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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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vs. §. Sect. 4 That the Spirit of God is the Author of spirituall life 1. And if we thus gaine his company and giue him friendly intertainement when he dwelleth in vs possessing our vessels in sanctification and honour Thes 4. 3. Eph. 4. 30. 1. Thes 5. 19. that they may be fit Temples for this pure Maiestie and not vexing and grieuing this holy Ghest by quenching those good motions which he suggesteth vnto vs then will not he be idle in vs but will direct and guide vs in all our wayes and inable and strengthen vs vnto all Christian duties of holinesse and righteousnesse nor come alone to dwell in vs but accompanied with the sweet society of all sanctifying and sauing graces And first of all he will quicken vs in the life of grace who were before dead in trespasses and sinnes and giue vnto vs spirituall motion in all holy actions Eph. 2. 1. the which though at first it be but weake and scarcely to be discerned like a child newly quickned in the wombe yet shall it increase by degrees vntill we be strengthened for the spirituall birth and grow vp from age to age and from strength to strength vnto a perfect man and vnto the Eph. 4. 13. measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ of which life the Spirit of God is the principall Author according to that of the Apostle If the Spirit of Rom. 8. 11. him that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised vp Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall body by his Spirit that dwelleth in you without the which we cannot once mooue in the wayes of godlinesse nor after that we haue begun proceede or grow vp vnto any perfection And therefore when we finde our selues dead and dull vnto all good actions we are earnestly to pray with Dauid that God will reuiue and quicken vs Ps 119. 25 107. by his grace and holy Spirit that we may become actiue and able to performe the duties of a Christian and holy life §. Sect. 5 That the Spirit inlighteneth vs in the wayes of godlinesse Secondly hauing giuen vnto vs this life of grace hee will in the next place indue vs with spirituall light and illuminate the blinde eyes of our mindes that we may vnderstand the will and wayes of God reuealed in his Word and attaine vnto such a measure of sauing knowledge as may be sufficient to direct vs in all our thoughts words and actions And this is that voyce of the Spirit which in our conuersion vnto God secretly whispereth in the eare of our minds as it were behind vs saying This is the way walke yee in it when ye turne to the right hand and when yee turne to Esa 30. 20. the left This is that day-spring which the Sunne of righteousnesse with his arising hath caused to appeare and visit vs to giue light vnto vs who sate Luk. 1. 78 79. in darkenesse and in the shaddow of death and to guide our feete into the way of peace This is that Comforter which our Sauiour promised to send after his resurrection who should leade his Disciples and with them all the faithfull into all truth This is that grace of God which hath appeared teaching Iohn 16. 13. Tit. 2. 11 12. vs to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world This is that holy oyntment and precious eye-salue which openeth and illighteneth the blinde eyes of our minds that we may know all things appertaining to our saluation so as we need no Tutor to teach vs any other doctrine but as the same anoynting hath 1. Ioh. 2. 20 27. taught vs of all things Whereof he is called the Spirit of truth not onely because he is most true and Truth it selfe but also teacheth and guideth vs in the wayes of truth And the spirit of illumination and wisedome not onely Ioh 14. 17 15. 26. because there is in him a measure without measure of light and knowledge but also illighteneth our minds darkened with ignorance and maketh vs who were only wise vnto euill wise vnto good and to the eternall Ier. 4. 22. saluation of our owne soules And vnlesse we be thus illightened by the Spirit of God and haue the way of saluation reuealed vnto vs it remaineth an hidden mysterie of which we are not capeable in our naturall vnderstanding for as the Apostle teacheth vs The naturall man vnderstandeth Eph. 3 3 5. not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can 1. Cor. 2. 14. he know them because they are spiritually discerned and the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God and they vnto whom by the Spirit they are reuealed Vers 10. 11. Vnlesse this light shine in our hearts we remaine in more then an Aegyptian darkenesse sitting still in errour and sinne and not being able to mooue in the actions of holinesse and righteousnesse neither is it possible that we should walke in the wayes of God vntill by the light of his Spirit they be reuealed vnto vs. Finally we must first know the will of God before wee can doe it and so attaine vnto euerlasting blessednesse And Ioh. 13. 