from the guilt and punishment of sinne for if the blood of Bulls and Goates sanctified to the outward purifying of the flesh how much Heb. 9. 13 14. more shall the blood of Christ who through his eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God Finally the conscience is renewed and sanctified by God the holy Ghost whilest he applieth Christ and all his benefits the vertue of his death and precious blood and maketh them effectuall for the purging of our consciences from all sinnefull corruption and spirituall defilements that wee may be inabled to performe pure and acceptable seruice vnto God §. Sect. 3 Of the instrumentall causes of a good conscience For the effecting whereof he vseth as his instruments the preaching of the Gospell and administration of the Sacraments and a liuely faith which by them both made effectuall by the inward operation of the Spirit is begotten and also confirmed and increased in vs. First the preaching of the Gospell is the instrument which the Spirit vseth whereby a good conscience is wrought in vs for when the Law preached and the curse threatned like a strange winde and tempest hath rent the mountaines and broken in pieces the rockes of our proud and hard hearts and as the earthquake and fire which Elias saw and felt hath terrified the conscience with the guilt of sinne and caused vs to hide our faces from Gods presence 1. King 19. 11 12 then the still voice of the Gospell causing these stormes to cease doth quiet and calme the conscience so as wee can without terrour yea with much ioy and comfort heare the voyce of God
that he shall neuer taste of the same stripes and reuerenceth him in respect of his power iustice grauity and authority ouer him though he expecteth nothing from them but all good So the Apostle Peter vseth this argument And if ye call on 1. Pet. 1. 17. the Father who without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans worke passe the time of your soiourning heere in feare And the Apostle Paul vseth Gods seuerity to the reiected Iewes as a reason to make vs to feare God and exhorteth vs to worke out our saluation with feare and trembling Rom 11. 28. Phil. 2. 12. Besides being partly flesh as well as Spirit and therefore full of infirmities and corruptions it is profitable for the vnregenerate part which is a slaue and not a sonne to be contained in dutie and restrained from sinne by the feare of Gods Iustice power and punishments For our loue being imperfect our feare cannot attaine in this life to filiall perfection but so farre foorth as we are vnregenerate is seruile and slauish And to this end are Gods iudgements denounced and punishments inflicted in the Heb. 3. 12 13. Psal 119. 120. 1. Cor. 10. 6 11. hearing and sight of the godly that they may feare to offend so iust and mighty a God and so escape these fearefull punishments But the chiefe grounds and causes of Gods feare in the hearts of his children are sauing knowledge and a liuely faith whereby being assured of Gods loue in Christ we loue him againe and are aboue all things afraid to doe any thing which is displeasing in his sight either in the omission of any duty or commission of any sinne which our gracious and louing Father either commandeth or forbiddeth §. Sect. 2 That this feare of God is commended vnto vs in the Scriptures and of the great profit of it And this is that feare of God which in the Scriptures is so much commended vnto vs and causeth those who in their hearts imbrace it to bee Pro. 28. 14. Deut. 6. 13. 10. 12. happy and blessed according to that of Salomon Blessed is the man that feareth alway which blessednesse that we may attaine vnto let vs labour after this feare and to this end let vs consider the excellencie and profit of it that our hearts being inflamed with the loue of it we may carefully vse all good meanes whereby we may obtaine it The excellency of it heerein appeareth in that it compriseth in it all other duties and is vsually put for the whole seruice of God wherein the whole man is to bee imployed according to that of Salomon Let vs heare the conclusion of the whole matter Eccles 12. 13. Feare God and keepe his Commandements for this is the whole of man Secondly it is called in this respect the head and beginning of wisedome that is Psal 111. 10. Pro. 1. 7. of all godlinesse and true Religion Thirdly it giueth grace and vertue vnto all other duties and maketh them acceptable in Gods sight For our whole conuersation must be a constant walking in Gods feare In it wee Act. 9. 31. must worship and serue God Serue the Lord with feare And in thy feare will I worship towards thine holy Temple By it our sanctification is perfected Ps 2. 11. 5. 7. 2. Cor. 7. 1. Phil. 2. 12. and our saluation wrought out and finished The profit of this feare of God is also inestimable for it restraineth vs from all vice and sinne according to that of Salomon A wise man feareth and departeth from euill and of Pro. 14. 16. 8. 13. Psal 4. 4. Gen. 39. 9. Dauid Stand in awe and sinne not As we see in the example of Ioseph who had his eares and heart stopped against the vnchaste allurements of his mistresse by the feare of God And of the Egyptian Midwiues who by the Exod. 1. 17 21. feare of God were kept from obeying the wicked edict of the King Whereas contrariwise the want of this feare is the cause of all disobedience and sinne as Abraham implyeth in his speech to Pharaoh and the Gen. 20. 11. Apostle plainely expresseth for hauing set downe a Catalogue of many sinnes he concludeth with this as the cause of all the rest There is no feare Rom. 3. 15. of God before their eyes Secondly it is a fountaine of life making vs to depart Pro. 14. 27. from the snares of death Thirdly it incites and inables vs to the performance of all good duties and therefore the Lord hauing deliuered his Law wisheth that the hearts of his people might be alwayes fraughted Deut. 5. 29. with his feare that thereby they might bee mooued to obey it and the Preacher in this respect compriseth in it alone all other vertues and duties Pro. 15. 33. Eccl. 12. 13. because it mooueth vs to the imbracing of them all Fourthly it deliuereth from all other feares and causeth them to giue place when it is present as the Sunne all other inferiour lights For if we feare God we will not feare the threatnings of men if we feare him that can cast body and soule into hell we neede not feare them that can onely and that by his Act. 5. 29. Luk. 12. 5. permission kill the body as our Sauiour implyeth Fifthly it maketh vs partakers of all good things promised in this life for hee that feareth the Psal 34. 9. Esa 66. 2. Lord wanteth nothing which is good but God is present with such to take notice of all their wants and his eares are open to heare their prayers Psal 145. 19. and grant their desires Finally it bringeth with it euerlasting blessednesse For blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that walketh in his wayes Psal 128. 1. 112. Pro. 28. 14. And happie is the man that feareth alway but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischiefe Which promises belong not alone to those that feare God but also to their posterity after them for their seede shall bee mighty Psal 112. 2. vpon earth and their generation blessed as the Psalmist speaketh §. Sect. 3 Of the meanes of obtaining this feare of God Now the meanes of attaining vnto this feare of God are diuers First to consider and meditate of Gods nature and attributes as of his omnisciency whereby he seeth all things euen the secret corners of our hearts of his omnipotency whereby he is able to reward vs if we feare him or punish vs if we neglect him of his Iustice whereby he impartially iudgeth all men without respect of persons of his truth which neuer fayleth in his promises or threatnings But especially of his mercy and goodnesse towards vs in Christ which will inflame our hearts with his loue and out of this loue cause vs to feare his displeasure as the greatest euill according to that of the Psalmist There is mercy or forgiuenesse with thee that thou mayest be feared The second
our selues in the fruition of his loue lest comming vpon the sudden in an houre that wee thinke not Mat. 24. 44. and taking vs vnprouided without the lampe of profession or the oyle of grace or the light of an holy conuersation either hunting after worldly profits and preferments by vnlawfull meanes or with immoderate desires or wallowing our selues in fleshly delights he shut vs out of dores and vtterly exclude vs from hauing any communion or interest with him in those heauenly ioyes CAP. II. Of some speciall duties of a godly life which are to bee performed in our daily exercise And first of the renewing of our repentance §. Sect. 1 Of the daily renewing of our couenant with God by the renewing of our faith and repentance BY the testimonies and reasons before alledged wee haue made it euident that it is not sufficient to serue God by fits and at sometimes neglecting his seruice and seruing the world and our owne lusts at another but that the daily exercise of a godly life in the continuall performance of all Christian duties is most profitable and necessary And now it remaineth that we giue some directions for the well-performing of this daily exercise To which end wee are to know that these duties wherein wee are daily to be exercised are of two sorts First generall which are not onely euery day necessarily to be in some degree and measure performed but also to be obserued in euery part of the day and in all the particular acts and exercises of it as occasion serueth The second more speciall and belonging more principally and properly vnto the diuers parts and seuerall occasions of euery day The former are more internall and spirituall betweene God and vs seruing to set our hearts in due frame and to make them constant and resolute to consecrate our selues wholly to Gods seruice and in all things to please him The latter more externall for the most part and visible which are the outward exercises proceeding from the other and as it were the pleasant fruits which spring from those inward and hidden rootes The first mayne duty which ought to be of euery Christian daily and duly performed is to confirme and in some sort to renew the Couenant of grace betweene God and vs in Iesus Christ wherein God for his part doth of his free grace promise the remission of all our sinnes his spirituall graces his fauour and reconciliation iustification and adoption his holy Spirit with all spirituall and temporall gifts and graces in this world and euerlasting life and saluation in the world to come in and for his Sonne Christ And we for our part doe promise and couenant that we will receiue and imbrace Christ with all these benefits by a liuely faith and bring foorth the fruits thereof in hearty repentance and new obedience The which Couenant is the maine ground and foundation of all the good things we receiue from God in this life and of all the ioy and comfort which wee take in them and of our future hopes and happinesse in the life to come And therefore as Citizens doe chiefly looke to the preseruation and establishment of the grand Charter that containeth all their priuiledges And as Souldiers in time of a siege doe euery day looke vnto their mayne fortifications and bulwarkes and if they be any way shattered and shaken in the last assaults doe with all care and diligence repaire and strengthen them So must wee who professe our selues Citizens of the spirituall Sion and heauenly Ierusalem vse all good meanes to ratifie this Charter which is the chiefe assurance of all the good which we either now can haue or heereafter expect and seeing in the time of our spirituall warfare Satan with his assistants seeke to shake and weaken this chiefe Tower of our strength with the engines and Canon shot of their tentations therefore we must daily haue a speciall eye to this our principall Bulwarke and vse continually all good meanes whereby the breaches may be repaired and strengthened against the next assault And howsoeuer we are after a more principall manner to renew and confirme our Couenant with God at set and solemne times as generally before wee come to the Lords Table and specially in the time of thanksgiuing for some singular and extraordinary benefits or of extraordinary humiliation in respect of some sinnes into which after our conuersion we haue relapsed or some grieuous afflictions from which wee desire to be deliuered or some dangerous sicknesse the vsuall fore-runner of death and Iudgement as wee shall more fully shew heereafter yet seeing wee must daily and hourely liue by faith and seeing faith hath no other ground to rest vpon for the applying and appropriating of any of Gods benefits but the Couenant of grace which hee hath made with vs the which though on Gods part it be more immooueable then the rockes Esa 54. 