17. therefore in the next place if we would leade this godly life we must desire to be inlightened by Gods Spirit in the knowledge of his will and to haue the light of spirituall wisedome added to the life of grace that knowing it in our vnderstandings we may yeeld obedience vnto it in our liues and conuersations praying to this purpose without ceasing for our selues as the Apostle for the Ephesians That the God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Eph. 1. 17 18. Father of Glory would giue vnto vs the spirit of wisedome and reuelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of our vnderstanding being inlightened that we may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints c. §. Sect. 6 That we must bee ingrafted into Christ before wee can leade a godly life The second maine thing required in those who are to leade a godly life is that they be ingrafted into Iesus Christ by vertue of which vnion he becomming their head and they his members they haue communion with him and are made partakers of the vertue of his death and resurrection Rom. 6. 12. whereby their sinnes are mortified and crucified so as they can no longer raigne in their mortall bodies and they quickned vnto holinesse and newnesse of life and so inabled to bring foorth the fruits of obedience in the whole course of their conuersation For we are naturally dead and buried in the graue of sinne and not able to stirre or mooue in the actions of godlinesse but no sooner are we ioyned to him and touch his body crucified by the hand of faith
the mind are not onely preserued but also much improoued by continuall exercise so vertuous actions and workes of piety and righteousnesse being the exercises of our faith doe tend much to the strengthening of it whereas contrariwise by the neglect of these duties it is much weakened and by the contrary vices and acts of sinne exceedingly shaken and grieuously wounded In which regard the Apostle ioyneth the holding of faith and a 1. Tim. 1. 19. 1. Cor. 15. 58. good conscience because the one will not stay without the other being such louing twins as cannot be diuided but liue and die together More especially the duties of a godly life doe confirme our faith in the assurance of our election not as causes for the election of God is free of grace and Rom. 11. 6. Eph. 1. 4. not of workes but as the effects and fruits of it and as the end vnto which wee are elected for wee are not chosen because wee were holy but to the end that wee might bee holy as the Apostle sheweth Thus the Apostle Peter exhorting vs to make our calling and election sure 2. Pet. 1. 10. prescribeth this as the onely meanes the ioyning of one vertue and Christian duty with another telling vs that if wee doe these things wee shall neuer fall The Psalmist likewise setting downe the markes and signes whereby wee may know whether God hath chosen vs to dwell in his holy mountaine maketh this the first chiefe to walke vprightly and work righteousnesse Psal 15. 2. 24. 4. and to haue cleane hands and a pure heart Secondly hereby our faith is perswaded of Gods grace and loue in Christ For by keeping of Gods Commandements we are assured that we loue God according to that of the Apostle Iohn Whoso keepeth his Word in him verily is the loue of God perfected 1. Ioh. 3. 6. 1. Ioh. 4. 19. and consequently that he loueth vs seeing we loue him because he loued vs first our loue being but a sparke of that diuine and infinite flame Thirdly of our effectuall calling this being the meanes which the Apostle prescribeth to make it sure For heereby we know that the grace of God 2. Pet. 1. 10. Tit. 2. 11 12. bringing saluation hath shined vnto vs when as we are taught thereby to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world that wee haue in a sauing manner heard Gods Word when hauing receiued it into honest hearts wee haue brought foorth fruits Luk. 8. 15. with patience That wee are ingrafted into Christ the true Vine when Ioh. 15. wee bring foorth the ripe Grapes of holinesse and righteousnesse That wee are trees of righteousnesse of Gods owne planting when like the tree planted by the riuers of waters wee bring foorth fruit in due season That wee are good men when out of the good treasure of our heart Psal 1. 2. Mat. 7. 17 18 20 we bring foorth that which is good That wee are of God and the Sheepe of Christ when we heare Gods Word and follow him And that wee are truely Luk. 6. 45. a kinne to Christ when wee doe the will of his Father which is in heauen Ioh. 8. 47. Mat. 12. 50. Fourthly by a godly life and the workes of piety and righteousnesse our faith is assured of it selfe that it is liuely and vnfained for as our good workes doe shew it vnto others so also they approoue it vnto our selues as being the fruits of this tree and the very breath of this body without which it is but a dead stocke and rotten carkasse For as the Apostle Iames Iam. 2. 