10. and mountaines yet is often shaken in respect of our weake apprehension euen as a rocke may seeme to mooue when it is lightly touched with a trembling hand a mountaine to shake when as it is beheld with a weak and quiuering eye who seeth not how necessary it is to vse daily all good meanes whereby wee may make this couenant which is so strong in it selfe to be also strong vnto vs and a firme foundation whereupon we may build our ioy and comfort §. Sect. 2 Of the daily renewing of our repentance First by recalling our sinnes to remembrance And secondly by humbling our selues before God in the sight and sense of them Now the principall meanes of renewing and confirming this couenant of grace is daily to renew the condition on our part which is a liuely faith approued by the fruits of it in vnfained repentance The which latter because it is the infallible signe and touch stone of the former and the outward and sensible fruit which assureth vs of the hidden roote that it liueth and groweth I will in the first place speake of our daily exercise in renewing of our repentance vnto which is required first that we call to our remembrance our former sinnes together with the cursed roote of originall corruption from which they spring but especially the sinnes frailties and falls which haue ouertaken vs since the last time that wee performed this exercise to which purpose it behoueth vs to keepe a strict and narrow watch ouer all our thoughts words and workes that these spirituall enemies of our soules may not slily passe by or secretly lurke in vs vnespied and consequently vnrepented of and also to take speciall marke of them that they doe not slip out of our minde and memory For which end we must looke our selues often in the glasse of Gods Law examine our liues by this rule that so we may take notice of our spirituall spots and deformities of our errours and auersenes to good pronenesse to euill and so bring them into the Court of conscience that
being thereby in the presence of God our supreme Iudge accused condemned our hearts may bee smitten with godly sorrow in the sight and sence of them and affected with a loathing and mislike of our former euill proceedings according to the practice of the faithfull foretold by the Prophet Then Ezech. 36. 31. shall ye saith he remember your former euill wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selues in your owne sight for your iniquities and for your abominations The neglect of which duty is reproued and condemned in the people of the Iewes I hearkened and heard but they spake not aright Ier. 8. 6. no man repented him of his wickednesse saying What haue I done euery one turned to his course as the Horse rusheth into the battell Secondly Humiliation is here also required in which diuers things ought to concurre first when we haue called our sinnes to our remembrance and set them in order before vs we must in the sight and sence of them haue melting relenting broken and contrite hearts and spirits which will truely mourne with bitter griefe because by our sinnes wee haue displeased so gracious and good a God who hath multiplied vpon vs so innumerable benefits and blessings both in temporall and spirituall things especially in giuing his only Sonne to the death for vs when as we were strangers and enemies vnto him Vpon which consideration we must looking vpon him whom wee Zach. 10. 12. haue pearced mourne for him as a man mourneth for his onely sonne and be in bitternesse for him as one that is in bitternesse for his first borne We must not slight ouer our sorrow but labour with Peter to weepe bitterly and Mat. 26 75. 1. Sam. 7. 6. with the Israelites to powre forth our melting soules before God like water drawne out of a well and finally with Dauid we must labour to bring our mourning for sinne into daily practice Euery night saith hee Psal 6. 6. Lam. 2. 18 19. make I my bedde to swimme and I water my couch with my teares And if through the hardnesse of our hearts we cannot thus sorrow for our sinnes wee must bee grieued because we can be no more grieued and lament the hardnesse of our hearts because we can no more hartily bewaile them Which if it be vnfained then will it moue vs to vse carefully the meanes whereby our griefe for sinne may bee increased as to meditate on the innumerable multitude and the grieuous hainousnesse of our sins the manifold imperfections and corruptions of our best actions the maiesty power and greatnesse the infinite goodnesse and graciousnesse of God towards vs against whom we haue committed them our owne basenesse and vilenesse who haue prouoked to wrath so infinite a maiesty the small and contemptible inducements which haue allured and inticed vs to offend so mercifull a Father euen the base baites of worldly vanities our continuing in these sinnes without repentance notwithstanding that the Lord hath giuen vs so manifold and effectuall meanes of reformation and amendment as the preaching of the Gospell admonitions instructions reprehensions the good motions of his Spirit checking vs for our sinnes and inciting vs to holy duties his promises alluring vs to serue him his threatnings terrifying vs that we may not offend him his mercies and benefits incouraging vs to all good his chastisements and fatherly corrections discouraging and stopping vs in our euill courses notwithstanding all which helpes and meanes we haue impenitently continued in our sinnes without any reformation our dishonouring of God hereby who hath beene so gracious and bountifull vnto vs and abusing of his mercies patience and long suffering which should haue led vs to Rom. 2. 5. repentance our pearcings wounding and as it were crucifying afresh the Lord of life our blessed Sauiour and Redeemer and our vexing and greeuing of the good Spirit of God whereby wee are sanctified by Ephe. 4. 30. 1. Thes 5. 19. quenching the good motions which he hath suggested vnto vs and by dulling and deadding his gifts and graces in vs. Secondly we must bee much displeased with our selues because we haue so many waies displeased God by our sinnes and be inflamed with a godly anger against our flesh and sinful lusts which haue caused vs to breake out into al these impieties the which must shew it selfe in our readinesse to be reuenged of them by vsing all good meanes whereby they may be mortified and crucified Thirdly we must haue our hearts affected with confusion and astonishment and our faces filled and discoloured with shame and blushing that we haue thus many waies shewed our selues so vnkinde and vngratefull to so good a God and when we see that God remembreth his couenant to establish and make it good to such vnworthy wretches we with the Church of the Iewes repenting of our sinnes must remember our former Ezech. 16. 61. Ier. 6. 15. wicked waies and be ashamed and confounded in the fight and sence of our vnworthinesse Finally we must in the former considerations cast away all pride carnall loue and selfe-conceitednesse of our owne worth and excellencie and be humbled and cast downe in the apprehension and feeling of our owne basenesse and vilenesse confessing that we are but dust and ashes Gen. 18. 27. Psal 22. 6. Iob 17. 41. Iob 42. 6. Psal 51. 17. with Dauid that we are wormes and no men and saying with Iob vnto corruption Thou art my father and to the worme Thou art my mother and my sister yea with him we must abhorre our selues and vnfainedly repent in dust and ashes The fruits of which humiliation we shall finde inestimable For we shall hereby offer vnto God a sacrifice which he most delighteth in and make him hereby propitious and gracious yea to dwell with vs and to replenish and cheare our hearts with our sweete communion and fellowship with him in the gracious comforts of his holy Spirit according to that of the Psalmist The Lord is nigh vnto them that are of a broken heart and saueth Psal 34. 18. such as be of a contrite Spirit And the Lords owne speech by his Prophet Thus saith the high and lofty one that inhabiteth eternity whose name is Holy Esa 57. 15. 6. 2. I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to reuiue the spirit of the humble and the heart of contrite ones We shall bring our selues within the compasse of Christs call and interesse our selues vnto his gracious promises of easing vs of the vnsupportable burthen of our sinnes and curing vs of all our spirituall sicknesses and sores of sinnes for he came to bee the Phisicion not of the whole but of the Mat. 11. 28. 9. 13. sicke and to call not those who haue no sence and feeling of their sinnes but such as labour and are heauie laden not the righteous in their owne opinion and
life §. Sect. 3 The second sort of meanes consist in the performance of diuers actions And vnto these meditations we are for the renewing of our faith to adde diuers actions as first we must daily renew our promises vnto God made in baptisme and bewayling our manifold frailties and imperfections whereby we haue often failed heerein we are to resolue and promise that if God will accept of vs and passe by our former infirmities we will with more intire affection renounce sinne Satan and all our spirituall enemies and consecrate our selues wholly to his worship seruice and with greater zeale and deuotion labour in the vse of all good meanes whereby we may attaine to more perfection Secondly wee must labour to finde and feele our hearts more and more inflamed with vnfained loue towards God in respect of his infinite goodnesse and absolute perfection in himselfe and graciousnesse towards vs shining in his vnspeakeable and innumerable blessings and benefits bestowed vpon vs which loue towards God will strengthen our faith in assurance of his loue towards vs seeing it is but a drop that distilleth from this fountaine and but a sparke that ariseth from this infinite flame Thirdly we must exercise our selues in the daily practice of religious duties as prayer meditation holy conferences and such like which will increase our communion and acquaintance with God and more and more assure vs of his fauour And finally we must resolue to take all good occasions of doing daily the workes of mercy and Christian charity towards our neighbours for Gods sake whereby our faith will get daily new assurance that seeing we are willing and desirous to glorifie God in all things by causing the light of our godly liues to shine before men hee will bee no lesse willing to glorifie vs before his Matth. 5. 16. 1. Sam. 2. 30. Saints and holy Angels in his heauenly Kingdome For these duties of piety and righteousnesse are the fruits which spring from the roote of faith the flames and heate which proceed from this fire the very breath whereby it liueth and the actions and motions wherein it is exercised and therefore if it bringeth not foorth these fruits it is but a barren tree and dead stocke a vselesse fire which being couered giueth no light or heate a dead carcase without breath an idle habite without vertue or vigour and for want of exercise languisheth and decayeth daily in strength whereas contrariwise if the strength thereof were vsed and seasonably imployed in holy and righteous actions it would like the strength of the body bee confirmed and redoubled by this daily exercise §. Sect. 4 The manifold benefits which would arise from the daily renewing of our faith But that we may be the better perswaded vnto this daily exercise of renewing our faith let vs consider more particularly the manifold and inestimable benefits which would thereby accrew vnto vs. For first we shall liue in couenant with God haue assured title and interest vnto all his promises without any intercession or intermission of our comfort and hope seeing God requireth of vs no other condition Secondly wee shall no longer liue the life of the flesh and corrupted nature but the life of faith Hab 2. 4. Mat. 4. 4. which is principally sustained by God and holdeth dependancie not on earthly things but chiefly on his Word and promise which can neuer faile and the life of Christ subiecting our selues in all things to the regiment and gouernment of his holy Spirit so as we may say with the Apostle I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in me and the life which I now liue in the Gal. 2. 20. flesh I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God who loued mee and gaue himselfe for me which life of grace certainely assureth vs of the life of glory Thirdly heereof it will follow that all our thoughts words and workes shall be voluntarily subiected to the good will and pleasure of God and being daily in couenant with God we shall by vertue of his Spirit assisting vs keepe all our faculties and functions senses and actions in couenant with Iob 31. 1. vs that they shall in all things obey him and doe nothing which is displeasing vnto him Fourthly by renewing our faith daily we shall with it renew all the sanctifying and sauing graces which issue from it and depend vpon it and by watring the roote giue vertue and vigour vnto all the branches and fruits which spring from it whereas contrariwise wee shall spend all our labour in vaine if neglecting faith we vse all diligence and indeuour to increase in loue patience hope or any other grace or to bring foorth plentifull fruits of them in a Christian conuersation and the workes of mercy and charity like those who take much paines in watring the boughes and branches of a tree and neuer take care to water the roote More especially if wee daily renew our faith wee shall heereby confirme our affiance and confidence in God in all things and at all times for when we firmely by faith apply vnto our vse the power wisedome goodnesse promises and prouidence of God and with strong imbracements vnite them vnto vs we may easily with all safety and security rest and rely vpon them We shall heereby also strengthen our hope which is nothing but an expectation of the things beleeued and according as our faith is strong or weake in apprehension of the promises so also is our hope which waiteth for their fruition Wee shall increase by it our loue towards God for the more and oftner we apprehend the diuine fire of his loue towards vs the more our cold hearts are thereby inflamed with the heate of it so that we returne vnto him loue for loue And our zeale of Gods glory there being no stronger argument to make vs in all things earnest to glorifie him then to be fully assured that he will glorifie vs. It will worke in vs and daily renew our patience when as we daily renew our assurance that all our afflictions are the chastizements of a louing Father and not the punishments of a seuere Iudge that they are stinted and measured out vnto vs both in respect of their quantity and continuance by a most wise prouidence which will not let them exceed either our strength or necessity that they are inflicted out of meere loue and are signes not of our reiection but adoption and saluation that they shall Rom. 8. 18. 2. Cor. 4. 17. haue a good issue and worke together for the best for the inriching of vs with spirituall grace and the furthering of our eternall glory It will increase our peace of conscience when as our assurance is daily renewed of our peace with God the remission of all our sinnes and victory ouer all the enemies of our saluation of our safety vnder his protection and that nothing shall be able to separate his loue from vs. It will daily replenish our
diligently heard the Word of God and applyed it vnto thy selfe for this end the threatnings of the Law for thy humiliation and the sweet and gracious promises of the Gospell assuring thee of the pardon of thy sinnes and of Gods loue and fauour that thou mightest loue God againe who hath so loued thee and forgiuen thee so great a debt and testifie this loue by bewailing thy sinnes whereby thou hast displeased so gracious a Father Hath Gods mercy patience and long-suffering drawne thee to repentance and hast thou beene offended with thy selfe because thou hast offended thy God who hath multiplied vpon thee so many testimonies of his loue Hast thou made right vse of Gods blessings and benefits to be made thereby more carefull to please him and of his chastisements and fatherly corrections to be made thereby more fearefull to offend him Hath thy sorrow in any good measure been sutable to thy sinnes and hast thou more bewailed thy sins then the punishment the guilt then the smart and in this respect chiefly because thou hast by them dishonoured thy God rather then for the miseries which they haue brought vpon thy selfe Hast thou bewailed all thy sinnes and those most of all whereunto thy corrupt nature is most inclined and not onely thy sinnes of grosse commission but also thy sinnes of omission and the wants and imperfections of thy best actions Hast thou been affected with Gods Iudgements and with those most of all which are spirituall and touch thee rather then thy sinfull flesh Hath the smart of thy sores been such that nothing would ease them but the balme of Gilead the blood of Christ applyed by faith and haue carnall sports rather increased then abated thy griefe Hast thou so washed thy selfe in the waters of repentance as that thou hast thereby been cleansed from thy Esa 1. 16. sinnes and hast thou being freed from sinne become the seruant of righteousnesse Hast thou been earnest in thy repentance and taken occasion from thy former negligence and vnprofitablenesse to redeeme thy lost time by redoubling thy diligence in Gods seruice Hast thou found plentifull fruits in thee worthy repentance and amendment of life And as thou hast increased in yeeres hast thou increased in fruitfulnesse bringing forth most in thine older age Hast thou found in thee those speciall fruits of care cleering indignation feare desire zeale and holy reuenge before spoken of §. Sect. 2 Of Confession Alas my soule how defectiue hast thou been in all these things Alas my God how should I without much shame and confusion of face looke vpon thee seeing when I come to pay that debt and duty which I owe thee my siluer is turned into drosse my medicine is become a poyson Esa 1. 22. my repentance which should be the salue for my other sinnes is so full of wants and imperfections that it selfe needeth to bee repented of and if this bath wherein I should wash my polluted selfe were not it selfe bathed and cleansed in a pured fountaine the precious blood of Iesus Christ so foule it is through the filth of my corruptions that it would but the more defile me and make me lothsome in thy sight It is true my God and I acknowledge it to thy glory that through thy grace I haue repented and doe desire to repent still more and more And that small measure which I haue receiued and which I returne vnto thee is not false and counterfet but in sincerity and truth But alas my Lord it is so maimed with imperfections and defiled with corruptions that it is vtterly vnworthy thine acceptance And seeing thou hast forbidden in thy Law that any sacrifices should be offered vnto thee which were maimed or vncleane how should I presume to offer this sacrifice of my sighes and teares which are so imperfect and defiled were it not that thou hast told me that the sacrifice wherein thou chiefly delightest is a broken heart and humble and contrite spirit And because thy perfection can indure no imperfection thou hast appoynted another sacrifice pure and perfect euen that which thy deare Sonne hath offered vnto thee vpon the Crosse to cleanse and couer the impurity and imperfection of mine that it may be acceptable in thy sight These waters of thy grace O my God were pure and perfect as they came from thee the Fountaine of all purity and perfection but alas they are now defiled by running thorow the polluted channell of my filthy heart But being againe cleansed by running thorow the pure Fountaine of my Sauiours blood they are restored to their purity and fit for thine acceptance From my selfe immediately I dare not offer vnto thee my repentance for it is wholly stained and defiled with my corruption and mingled with much impenitency carnall security and hardnesse of heart And though it be most imperfect yet haue I been too too slothfull in vsing any of those good meanes wherby I might attaine vnto more perfection or when I haue vsed them it hath been so formally and negligently that they haue had little efficacie to worke this grace in me Thy legall threatenings haue not humbled me thy Euangelicall promises haue little affected mee the good motions of thy Spirit haue been quenched in me thy blessings and benefits haue not allured me thy chastisements and corrections haue not drawne me but notwithstanding all these helpes I haue continued in my sinnes with much impenitency or laboured to come out of them with much weakenesse My sorrow for sinne hath been very small and ioyned with much hardnesse of heart my desires of amendment exceeding feeble and faint my resolutions weake and vnconstant and my actions and indeuours impotent and imperfect and when to will is present with me I finde no power to Rom. 7. performe that which is good so that I cannot doe the good I would nor leaue vndone the euill I would not §. Sect. 3 Of Complaint Alas my soule how farre hath thy carnall security preuailed with thee How hath it rocked thee in such a deepe slumber that thou hast little or no sense of thy sloth but when thou art asleepe dreamest that thou art waking How is thine heart hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne that it is scarce sensible of its owne hardnesse yea when thou dost discerne it how art thou hampred and fettered with the g●ues of thy corruption that thou hast neither power nor will to better thine estate Repentance is the meanes of curing thine infirmities and sicknesses of sinnes But thou fearest the medicine more then the disease and neglectest or formally vsest all good meanes whereby it might be obtained and applyed Thou thinkest no care or cost too much for the compassing of worldly vanities and thou canst in pursuing them keepe thy desires within no bounds but the more thou drinkest the more thou thirstest But how soone art thou tyred in working thy heart to sorrow for thy sinnes and how little of this doest thou thinke enough In