17 26. telleth vs Faith if it haue no workes is dead being alone And as the body without the spirit is dead so faith without workes is dead also Fifthly our faith is heereby assured of our iustification and of all the fruits and benefits that doe accompany it As that we are freed from our sinnes both in respect of their guilt and punishment by the death and resurrection of Iesus Christ when as by the vertue and power of them we feele our selues deliuered from the corruption of them so as they doe not rule and raigne in vs as in former times and quickned in the inner man vnto holinesse and newnesse of life That we are reconciled vnto God when as we feele an earnest desire and constant indeuour wrought in vs of pleasing him in all things That we are his children by adoption and grace when we liue as it becommeth his children and resemble our heauenly Father in holinesse and righteousnesse That we are sanctified by his Spirit when as wee bring forth the fruits of our sanctification in a godly and Christian life That we haue vnfainedly repented of our sinnes when as wee bring forth fruits worthy amendment and doe daily exercise our selues in good workes Finally that we are Citizens of heauen and heires of euerlasting happinesse when as we haue our conuersation there setting our hearts and affections on things aboue and not on things beneath and when hauing Phil. 3. 20. Col. 3. 2. Joh. 3. 2 3. this hope that we shall be made like vnto Christ we haue purged our selues as he also is pure §. Sect. 4 That a godly life strengthneth and increaseth our hope and confidence in God The second spirituall benefit of a godly life is that it strengtheneth and increaseth our hope and confidence in God grounded vpon this assurance Psal 34. 15. that hee will preserue all those that feare and serue him from all euill all perils and dangers and the malice and might of all their enemies and that he will prouide for them all things necessary seeing he who is so bountifull euen to his enemies will not let his owne children want any thing that is good who haue a desire to serue and please him So that they which feare the Lord haue great cause to trust in the Lord as the Psalmist Psal 115. 11. exhorteth because he is their helpe and shield And this made the three Children so confident that they cared not for the rage of the Tyrant nor for the fiery Furnace though seuenfold hotter then ordinary because they had serued God with a good conscience and thereby were assured that the God whom they serued was both able and willing to deliuer them Dan. 3. 17. This made Daniel to serue God constantly whom hee had formerly serued notwithstanding the cruell edict of the King because he well knew that the God whom he serued was able to deliuer him from the Lions as Dan. 6. 16. Darius also acknowledged From which confidence there arise diuers other singular benefits as inward ioy and comfort in all estates seeing in this confidence we haue cast all our care vpon God patience in all troubles seeing we trust assuredly in God for helpe and deliuerance in that time which shall be most seasonable both for his glory
vnsupportable waight of sin the wrath of God and curse of the Law from which he hath freed vs and not such an one as will toyle and turmoile vs but a burthen that bringeth ease and a labour which causeth rest It is not Christs purpose to surcharge and oppresse vs by imposing a burthen aboue our strength for he that hath taught vs that a good man is mercifull vnto his beast Pro. 12. 10. will not be hard-hearted and cruell to his yoke fellowes yea to his owne body and bowels but onely he desireth that we would beare him company promising that if our weight be ouer-burthensome he will ease vs if it be irksome and tedious he will make it sweet pleasant and if there be any defects wants in vs he will supply them by vertue of that communion which we haue with him If we be dead Rom. 6. 4. and cannot mooue in the actions of piety and righteousnesse by touching his dead body he will giue vs spirituall life and motion For as the Father rayseth vp the dead and quickneth them euen so the Sonne Joh. 5. 21 25. quickneth whom he will He is the Resurrection and the Life he that beleeueth Ioh. 11. 25. in him though he were dead yet shall he liue So if being raysed we want spirituall illumination that we may walke in those wayes which God hath prescribed our Sauiour will supply it according to that of the Apostle Awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee light If we be weake feeble he will strengthen vs with might Eph. 5. 14. by his Spirit in the inner man If we feele the exercises of a godly life so Eph. 3. 16. difficult vnpleasant to our corrupt nature that we haue little hope of proceeding in them that which is defectiue through naturall corruption he wil supply by grace aboue all that we can expect for he is able to doe exceeding abundantly aboue al that we aske or thinke according to the power Vers 20. that worketh in vs. If we be faint he will support vs if weary he will refresh vs if we fall he wil lift vs vp If we be discomforted and discouraged with afflictions tribulations which we meet with in the way he will strengthen vs with faith patience that we may be able to beare them so as we may say with the Apostle We are troubled on euery side 2. Cor. 4. 8 9. yet not distressed we are perplexed but not in despaire persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but not destroyed §. Sect. 4 That the duties of a godly life are made easie by the assistance of the holy Spirit Finally the holy Spirit so assisteth vs with his grace that the duties of a godly life which are to the flesh difficult and vnpleasant become Rom. 8. 11. sweet and easie For when we feele our selues most dull dead and vtterly vnable to moue in the wayes of godlinesse this Spirit of life and power will quicken and reuiue vs according to that of the Apostle If the Spirit of him that raysed vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raysed vp Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you If our flesh rebell and labour to hinder vs in all good duties the Spirit of God will mortifie and subdue it If carnall corruption be so strong in vs that it withdraweth our hearts and affections from God and his seruice This Spirit of God as a sharpe razour will circumcise our hearts and purging vs from our naturall Deut. 30. 6. corruption will inflame them with Gods loue and with feruent desires to please him in all things If we be so straightned in our zeale and deuotion that we can neither read heare nor pray yet our comfort is that the Spirit of God is not straightned but can like fire thaw our Mic. 2. 7. frozen hearts open our eares and hearts that we shal be able with Lydia to attend vnto those things which concerne our saluation and helping Luk. 16. 14. our infirmities will make intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be Rom. 8. 26. vttered If we be destitute of all sauing graces in our owne sense and feeling and doe thirst after them like the drie lands Gods Spirit will quench our thirst and be in vs as a fountaine of liuing water springing vp Ioh. 4. 14. into euerlasting life Finally if wee be stiffe and vnactiue vnto euery good worke so as we cannot performe any dutie of Gods seruice or if we doe yet with much difficulty and with murmuring and complayning of the flesh this oyle and holy vnction of the Spirit will supple and soften our hearts and stiffe ioynts making vs to goe with ease and agility in the wayes of godlinesse like the wheeles of a cart which being drie goe hardly and with a creaking noyse but when they are oyled runne with much ease and swiftnesse And therefore when wee finde our selues indisposed to Gods seruice prayer or any other duty and see some difficulty in them to our sinfull flesh let vs not hereby be discouraged but feeling our owne weakenesse let vs craue the helpe and assistance of this holy Spirit that we may be strengthened Eph. 3. 16. thereby in the inner man with all might according to his glorious power and so Col. 1. 10 11. walke worthy of the Lord vnto all pleasing being fruitfull in euery good worke Let vs goe boldly vnto the Throne of grace crauing the Spirit to support vs seeing we haue Gods promise that he will giue it to those that aske him Let vs begge the Spirit of Grace and supplication seeing the Luk. 11. 13. Zach. 12. 10. Lord hath promised to bestow it vpon all the faithful and finding our selues so drie and emptie of all goodnesse that we thirst after Gods grace which inricheth vs with it let vs by faith goe vnto Christ inuiting vs to come vnto him and to drinke plentifully of these waters Ioh. 7. 37 38. of the Spirit that we may be nourished thereby vnto euerlasting life §. Sect. 5 That the sauing graces of the Spirit wrought in vs make the godly life easie and familiar And as the Spirit it selfe so the gifts and graces which it bringeth with it and worketh in vs are notable helpes enabling vs to ouercome all difficulties which we find in the way As first a true liuely Faith which not onely ouercommeth the world and all the enemies of our saluation and vniting vs vnto Christ doth cause vs to bring forth fruits in him but also perswadeth assureth vs that notwithstanding all lets and difficulties we shall attaine vnto that sanctification and holinesse of life which we labour after The which as a singular encouragement hearteneth vs to take paines to vse all diligence in all Christian duties when as we are sure that we shall
rest compose our selues to sleepe in such a Christian and holy manner by prayer and meditation that euen as much as may be our imaginations and dreames may retaine some rellish and sauour of our former religious exercises Where by the way wee may note that as the Christian Sabbath is to begin at the dawning of the day because it was instituted in remembrance of Christs Resurrection who was that Sunne of righteousnes who brought light and life vnto vs by performing and finishing that great worke of our Redemption and not ouer-night like the Iewes Sabbath which was ordained to put them in mind of the worke of Creation and the rather because it was fit that there should vpon these diuers reasons be a difference betweene their Sabbath and ours so also it is to continue to the dawning of the next day as wee haue formerly shewed by Pauls example §. Sect. 2 That we must rest from our owne workes on the Lords Day And thus we see the time of the Lords Day how long it is to continue now we are to speake of the duties which ought to be performed in it And these are all comprized in these two things first in obseruing a Rest and secondly in keeping it holy or in sanctifying this Rest vnto Gods seruice The Rest consisteth in the forbearing or not doing of our owne workes but onely in cases of necessity and when the sanctification of the Lords Day requireth them as duties tending to the aduancing of Gods seruice or such workes of mercy and Christian charity as belong to this Day as the study and paines of the Minister the trauell of the people to places of diuine worship visiting and helping of the sicke and distressed confounding of contentions and making peace betweene neighbours feeding and tending of cattell and such like Where by our owne workes I vnderstand all our thoughts words and actions which simply or chiefly tend to our owne profit or pleasure As first the workes of our callings Exod. 31. 