occurrent The which ioy far exceedeth all the ioyes of the world For they satisfy not but leaue the soule empty so that the ioy of one pleasure doth but stirre vp the appetite to hunger after another which if it should not be inioyed leaues nothing but sorrow behind whereas this as our Sauiour speaketh is a full ioy in the fruition of God partly in sense and feeling according Iohn 15. 11. to that of the Psalmist O taste and see that the Lord is good Psal 34. 8. and partly in the assurance of faith which maketh vs reioyce in expectation of full fruition Worldly ioy is short and momentany like the crackling of thornes vnder a pot which causeth a suddaine blaze as suddenly Eccles 7. 6. goeth out but the ioy of the Spirit is lasting and permanent and Iohn 16. 22. no man as our Sauiour saith can take it from vs. That consists in eating and drinking and the inioying of such company as are like our selues but this in the soules fruition of her beloued Spouse whose loue is Cant. 1. 2. better then wine seeing his fauours are so full of rauishing delight that the heart is not able to containe them as we see in the example of the Spouse in the Canticles who being brought by her Bridegroome into his banketing house was so filled that she euen surfeted of his delicacies which forced her to cry out Stay me with flaggons Comfort me with Cant. 2. 4 5. apples for I am sicke of loue Of which sweete and gracious entertainment of the faithfull soule the Psalmist also speaketh They shall bee abundantly Psal 36. 8. satisfied with the fatnesse of thy House and thou shat make them drinke of the riuer of thy pleasures Finally the ioy of worldlings accompanieth their prosperitie but when the euill day commeth it leaueth and forsaketh them and is turned into sorrow and griefe of heart but the godly reioyce euen in their tribulation affliction in their assurance of Gods loue and because they know that they shall worke together for their good these light and momentany afflictions causing vnto them a farre Rom. 5. 3. Rom. 8. 28. 2. Cor. 4. 17. Iam. 1. 2. most excellent and an eternall waight of glory They account it all ioy as the Apostle Iames speaketh when they fall into diuers tentations knowing that the tryall of their faith worketh patience And when they are persecuted for righteousnesse sake they being blessed in their sufferings reioyce Matth. 5 10 11 and are exceeding glad because their reward is great in heauen And thus the Apostle saith that the Thessalonions receiued the Word in much affliction 1. Thes 1. 6. and with ioy in the holy Ghost And that the Hebrewes tooke ioyfully the spoyling of their goods knowing themselues that they had in heauen a better and induring substance The which ioy is a supernaturall gift and fruit of the sanctifying Spirit which all cannot attaine vnto but the faithfull only and therefore the Apostle prayeth for the Romans that Rom. 15. 13. the God of hope would fil them with all ioy and peace in beleeuing that they might abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost It is a priuiledge wherin wicked men haue no portion but is peculiar to the godly in whom the Kingdome of God is begunne in this life which none inioy but they Matth. 6. 33. which seeke also his righteousnesse seeing it consisteth not onely in peace Rom. 14. 17. and ioy in the holy Ghost but also in righteousnesse as the Apostle speaketh and therefore seeing those things cannot bee separated which God hath conioyned we must labour after righteousnes if we would be partakers of this ioy vnto which if we doe attaine we shall assuredly be filled with it For if the Apostle reioyced in it as in his Crowne Phil. 4. 1. 1. Thes 19. 20. and ioy when he had beene a meanes of conuerting others and bringing them into the way of truth and righteousnesse and if the Apostle Iohn reioyced so greatly that he professeth he had no greater ioy in any outward Ioh. Epist 2 4. and Epist 3. 3 4. thing then when he saw his children walking in this way then what inestimable ioy must this needs cause vnto vs when our selues by walking in the way of holinesse and righteousnesse doe attaine vnto the assurance of our owne happinesse §. Sect. 5 The last speciall priuiledge is Christian liberty The last speciall priuiledge peculiar vnto the godly which the Spirit bringeth is Christian liberty whereby being freed out of the hands of all Luk. 1. 74. our spirituall enemies we serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse without feare and so attaine vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God seeing his seruice is perfect freedome and haue power and dominion ouer all the creatures so as wee may vse them to all purposes both for necessity and comfort hauing full right and interest in them by our adoption The which priuiledge also is a fruit of the Spirit according to that of the Apostle Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty And is deriued vnto 2. Cor. 3. 17. vs when as the holy Ghost by a liuely faith applyeth vnto vs the vertue and efficacy of Christ Iesus his death and satisfaction whereby this liberty was first purchased for vs in which respect our Sauiour also challengeth vnto himselfe this power and prerogatiue of setting vs at liberty as being our alone Redeemer who hath deliuered vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies If saith he the Sonne shall make you free you shal be free Ioh. 8. 36. indeed We were subiect to the wrath of God but our Sauiour hath freed Gal. 3. 13. vs from it and by satisfying his Iustice hath reconciled vs vnto him We were vnder the curse of the Law but hee hath freed vs by being made a curse for vs. Wee were the wretched slaues of Satan and in the state of death and condemnation but hee by his death hath destroyed him that had Heb. 2. 14 15. the power of death that is the deuill that he might deliuer them who through the feare of death were all their life time subiect to bondage Wee were seruants to the world and the vassals of the earthly Mammon but Christ hath ouercome the world both for himselfe and all his Elect Ioh. 16. 33. and so set vs at liberty out of this thraldome Wee were the seruants of sinne which made vs slaues to all other enemies and obeyed it in the wicked lusts thereof for as our Sauiour saith Hee that committeth sinne Joh. 8. 34. is the seruant of sinne For his seruants wee are whom wee obey whether of sinne vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnesse And though with the Rom. 6. 16. Iewes wee were ready to boast of our freedome and as it were out of our store to promise liberty vnto
others like those of whom the Apostle Peter speaketh yet were wee like them our selues seruants of 2. Pet. 2. 19. corruption For of whom a man is ouercome of the same hee is brought in bondage Finally wee were slaues to our owne sinfull lusts vile affections and turbulent passions as wrath pride ambition couetousnesse and voluptuousnesse which were the most cruell Lords that euer tyrannized ouer any seeing they kept such a narrow watch ouer vs that they gaue vs not so much as a breathing time of liberty but forced vs to drudge night and day not only in the sight of others but when wee were retyred into the most secret corners because they held in miserable bondage our soules as well as our bodies our iudgements wills and affections so as wee liked and pleased our selues in our thraldome and had no desire to come out of it But our Sauiour hath freed vs from these enemies also by mortifying our sinnes and crucifying our corruptions by vertue of his death applyed vnto vs by his holy Spirit And lastly we had no right to any of the creatures hauing by sinne lost our dominion ouer them but our Sauiour and his holy Spirit by giuing vs the liberties and priuiledges of sonnes hath restored vs to our right so that they are all become good and pure vnto vs being sanctified by the Word and 1. Tim. 4. 4 5. Tit. 1. 15. prayer But this royall priuiledge of Christian liberty belongeth not to all but onely to the faithfull who desire to serue and please God in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse Neither can wee euer attaine vnto any assurance that wee haue right and title vnto it till wee feele it effectuall in vs for our sanctification For all those who are by Christ freed from Gods wrath and reconciled vnto him haue heereby a desire wrought in them to serue and please him and will not willingly for any worldly hire prouoke his displeasure They that are freed from the curse of the Law by the Crosse of Christ will crucifie their owne lusts and not runne such a course as will againe make them accursed They that are deliuered out of the hands of their spirituall enemies doe worship and serue Luk. 1. 74. their Lord and Sauiour in holinesse and righteousnesse and being redeemed Tit. 2. 14. that they may be his peculiar people they become zealous of good workes They that are freed from sinne in respect of the guilt and punishment are also in some measure freed from the corruption of it so as it doeth not Rom. 6. 12. raigne and rule in their mortall bodies that they should obey it in the lusts thereof but being freed from sinne they become the seruants of righteousnesse The Vers 19. which should bee a forcible argument to mooue vs vnto the duties of a godly life seeing heereby wee may be assured of this royall priuiledge of Christian liberty according to that of our Sauiour If yee continue in my Ioh. 8. 31 32. Word then are ye my Disciples indeed and ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Whereas if wee neglect them and still liue in sinne yeelding obedience vnto our owne carnall lusts wee lose the benefit and comfort of this priuiledge and haue iust cause to feare that as yet wee remaine in that miserable bondage of the deuill the world and our owne lusts CAP. XLV Of foure other mayne priuiledges wherewith God crowneth the godly both in this life and the life to come §. Sect. 1 The sixth mayne priuiledge is that God bestoweth vpon the godly the spirit of prayer and supplication THe sixth mayne priuiledge which God vouchsafeth to the godly is that he bestoweth vpon them the Spirit of prayer Zach. 12. 10. Rom. 8. 26 27. and supplication and both heareth and granteth all the suites which they make vnto him For hee powreth vpon the house of Dauid and the inhabitants of Ierusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication as he hath promised and whereas naturally we know not how to pray nor what to pray for as we ought the Spirit helpeth our infirmities and maketh intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be vttered And hee that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the minde of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God Yea he not onely by his Spirit teacheth vs how to pray and what to aske but hath also bound himselfe by his gracious and free promises that hee will heare all our suites made in the name of his Sonne and indited by his Spirit according to that of our Sauiour Aske and you shall haue seeke and you shall Mat. 7 7. Iob. 16. 23. 1. Ioh. 5. 14 15. Psal 50. 15. finde knocke and it shall bee opened vnto you And againe Verily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my Name hee will giue it you Now what an high and holy priuiledge is this to haue alwayes free accesse vnto God in all our wants and necessities who is alone able to helpe vs and will also doe it because of his promise To haue a deare and able friend into whose bosome wee may with boldnesse and comfort powre out all our complaints who is ready to pitty and ease vs To haue a key alwayes in our keeping which through Christ will open vnto vs the treasury of Gods graces where wee may relieue our wants and store our selues with all things needfull for his glory and our owne spirituall good and euerlasting saluation Finally to conuerse with the supreme and glorious King of heauen and earth in a familiar manner and to talke with him as a man talketh with his friend For as the Lord speaketh to the Israelites What nation is so great who hath God so nigh vnto them as the Lord Deut. 4. 7. our God is in all things that we call vpon him for But this priuiledge is peculiar vnto them who serue the Lord by obseruing his will according to that of our Sauiour If ye abide in me and my words abide in you aske what Iob. 15. 7. you will and it shall be done vnto you and not vnto wicked men who turne Pro. 15. 8. away their eare from hearing the Law and neglect the duties of Gods seruice whose sacrifices and prayers are abominable as before I haue shewed 28. 9. and shall not bee heard or granted of God as hee telleth the rebellious Iewes When you spread foorth your hands I will hide mine eyes from you yea Psa 1. 15. Pro. 1. 28. Zach. 7. 11 12 13. when you make many prayers I will not heare And therefore let this also effectually mooue vs to serue the Lord in the duties of a godly life that wee may be partakers of this rich and royall priuiledge hauing not onely the Spirit of God as our Counseller to draw all our suites and Petitions in such manner and forme as