15. of all kinds whatsoeuer as all workes of husbandry euen in the time of haruest buying and selling carrying of burthens trauelling and such like Secondly all kinds of recreations which are not necessary for the preseruing of health and life and tend not to the better fitting and inabling of vs for religious duties but to sensuall and carnall delight Of which sort are walking abroad that we may take the ayre or that wee may conferre one with another or meditate on the creatures some bodily exercise in course of physicke to refresh the body and in some cases musicke not onely vocall by singing of Psalmes which is a duty of the Sabbath but also on instruments when as it is vsed not for carnall and sensuall delight but to refresh our spirits and quicken our dull and drowzie hearts and minds that they may with more cheerefulnesse returne vnto the performance of religious and holy duties in which cases there may at some times be the same vse of these recreations so they be in moderation in an holy manner and to these ends which is of physicke meates and drinkes But from all other recreations which tend onely to carnall and sensuall delight we must wholly abstaine first because the Lord expressely forbiddeth vs to doe our owne pleasure on his holy Day and contrariwise commandeth vs to call his Sabbath our delight Esa 58. 13. the holy of the Lord honourable and that we should honour him nor doing our owne wayes nor finding our owne pleasures nor speaking our owne words Secondly because they are our owne workes from all kindes whereof Gods Commandement restraineth vs that wee may bee wholly deuoted to the seruice of God and the meanes which inable vs thereunto yea they may in some sort be called more our owne workes then the workes of our callings because these are more expressely commanded and are ordinarily more necessary and more directly tend to Gods seruice then the other for it is possible to liue and serue God without these recreations but not vnlesse we walke in the duties of our callings And therefore if these bee forbidden on the Lords Day then much more the other which are of lesse vse and necessity Finally because these worldly recreations doe more dangerously and cunningly winde into our hearts steale them away from holy duties and distract vs in Gods seruice then the duties of our callings the workes and labours whereof we doe not loue for themselues but onely as they are meanes of deriuing pleasure or profit vnto vs whereas we loue these sensuall pleasures for themselues and oftentimes so dote vpon them that we neglect our worldly profit yea the seruice of God it selfe and the eternall saluation of our soules that we may inioy them §. Sect. 3 That on the Lords Day we must abstaine from carnall recreations Now if any obiect that to depriue vs of these recreations is to take away all the ioy and comfort of our liues to this I answere that it is an obiection which altogether misbeseemeth a Christian For howsoeuer Infidels and carnall worldlings may reioyce chiefly in them as hauing no greater cause of ioy and comfort yet it ought not to bee so with the faithfull who should chiefly reioyce in the Lord and in the pledges and testimonies of his loue and fauour in their Communion with him who is their Phil. 4. 4. summum bonum and chiefe happinesse and the visible signes of his gracious presence vnto which spirituall ioy Dauid exhorteth Delight thy Psal 37. 4. selfe in the Lord and he shall giue the desires of thine heart Of which he in many places propoundeth himselfe as an example for our imitation Secondly if we be spiritually and not carnally and worldly-minded we may make the Lords Day it selfe our delight as he requireth which if we Esa 58. 13 14. doe then we shall indeed finde sweete delight in the Lord. For what greater delight can there bee to a Christian then to praise God by singing of Psalmes who hath beene so good and gracious vnto vs then to heare the Word whereby God assureth vs of his fauour and of the pardon of our sinnes and receiue the Sacrament whereby it is sealed and assured vnto vs then to feast our soules at this spirituall banket and afterwards meditate on and peruse our spirituall euidences whereby the assurance of heauenly happinesse is conuayed vnto vs then to be assured that wee are redeemed out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies and restored to the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God then to solace our selues in the sweete society of Christ our Bridegroome in his Banketing-house and to be stayed and comforted with his flagons of wine apples and kinde imbracements Cant. 2. 4 5 6. which spirituall ioyes if we rellish not what doth it but argue a carnall taste and appetite which we ought to bewaile and mortifie and not feede and cherish it with vaine sports and worldly recreations