perfection yet they suppose that there is no necessity of seruing God so strictly and sincerely but that all is spoken for forme and fashion sake otherwise they who are so earnest in perswading vs would leade vs the way by their good example For the remouing of which impediment we are to know that howsoeuer Ministers excell others in the common gifts of the Spirit as knowledge learning and such like yet the sauing graces of God are free not tyed to any calling or profession more then others And therefore seeing in this regard the learned hath no priuiledge aboue the vnlearned the Doctor aboue the Artificer or the Pharisee before the Fisherman it is no great maruaile if the greatest Rabbins in the world bee as small proficients in Matth. 11. 25. 1. Cor. 1. 26. Matth. 23. 2 3. grace and in the practice of holy Christian duties as those which they scorne for their ignorance and simplicity But yet so long as they sit in Moses chayre wee must not onely heare them but doe as they say though not as they doe seeing their speeches are not grounded vpon the authority of their persons or actions but vpon the Word of God vnto which wee owe simple and absolute obedience whosoeuer bee the Messenger that bringeth it vnto vs. But of this I haue written more largely in the first part of my Warfare vnto which I referre the Reader who desireth in this point more full satisfaction §. Sect. 6 Of the publike impediments which respect the people The common impediments of a godly life which respect the people are also diuers As first when they content themselues with a forme of profession and Religion without any desire to finde in themselues the power efficacy and fruite thereof for the sanctifying of their hearts and reforming of their liues As when they professe Religion because the State establisheth it goe to the Church and heare the Word because the Law requireth it pray in the Congregation and goe to the Communion because it is the custome of the Countrey and other of their neighbours doe it as well as they But this is to rest in a shadow without a substance and in a forme of godlinesse but denying the power thereof Which if wee would auoid our care must 2. Tim. 3. 5. bee to serue God in obedience to his Commandements to worship him in Spirit and truth and to ioyne the inward seruice of the heart and soule with the ourward seruice of the body and finally that in all these duties wee propound vnto our selues right ends namely to profit by them in knowledge faith and the practice of all holy duties of a godly life that we may glorify God in the further assurance of our saluation The second impediment respecting The second impediment the people is the neglect and contempt of the Preaching of Gods Word as a thing vnnecessary for their saluation For howsoeuer they suppose that there is some vse of it for their conuersion vnto God the inlightening of their mindes with some knowledge of the truth and the working of faith in some first degrees yet they hold it a needelesse taske to bee continually tyed to these religious exercises and that it is sufficient to vse them sometimes at their best leysure Which impediment if wee would shun wee must remember that as the Word and the ministery thereof is the immortall seede which begetteth vs to God so it is the spirituall food of our Ephe. 4. 11 12 13. soules whereby they must bee continually nourished that the graces of the Spirit begun may bee increased and confirmed in vs vntill we come to a perfect age in Iesus Christ That it is the sword of the Spirit whereof we haue daily vse in our spiritual warfare which lasteth as long as our liues last for the repelling of our enemies the ouercomming of all their dangerous temptations That it is the only true light which guideth vs in all our waies whereof if through negligence wee depriue our selues we shall walke in darkenesse and sit in the shaddow of death That it is our counsellor in all our doubts and our comforter in all our troubles the meanes to strengthen and vphold vs when we stand and to recouer and rayse vs when we are falne the chiefe helpe we haue to keepe vs in the way of truth and to recall vs when we erre and goe astray our food in time of health and our physicke to cure and restore vs when we are sicke The third impediment to the The third impediment life of grace and godlinesse is when as the people are content to heare the Word but without any cheerefulnesse and delight with cloyed stomacks and lost appetites whereof it is that this delicious Manna is loathsome to their carnall and surfetted taste and yeeldeth no wholesome nourishment because it is eaten against the stomacke Which if we would remoue wee must labour often to quicken our appetite that wee may with Dauid finde and feele the sweetenesse of Gods Psal 19. 10. Word farre exceeding the hony and the hony-combe and earnestly hunger and thirst after it that we may profit by it and haue the graces of Gods Spirit nourished and increased in vs. To which end wee must often meditate vpon the excellency profit and necessity of it as being a Pearle aboue all price and the onely chiefe treasure which will make vs truely rich The fourth impediment is want of diligence reuerence The fourth impediment and attention in the hearing of the Word whereby most of this precious liquor spilleth beside and is vtterly lost and want of care to treasure it vp in our memories or to meditate vpon it afterwards that we may bring it home to our hearts and consciences and practise it in our liues Which if we would remoue we must consider that it is not the deede done which will make Gods ordinances truely profitable but the right manner of doing them that God will neuer blesse vnto vs the meanes of our saluation if wee only bring our lips and eares and outward man vnto them and do not performe these religious duties with our heart and spirit And finally that for our spirituall nourishment it is not sufficient that we haue plenty of food set before vs vnlesse we feede on it with good appetites retaine it in our memories as it were in the stomacke and well digest and apply it to our vse by serious meditation which duties if wee neglect either not feeding vpon the food of our soules or casting it vp againe as soone as it is eaten we can neuer attaine vnto any spiritual strength but must needs grow faint and languish in the life of godlinesse The last impediment which I The fifth impediment will here speake of in the people is too much curiosity both in their hearing and applying of the Word For such itching eares haue many that they loath the sincere milke of the Word and all
exercises for the increasing of his graces in vs notwithstanding that God in so many places reiects these heartlesse sacrifices lip-labour and hypocriticall Esa 49. 13. formalities and being a Spirit doth require of vs such a seruice as is performed Mat. 15. 8. in Spirit and truth Thus they thinke that God is serued in an acceptable Ioh. 4. 24. manner when they repeate the Lords Prayer though they doe not vnderstand any one Petition in it and when they rehearse the Beliefe and the ten Commandements which they also vse in stead of Prayer not vnderstanding aright any one article of their faith nor any precept of the Decalogue and that they haue by this repetition blessed themselues sufficiently for the day following though a little child who is destitute of all sauing knowledge is able to performe this taske as well as they That they may liue in their sinnes without repentance vnto old age or the day of sickenesse and death and that God is so gracious that he will forgiue all their sinnes if before they depart this life they haue but leasure to say Lord haue mercy vpon me though the Scriptures teach vs that he who turneth Pro. 28. 9. 15. 8. 1. 24. 28. Zach. 7. 11 12. away his eare from hearing the Law his prayers are abominable that God abhorreth euen the very sacrifices of the wicked and that those who stop their eares when God calleth shall not be heard when they call and cry vnto him Finally they suppose that they can repent when they list though it be a free grace of God which must be accepted when he offereth it and cannot be reasonably expected if it be refused and reiected when he tendreth it vnto vs. In respect of the Christian life it selfe and the graces and duties required vnto it they doe all delude themselues with a false and erroneous iudgement For they cannot perswade themselues that the godly life is best and most blessed nor that there is such necessity of it as Preachers would beare them in hand but that they may take heere their full swindge in pleasure and set their hearts vpon riches and other worldly vanities and yet bee assured of heauenly happinesse as well as those who are most scrupulous and precise though the Scriptures tell vs that wee cannot serue God and Mammon that if wee loue the world the loue Matth. 6. 24. 1. Ioh. 2. 15. of the Father is not in vs because the loue of the one is enmity against the other that without holinesse we cannot see God and that the way to Iam. 4. 4. Heb. 12. 14. Matth. 7. 12. heauen is narrow and the gate so straight that without much striuing wee cannot enter into it Thus they imagine that they neede not to take such paines in hearing many Sermons seeing the Preacher can tell them no more then they know already namely that they must loue God aboue all things and their neighbours as themselues that the best faile in this and that wee are all sinners and must be saued onely by Iesus Christ Though the Scriptures truely preached are not onely the spirituall seed to beget vs but the food also to nourish vs the strong power of God to saluation to all that beleeue and the sword Rom. 1. 16. of the Spirit to defend our selues and beate backe our enemies Our heauenly Schoole-master to teach vs the way and the meanes also whereby wee may be enabled to walke in it and finally our guide to direct and leade vs by the hand and our comforter to support vs when wee are ready to faint in our iourney That it is sufficient if wee leade a ciuill life and be no heynous malefactours as murtherers theeues adulterers and such like and that wee are good Christians if wee doe no man harme if wee doe no good though he who hid his talent in the earth and did not increase it was cast into outer darkenesse Diues tormented in hell because he releeued not Lazarus And though our Sauiour professeth that hee will reiect at the day of Iudgement not onely oppressours theeues and mutherers but those also who haue not fed the hungry and clothed the naked Thus they thinke that they haue abundantly discharged their dutie if they haue for worldly ends had some respect to some duties of the second Table as keeping their word and dealing iustly and giuing now and then an almes howsoeuer they haue wholy neglected the duties of the first Table and haue made no conscience of Gods seruice and Sabbaths though piety be the ground and foundation of all obedience without which Iustice and morall honesty haue no true subsistance That they neede not to labour after the knowledge of God and his will because they are vnlettered and vnlearned though without knowledge of the maine principles of Religion there can be no Faith and without Faith no Saluation That they haue good hearts towards God though their speeches be filthy and prophane and their actions wicked and mischieuous notwithstanding that our Sauiour hath told vs that Matth. 7. 18. 15 18 19. the tree is knowne by its fruit and that such as the fountaine is such also are the streames that flow from it That wee are all sinners and full of infirmities and humane frailties and therefore they must be excused when wittingly and wilfully they fall into grieuous sinnes though the Apostle telleth vs that he who thus sinneth is not borne of God but 1. Iob. 3. 8 9. that he is of the deuill if with full swinge of will he doe him seruice That they are in Christ and therefore haue escaped condemnation though the Apostle saith that all who are in him walke not after the Rom. 8. 1. 2. Cor. 5. 17. flesh but after the Spirit and that all who haue put on Christ are become new creatures and being ingrafted into this Vine doe bring forth fruits in Iob. 15. 2. him Thus they erroneously alleadge that because Christ came to Matth. 9. 13. 11. 28. saue sinners therefore though they continue still in sinne they may haue their part in this saluation whereas this comfort onely belongeth vnto repentant sinners who labour and grone vnder their sinnes as vnder an heauie burthen and being weary of it doe flee vnto Christ for ease Thus they abuse Gods eternall decree of predestination concluding that because he hath decreed and ordained all men either to life and saluation or to death and destruction and his counsell must stand being immutable and vnchangeable therefore it is no matter how they liue for if they be ordained to life they shall be saued liue how they list or if to destruction they cannot attaine to saluation though they take neuer so much care and paines in Gods seruice The which their conceit is quite contrarie to the Scriptures which teach vs that God hath in his decree of predestination included the meanes with the end so that it is
not possible to be condemned if wee conscionably vse the meanes of attayning to saluation or to be saued if wee neglect these meanes and walke in the wayes of wickednesse which leade to destruction For whom he Rom. 8. 30. hath predestinated to saluation those also he calleth iustifieth and sanctifieth Those whom he hath chosen he hath also ordained that Eph. 1. 4. they should be holy and without blame before him in loue and hath elected 1. Pet. 1. 2. them through sanctification of the Spirit vnto obedience and sprinkling with the blood of Christ Those whom he hath ordained vnto glory he hath predestinated them to be conformed to the Image of his Sonne and hath created Rom. 8. 29. Eph. 2. 8. them in him to good workes And therefore if wee be effectually called iustified and sanctified we may thereby be assured that we are elected to saluation but if none of these can be found in vs wee still continue in the state of reprobation seeing the meanes and end doe inseparably goe together Finally when as the Scriptures teach vs that Faith alone iustifieth as being the onely instrument that applieth vnto vs Christ our righteousnesse loose Libertines doe hence conclude that that Faith which is alone iustifieth and therefore so they beleeue in Christ they haue liberty to liue as they list and need not to take any paines to serue please God in the duties of a godly life Wheras the Apostle plainly telleth vs that we shal be iudged according to our works 2. Cor. 5. 10. whether they haue bin good or euill And our Sauiour hath taught vs that he will pronounce the last sentence according to the workes of mercy either Matth. 25. 34 35 36. performed or neglected by vs as being the signes and vndoubted euidences of our Faith whereby it is approued as sound and sincere or condemned as counterfet hypocriticall And the Apostle Iames expresly affirmeth that Faith without works is dead like a carkase without Iam. 2. 17 26. breath or life And therefore though good workes are not required as causes to the act of iustification yet they are necessary as effects to the Matth. 25. 34. Rom. 6. 23. party iustified though they doe not merit euerlasting happines seeing it is a gracious inheritance Gods free gift yet they are the way that leadeth vnto it in which we must necessarily walke if we wil be saued for without holinesse we shall neuer see the Lord as the Apostle telleth vs. Heb. 12. 14. §. Sect. 6 That infidelity is a great impediment to a godly life Againe the corruption of our intellectuall faculties doth exceedingly hinder vs from seruing God in the duties of a godly life not onely as it blindeth them with ignorance and misleadeth them with errour but also as it poysoneth them with cursed infidelity which is the roote of all other sinnes and the chiefe impediment of all Christian duties the ground of all which is a liuely faith For as the Apostle speaketh No man can come vnto God vntill he first know that God Heb. 11. 6. is nor performe any faithfull seruice vnto him vntill he be perswaded that he is a rich rewarder of them who diligently seeke and serue him Againe Without faith it is impossible to please God because whatsoeuer is not Rom. 14. 23. done of Faith is sinne Without Faith wee cannot be ingrafted into Christ seeing it is the bond of this vnion nor bring forth in him any fruits of new obedience for without Christ we can doe nothing Vnlesse Ioh. 15. 2 5. by Faith we be assured of Gods loue towards vs we cannot loue him for as the Apostle Iohn saith We loue him because he loueth vs first and 1. Ioh. 4. 19. without loue there is no obedience seeing it is the summe of the whole Law And therefore if we would leade a godly life wee must with all care and indeuour remooue this impediment then the which none is more pernicious for how should wee flee from that sinne which we naturally loue or practise those duties vnto which our natures are auerse if wee neither beleeue Gods threatnings restrayning vs from sinne nor his promises alluring vs to obedience And to this end wee must carefully vse all those meanes of which I haue before spoken both of begetting Faith in vs if it be wanting and of confirming and increasing of it if it be begun CAP. X. Of those manifold impediments of a godly life which arise from our sinnefull and corrupt hearts and affections §. Sect. 1 The first impediment is an heart hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne ANd thus haue I shewed how we may remooue those impediments of a godly life which arise from the corruption of the intellectuall faculties Those which respect the heart and affections are many and dangerous The first is when our hearts are hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne and so habituated and accustomed to euill courses that it is death to vs if we indeuour to forsake them and to serue God in the duties of a godly life Of this wee haue many warnings in the Scriptures as being a most dangerous rocke vpon which many haue suffred shipwracke To day if you will heare his voyce harden not your hearts Psal 95. 7 8. And Take heed brethren lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe in departing from the liuing God But exhort one another dayly while it is Heb. 3. 12 13. called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Which impediment if we would remooue let vs withstand sinne in the first motions of it and if at any time we be ouertaken let vs carefully take heed that wee doe not lie in sinne but rise againe speedily by vnfained repentance Let vs beware that wee doe not often fall into the same sinnes after wee haue repented of them seeing by many acts wee come at last to an habit and custome Or if this custome hath already preuailed and is now come to haue in it the strength of a Law and to be as it were a second nature let vs not suffer it any longer to continue inuiolable but bend all our power and strength to disanull and breake it Neither let our corrupt nature pleade prescription for sinne or the neglect of holy duties as though because we haue long done that which God forbiddeth or not done that which he hath commanded therefore we must be borne with if we doe so still seeing this is no excuse at all but rather the greatest aggrauation of our sinnefulnesse and negligence For though they might be somewhat excused if they were done but once or twice they are altogether intolerable when they grow common and customable And therefore our long liuing in sinne and in the neglect of Christian duties should be so far from excusing our continuing in these courses that it ought to be a strong motiue to
rewards How coldly carelesly how dully drowzily how irreuerently and negligently do I performe them How soone am I weary of these holy exercises and desire to returne to my worldly imployments How little sweetnesse doth my aguish taste feele in thy loue though it be better then wine and in feeding vpon thy spirituall delicacies in thy banqueting-house thy Word and Sacraments How little delight haue I had in thy Sanctuary and Sabbaths and how haue I consecrated the least part of them as an holy Rest vnto thee and misspent the greatest part in thinking mine owne thoughts in thinking mine owne words and doing mine owne workes How much and often haue I abused thine holy ordinances through my worldlinesse and prophanenesse and after that I haue long inioyed them how little haue I profited by them Mine heart is still full of grosse infidelity which is the cause that I am not much raised and comforted with thy sweet promises nor deiected and humbled with thy terrible threatnings It is full of impenitency being vnapt to mourne for sinnes past or to resolue vpon amendment for the time to come It is full of carnall security making mee to apprehend no danger when as I walke in the middest of pernicious snares which are in euery place laid in my way by my spirituall enemies and to put the euill day farre from me when as pulling it on with my sins it approcheth neere and is ready to seaze vpon me It is much hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne custome in sinning depriuing mee of the sense of it There is much spirituall pride that lyeth lurking in it which maketh me ready to arrogate the good things I haue not to ouerweene those I haue and to attribute the praise of both vnto my selfe and so to rob thee of the glory of thine owne gifts Hypocrisie also still hangeth vpon me being ready like a slie thiefe to steale in when I open the doore of mine heart to let in any grace or religious duty I am still tainted and poysoned with carnall selfe-loue which maketh mee oftentimes to incurre spirituall hurt and damage whilest I labour ouer-eagerly after worldly good and earthly aduantage Yea as hereby I am made apt to neglect my soule for the seeming and present good of my body defrauding it of all dues that belong vnto it so likewise the duties of righteousnesse and loue which I owe to my neighbours when as they are in my partiall affection ouer-ballanced with some worldly profit pleasure or preferment O that my head were a fountaine of teares that I might wash my defiled body and soule in the floods of vnfained sorrow O that I could mourne for my sinnes as a man mourneth for his onely sonne and be sorry for them as a man is sorry for the death of his first-borne O that I could looke vpon him whom I haue pierced with bitter griefe and be thorowly displeased with my selfe because I haue by my sinnes so much displeased thee who hast been euer vnto me so gracious a God and so louing a Father O that thou wouldest come downe and strike my rocky heart that out of it might flow wholesome streames of repentance But alas the filthy staines and deepe dye of my sinnes cannot bee washed cleane with these waters It is onely that Fountaine which thou hast opened to the house of