And it is a signe of madnesse not to bee perswaded that it is the death of the soule if wee doe not often cast downe our selues at Gods feete As the body without the soule is a dead carrion so the soule if it flee not to God by Prayer is dead miserable and lothsome §. Sect. 2 That by prayer we obtaine Gods Spirit and the graces thereof More specially Prayer is the chiefe meanes on our part whereby wee obtaine his spirituall gifts and graces by which wee are inabled to performe Luk. 11. 13. the duties of a godly life For by it we obtaine the Spirit of God who is the Author of all grace and godlinesse seeing as our Sauiour hath taught vs the Lord will giue his Spirit to those that aske it And if wee want the graces of the Spirit the Scriptures admonish vs to vse Prayer as a speciall and chiefe meanes whereby we may obtaine them So the Apostle Iames If any man want wisedome let him aske of God that giueth to all men liberally Iam. 1. 5. and vpbraideth not and it shall be giuen him And the Apostle to the the Hebrewes setteth vs in this course for the obtaining of all grace Let Heb. 4. 16. vs saith he come boldly to the throne of Grace that we may obtaine mercy and finde grace to helpe in time of need Yea these spirituall graces whereby we are inabled to serue God in all holy duties are things absolutely good for vs in some degree and measure and therefore we may absolutely pray for them without interposing any condition first because our heauenly Father is so infinitely gracious and true of his promise that he will deny nothing vnto vs that is good and therefore much lesse these things which are most necessary and in an high degree of goodnesse For if wee being Math. 7. 11. euill know how to giue good gifts vnto our children how much more shall our Father which is in heauen giue good things to them that aske him Secondly because he hath commanded vs to pray for these spirituall graces and therefore it is not to be imagined that the God of all bounty and goodnesse would euer haue inioyned vs to aske those things which hee is vnwilling to giue neither will any wise father draw his children to come with suits vnto him by giuing them repulses onely it may be that the Lord to inlarge our hearts and to make our desires more feruent and earnest doth for a time with-hold these graces at least in respect of our sense and feeling but if we perseuere in prayer and continue importunate Luk. 18. 1 7. suiters we are sure to obtaine them in the end and that in greater measure seeing he that by holding his hand backe hath inlarged our desires and made vs more empty and hungry hath promised also to fill and satisfie vs. To which purpose Augustine speaketh excellently So long Quamdiu Deus non tollit à to crationem tuam non amouebit à te misericordiam suam c. saith he as the Lord doth not take away from thee thy prayer he will not remoue from thee his mercy for he that giueth thee his Spirit that thou maist pray will also giue vnto thee that which by helpe of the same Spirit thou doest desire By all which it appeareth that prayer is a principall meanes to obtaine all grace and strength at Gods hands for the well performing of all holy duties Whereof it is that the Saints in all ages haue so ordinarily vsed it for this end in the behalfe both of themselues and others So Dauid in many places of the Psalmes Shew mee thy wayes O Psal 25. 4 5. and 119. 32 33. Lord and teach me thy paths Leade me in thy truth and teach me Teach mee O Lord the way of thy Commandements and I shall keepe them vnto the end And the Apostle Paul The Lord make you to increase c. to the end he may stablish 1. Thes 3. 13. and 5. 23. your hearts vnblameable in holinesse before God And the very God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soule and body may be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ Wheras without prayer there is no hope of any growth in grace for as in nature all things that grow haue in them an appetite and attractiue force wherwith they draw that nourishment vnto themselues whereby they come to growth and augmentation so in the spirituall growth none receiue any increase of grace but they who haue an appetite and spirituall desires which they expresse by the attractiue force of prayer whereby they draw from God the fountaine of all goodnesse spirituall nourishment and all things needfull to the furthering of their growth in Christ §. Sect. 3 That publike prayer is most effectuall for the obtaining of all Gods graces Now as prayer generally is a notable means to further vs in all duties of a godly life so especially that which is publike when as many of Gods Saints and seruants being met together in his holy Assemblies doe ioyntly with one heart and voyce implore the gracious assistance of his good Spirit whereby they may be inabled to serue him in all Christian duties For if the prayers of one alone doe offer vnto God an holy kind of violence as we see in the example of Moses so as he seemeth vnable to deny Exod. 32. 