Dauid and the inhabitants of Ierusalem for sinne and for vncleannesse that is sufficient to purge me from my ingrained filthinesse It is those bloody streames alone which so plentifully flowed out of my crucified Sauiour that can clense me from all my sins And therefore O Lord for thy mercies sake and for thy Christs sake wash my leprous body and soule in the streames of this thy Iordan Yea Lord seeing they are so deepely stained with the double double dye of imputed and inherent originall and actuall sinnes that no slight and ordinary washing can purifie and restore them to their created cleannesse multiply thy washings drench and diue me thorowly in the streames of this liuing Fountaine that being cleansed from my Scarlet and Crimson sinnes both in respect of their guilt and punishment I may become as white as Snow and that no spot remaining of spirituall defilement I may be iustified when thou iudgest and stand righteous in thy sight And together with the staine of sinne take away also the sting of conscience and worke in it sound and secure peace by perswading me by the infallible testimony of thy Spirit that my sinnes are remitted I reconciled through the death and satisfaction of thy Sonne and that of the child of wrath and heire of perdition I am now become thine owne child by adoption and grace And to this end let me finde and feele it in mee not only the Spirit of Adoption perswading me of thy fatherly loue and sealing me vp vnto the Day of my Redemption but also the Spirit of Sanctification mortifying in me all my sinfull corruptions by applying vnto mee the vertue of Christs death and quickening mee in the inner man vnto holinesse and newnesse of life by the power and efficacy of his Resurrection Let me put off concerning the former conuersation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts and being renewed in the spirit of my minde let me put on the new man which after thine owne glorious Image is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Let me continually keepe a narrow watch ouer my selfe that I bee not againe intangled in the snares of the diuell nor circumuented and mis-led through the deceitfulnesse of my corrupt flesh but being freed from sinne let me now become the seruant of righteousnesse Let mee make conscience of all my wayes and shunne not onely open and notorious but also secret sinnes yea all the occasions of euill and hate euen the garment which is spotted of the flesh Let mee put on daily the whole armour of God that being weake in my selfe I may bee strong in thee and in the power of thy might and bee inabled to withstand the wiles of the diuell and resist all tentations in the euill Day praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all perseuerance Weane mine heart and affections more and more from the loue of the world and earthly vanities and being a pilgrim on earth let my conuersation be in heauen from whence I expect a Sauiour and Redeemer Begin and worke in me all spirituall gifts and sauing graces which yet are wanting and daily increase and confirme those that are begun and let me daily bring foorth the fruits of them all throughout my whole life and conuersation in new obedience labouring to performe vnto thee faithfull seruice in all my thoughts words and deeds Let me delight in the wayes of thy Commandements and performe all the duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety with all cheerfulnesse and inward ioy Let me daily seeke thy face and fauour aboue all
Iesus Christ his sake to whom with thee and thy holy Spirit one true and euerlasting God we ascribe the glory and praise of all goodnesse and perfection both now and euermore Amen A Prayer for the Family in the Euening O Lord our God most high and holy most dreadfull and glorious in thy might and Maiesty vnto all creatures terrible and like a consuming fire vnto all impenitent sinners but a most gracious and louing Father vnto all those who are reconciled vnto thee in Iesus Christ Thou hast commanded vs to call vpon thee in all our necessities and hast incouraged vs hereunto by thy most gracious and free promise that where two or three are gathered together in the name of thy Sonne there thou wilt be present amongst them by thy holy Spirit to heare their suits and relieue their wants In obedience to which Commandement and in some assurance of thy gracious promise we thy poore and vnworthy seruants doe heere in the mediation of Iesus Christ humbly prostrate our selues before thy Throne of grace and mercy acknowledging our selues guilty of innumerable sinnes and thereby lyable to as many fearefull punishments but yet in the merits of thy Sonne and in the truth of thy promises pleading for pardon and forgiuenesse We confesse vnto thee that wee were conceiued and borne in sinne hauing all the faculties and powers of our soules and bodies so wholly defiled with originall corruption that wee are vtterly disabled for thy seruice and prone vnto all manner of wickednesse and haue in the whole course of our liues multiplied against thee our actuall transgressions by breaking thy whole Law and euery Commandement thereof in thought word and deed Wee are naturally full of ignorance and blindnesse of mind neither knowing thee nor thy truth and after that thou hast caused the light of the Gospell to shine vnto vs for many yeeres our minds are still full of darknesse We content our selues with a small measure of knowledge and continue children in vnderstanding when we should be of ripe age not striuing after more perfection neither according to the measure of our meanes are we rich in knowledge and in the fruits of new obedience We are full of infidelity and doubting and negligent in the vse of the meanes whereby our faith should be confirmed and strengthened and are full also of impenitency security and hardnesse of heart and doe both seldome and slightly bewaile our sinnes past and but weakly and vnconstantly resolue and indeuour to amend our liues for the time to come We are ready to trust in the creature more then in thee the Creator and cannot as we ought rest vpon thy power and promises in the absence of inferiour meanes We are apt to forget thee when thou most remembrest vs and the more that wee abound with thy blessings the lesse mindfull wee are of thee from whom we haue receiued them Wee haue loued the world and earthly things more then thee and heauenly excellencies and haue preferred the pleasures of sinne before thy loue and fauour being ready to hazard these rather then to forgoe them We are full of selfe-loue and haue been moued hereby to sow vnto the flesh of which we can reape nothing but sin and punishment and haue set our hearts so much vpon carnall vanities that they easily draw them away from thee We doe not patiently and constantly hope and waite for the accomplishment of thy promises though we haue great experience of thy power truth and goodnesse towards vs. We are cold or luke-warme in our zeale and haue not with any feruency aduanced the meanes of thy glory nor remoued the impediments whereby it is hindred Our reioycing is more in the flesh then in the Spirit in worldly things and the pleasures of sinne more then in thee the Fountaine of all true ioy in the fruition of thy present fauours and expectation of heauenly happinesse Wee are vngratefull vnto thee for thy manifold benefits and oftentimes when we praise thee it is with our lips onely and not with inward ioy and cheerfulnesse of our hearts Wee doe not approoue our loue and thankefulnesse vnto thee by our fruits of obedience but haue been negligent in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse that wee might giue glory to thy holy Name and all wee doe is maimed and imperfect full of wants and weaknesses and stained with many corruptions Wee are ready to murmure and repine in our least afflictions and doe not beare thy fatherly corrections with patience and thankfulnesse being more sensible of the smart then of our sinnes which haue caused it and looking more to the rod then vnto thy hand which thereby chastizest vs for our amendment Wee doe not feare to displease thee by our sinnes nor auoyd thine anger as the greatest euill or if we doe feare thee at all it is not so much for thy mercies as to auoyd thy Iudgements We haue not adorned our selues with humility and meeknesse in the sight and sense of our owne vilenesse and vnworthinesse but are full of spirituall pride arrogating vnto our selues those gifts we haue not and ouerweening those we haue or ascribing the praise of them vnto our selues which is onely due to thee We are negligent in the duties of thy seruice and doe not performe them in Spirit and truth but either neglect them vpon euery slight occasion or doe them without due preparation coldly and formally without any feruency of zeale respecting thy glory or our spirituall good We haue often taken thy holy Name in vaine and abused thine holy ordinances and prophaned thy Sabbaths not doing thy will onely on thy holy Day but speaking our owne words walking in our owne waies and seeking our owne carnall delights We haue also neglected the duties of righteousnesse charity and mercy towards our neighbours and of temperance and sobriety towards our selues By all which and many other our sinnes wee haue made our selues subiect to thy wrath and the curse of the Law and haue iustly deserued to be depriued of all testimonies of thy loue and to bee ouerwhelmed with all thy iudgements and punishments both in this life and the life to come O Lord our God affect our hearts with sonne-like sorrow because we haue so much and often displeased thee our gracious Father and let vs be grieued in our soules that wee are so little grieued for our sinnes whereby we haue pierced our Sauiour and grieued thy good Spirit dwelling in vs. And further wee beseech thee in the multitude of thy mercies to remit and forgiue all our sinnes and wash vs cleane from the guilt and punishment of them all that they may neither depriue vs of thy loue and manifold blessings temporall and eternall nor expose vs to thy wrath and fearfull punishments And not onely remit our sins and heale our soules but speake comfortably to our consciences by the secret voyce of thy Spirit as once thy Sonne did to the sicke of the palsie Sonnes be of good
for all thy blessings and benefits both spirituall and temporall which thou hast multiplyed vpon vs and continue them vnto vs this day and euer preseruing vs from all perils and furnishing vs with all necessaries that we may be the fitter with all cheerfulnesse to doe thee seruice And vouchsafe all these blessings which wee haue craued for our selues with all other things which in thy wisdome thou seest needful vnto euery true member of thy Church c. euen for Iesus Christ his sake to whom with thee thine holy Spirit we ascribe all praise and glory power and dominion both now and for euermore Amen A Prayer for the Euening of the Lords Day O Eternall God who art glorious in Maiesty and power and of infinite goodnesse and mercy vnto all those who are reconciled vnto thee in thy Sonne wee thine vnworthy seruants hauing nothing else to returne vnto thee for the innumerable testimonies of thy loue which with a bountifull hand thou hast multiplyed vpon vs doe here offer vnto thee the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing for all thy blessings and benefits which either respect our soules or bodies this life or the life to come More especially wee laud and magnifie thy great and glorious Name for that thou hast loued vs from all eternity and of thy meere grace without any respect of our worthinesse hast made vs vessels of grace by thy free election created vs according to thine owne Image redeemed vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies by giuing thy dearely beloued Sonne to dye for vs when as we were strangers and enemies for calling vs by thy Word and Spirit to the sauing knowledge and effectuall participation of him and all his benefits for our iustification by his obedience our sanctification by thy Spirit and for that assurance which thou hast giuen vs of a better life in the world to come For all temporall benefits as health wealth peace plenty preseruation from dangers and protection from all our enemies both worldly and spirituall And especially wee praise and glorifie thee for vouchsafing vnto vs in such a gracious manner the meanes of our saluation for our blessed opportunities and liberties with peace and safety in sanctifying thy Sabbaths publikely and priuately by hearing thy Word and calling vpon thy Name and performing other duties of thy seruice that thereby we may glorifie thee and make our owne calling and election sure and for giuing vnto vs hearts wherein by thy Spirit thou hast wrought some poore desires and indeuours to make vse of these thy benefits for the inriching of our soules with all spirituall graces as at other times heretofore so namely this day past O that our soules could be rauished with the sweet apprehension of such inestimable blessings O that we could exceed all others in loue and thankfulnesse as farre as wee exceed them in these high and holy priuiledges and were able to expresse them in our carefull and conscionable indeuours to glorifie and please thee in all things who hast been so gracious and good vnto vs But alas how vnworthy haue we made our selues of the least of these thy benefits by our manifold and grieuous sinnes both our originall corruption which hauing ouer-spred all the powers and parts of our soules and bodies hath vtterly disabled them vnto all duties of thy seruice and our manifold actuall transgressions which in number and waight exceed all things but thy mercies which are aboue all thy workes and the merits and satisfaction of thy Sonne which are of infinite worth and value More especially we humbly acknowledge our fearfull abuse of those great priuiledges and meanes of our saluation which for a long time thou hast graciously granted vnto vs. For not onely haue we in the dayes of our ignorance vtterly neglected all duties of thy seruice spending our whole strength in the miserable slauery of sinne and Satan and prophaned and mis-spent thy Sabbaths in pleasing our carnall lusts and performing the workes of darknesse in greater measure and worse manner then any other dayes besides but euen since wee haue been called to the knowledge of thy truth and haue consecrated our selues to thy seruice wee haue either vpon slight occasions neglected those holy duties of thy publike and priuate worship or performed them with many wants and weaknesses discouering vnto thee who searchest the heart many imperfections and great corruptions For we haue not remembred thy Sabbaths nor with feruent desires longed after thine holy Day We haue not delighted in them nor consecrated them vnto thee as an holy Rest but though the spirit hath been willing yet the flesh hath been weake and soone tyred with spirituall exercises We haue been much defectiue in our zeale and deuotion and haue been too too cold and formall in religious duties and haue not performed them with that care and conscience nor haue serued thee with our hearts and soules in spirit and truth in that degree which thou requirest but externally and with the outward man hauing in the meane while our minds and hearts carried away with many distractions and worldly imaginations Our cogitations haue not bin takē wholly vp with spirituall and heauenly things but we haue suffered them to roue wander after earthly trifles Our tongues haue not in that measure as they ought been exercised in setting forth thy praise nor in such holy and religious conferences as tend to the edification one of another but we haue spoken our own words on thine holy Day and many of our speeches haue been idle and vaine worldly and vnsauoury We haue not as we ought priuately prepared and fitted our selues for thy publike seruice by prayer and meditation by renewing our faith and repentance but haue come into thy glorious presence without due feare and reuerence hauing our hearts clogged and choked with many corruptions which haue disabled them to the duties of thy seruice and haue made them like vnfallowed and vnweeded grounds vnfit to receiue the seed of thy Word We haue not called vpon thy Name with faith and feruency of spirit nor giuen thankes vnto thee for all thy benefits with such cheerfulnes as became vs. We haue not with due reuerence and attention heard thy holy Word nor laid it vp in our memories nor applyed it to our hearts and consciences nor made an holy vse of it by putting it in practice in our liues and conuersations We haue not meditated as we ought on thy Word which we haue heard nor on thy maruellous works of Creation Preseruation Redemption nor diligently read and studied in thy holy Book nor exercised our selues in the works of mercy and Christian charity towards our brethren in that manner and measure which thou requirest especially in those spirituall duties which tend to the mutuall edification of one another In which and many other kinds as we haue often offended heretofore so we cannot excuse our selues of many imperfections and corruptions which wee haue shewed
in the greene pastures and be led by him by those still waters of peace and securitie yea though he lead vs into places of feare and danger euen through the valley of the shadow of death yet may we be secure and feare no euill seeing hee is with vs and with his rod and staffe doth comfort vs. Yea wee must labour after a neerer vnion with Christ and to be espoused vnto him and then wee being his Spouse and hee being our Bridegroome wee may rest securely vnder his powerfull protection seeing by the institution and law of marriage he is bound both to defend and prouide for vs and because hee that toucheth vs toucheth him hee that offereth any iniurie vnto vs doth offer it as it were to his owne person then may we with the Spouse in the Canticles sit downe securely vnder his shadow Cant. 2. 3 6. with great delight and sleepe in safetie when his left hand is vnder our head and his right hand doth embrace vs. Or if we would be neerer vnto him for our greater safetie and securitie let vs labour to become members of his blessed body vnited vnto him by his holy Spirit and a liuely faith seeing then there will be no place for feare because hee that toucheth vs toucheth the apple of his eye hee that doth Zach. 2. 8. vs any hurt hurteth and offereth violence against his owne bodie and he that seeketh to plucke vs from him shall goe about an impossible worke euen to plucke a member from the bodie of Christ which he tenderly loueth seeing he hath all power in heauen and earth committed vnto him so as no creature is able to preuaile against him §. 3 The third meanes is that we labour to be in the Couenant of Grace Thirdly if wee would obtayne this spirituall securitie wee must labour to be within the compasse of the couenant of Grace which God hath made with vs in Iesus Christ For such onely as are in the Couenant haue right vnto the Promises of Gods grace and prouidence watching ouer them for the endowing them with all good and of his power and protection to shield and defend them from all euill Such onely haue God for their Lord and King and are the peculiar People and Subiects of his Kingdome ouer whom hee hath taken charge and receiued them vnder the safegard of his protection As for others they are strangers vnto him whom he respecteth not yea they are no better then Rebels and Out-lawes who haue no benefit by his protection and therefore can haue in them no true securitie but may well feare with Cain that being exiled out of Gods presence they shall be like Fugitiues and Vagabonds vpon the earth and that it shall come to Gen. 4. 14. passe that euery one that findeth them shall be ready to slay them Whereas if we haue the Seale of the Couenant stamped vpon vs we are thereby secured from all euill for when the destroying Angell is purposely sent from God to spoile and make hauocke of all yet his commission is restrayned so as hee may not hurt those which are in the Couenant but those onely who haue not the Seale of God in their foreheads Now the meanes to be in this Couenant with God is to performe the Apoc. 7. 3. 9. 4. condition of Faith bringing forth the fruits thereof in heartie repentance and amendment of life which wee must therefore aboue all things labour after that we may haue interest in the former priuileges And because through our frailtie and infirmitie we are apt to wound and weaken our Faith by our sinnes and this shield is oftentimes shrewdly battered with beating backe the fierie darts and bullets of Satans tentations And our repentance also is ready to grow faint and languish both in respect of our griefe for sinne past and resolution to leaue and forsake it for the time to come and so by weakning the Couenant not in it selfe but in our apprehension wee are ready to lose our inward peace and to haue our securitie disturbed with feares therefore as we often sinne so doth it become vs often to renew our Couenant with God by renuing the condition of Faith and Repentance that so also with them wee may renew our securitie according to that in Iob If iniquity be in thine hand put it farre away and let not Iob 11. 14 15 18 19. wickednesse dwell in thy Tabernacles For then thou shalt lift vp thy face without spot yea thou shalt be steadfast and shalt not feare And thou shalt be secure because there is hope yea thou shalt digge about thee and thou shalt take thy rest in safetie Also thou shalt lye downe and none shall make thee afraid yea many shall make suite vnto thee §. 4 The fourth meanes is to labour to haue the causes of it in vs. As first the Spirit of adoption and the chayne of sauing graces Fourthly if we would haue spirituall securitie we must indeauour by all meanes to haue those causes of it in our selues of which I haue spoken As first the Spirit of adoption whereby being assured that we are Gods children through Christ we may securely rest vpon the prouidence and promises of our heauenly Father for the prouiding of all things necessarie for the supplying of all our wants preseruation from all dangers and protection from all enemies For if earthly Parents according to their power performe all these things to their children so as they are secure and without feare when they are in the sight and presence of their able friends how much more will our heauenly Father who infinitely exceeds them in power and loue For if he be so infinitely gracious that he preserueth those which are strangers vnto him how much more those who are of his owne Family if hee doth good vnto all how much more those who are of the Matth. 5. 45. Gal. 6. 10. house-hold of Faith if he prouideth for the yong Lions and Rauens that call vpon them and richly clotheth the Lillies and Flowres of Matth. 6. 26. 30. the Field how much more will hee defend and preserue feede and clothe his owne Children whom hee hath loued so deerly that hee Rom. 8. 32. hath not spared to giue his best beloued and onely begotten Sonne to the death for their redemption and saluation So also we must labour after the gifts and graces of the Spirit which haue the promises of Gods protection made vnto them so that if we haue them we may be secure in his helpe and assistance because if he be with vs it mattereth Rom. 8 31. not who oppose against vs if we are destitute of them then being hopelesse and helplesse there is no place for peace and securitie Againe these sauing graces are the only meanes whereby we may make our Calling and Election sure which if we doe no worldly thing can 2. Pet. 1. 10. disturbe our peace or dampe our ioy but if for