10. and reiect them because he hath graciously bound himselfe by his free and infallible promises to heare and grant them how powerfull must the prayers of the whole Congregation needs bee to preuaile with God in any suit made according to his will seeing he hath tyed himselfe to heare and helpe them by more speciall promise according to that of our Sauiour If two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall Mat. 18. 19 20. aske it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heauen For where two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the midst of them So the Lord hath promised that he will cause his seruants to reioyce in the granting of their suits by speciall fauour which they shall make vnto him in his owne House I will bring them saith he to mine holy Mountaine and Esa 56. 7. make them ioyfull in my House of prayer their burnt offerings and sacrifices shall bee accepted vpon mine Altar for mine House shall be called an House of prayer for all people Vpon which promises made by God Salomon at the consecration of the 1. King 8. 30 33 Temple groundeth his prayer that the Lord would in speciall manner heare the suits and supplications of his seruants publikely assembled in his Temple to call vpon him And hereof it is that the Apostle contenteth not himselfe with his owne prayers or the priuate suits of others that he might still be preserued for the seruice of
soules no lesse then our bodies need their daily bread and to be refreshed continually in their spirituall strength which is abated through our naturall corruption and many slips and falls into sinne as also with the daily and hourely tentations of the diuell and the world In which respect these priuate meanes haue this preeminence aboue the publike that though they are not so powerfull and yeeld lesse nourishment yet we may haue them at our pleasure and feed vpon them as oft as we will supplying what is wanting in their vertue and efficacy by their daily and continuall vse Finally by the priuate meanes we are fitted and prepared for the well-performing of the publike as by reading prayer meditation c. we are inabled to heare the Word preached with profit seeing they not onely inlarge our hearts that wee may heare it with delight reuerence and attention but also fasten it in our minds and memories and make it fruitfull in our liues and not onely helpe our vnderstandings that we may better conceiue of what is spoken being well acquainted with the holy Scriptures but also inflame our affections with the loue of Gods publike seruice when as we haue thought before-hand of the excellency profit and necessity of it So likewise by these priuate meanes we are made more fit for publike prayer whereas thereby we are made better acquainted with our wants which need supply our sinnes to be confessed and the benefits receiued for which we are bound to returne vnto God praise and thanksgiuing and by often conuersing with God in our priuate prayers we are more incouraged to goe with boldnesse and confidence vnto the Throne of grace vnto which wee cannot attaine if wee estrange our selues from him by our seldome approching into his presence Finally we cannot come as worthy ghests to the Lords Table vnlesse by our priuate exercises of meditation examination and prayer wee be prepared whereby we renew our faith repentance and charity towards our neighbours and come furnished with such sauing graces as are needfull and necessary for the receiuing of the Sacrament with fruit and comfort And therefore it is no maruell if those who content themselues only with the publike meanes of saluation and altogether neglect these priuate helpes leauing all their Religion and deuotion at the Church doore and neuer looking after it till their next returne doe prooue such vnthriuing Christians weake in knowledge feeble in grace and slacke and faint in all the duties of a Christian life For as we would not wonder to see one leane and feeble in body that should content himselfe with liberall sustenance one day in the weeke and fast all the rest so there is as little cause to maruell at the small growth spirituall leannesse and weaknesse of these carelesse Christians after they haue long inioyed the publike means of saluation seeing they rest wholly vpon them and neglect all priuate duties as it were their daily sustenance and so by long fasting are infeebled in their strength and abated in their appetite that they can neither receiue the food publikely offered nor yet disgest and turne it into nourishment when they haue fed vpon it Whereas our soules need more continuall and daily nourishment then our bodies seeing there are no fewer causes of the impairing and abating of their strength §. Sect. 2 That Christiā watchfulnesse is not a bodily but a spirituall exercise Now these priuate meanes are manifold All which may bee reduced vnto two kinds both which containe vnder them diuers particulars the first are such priuate helpes and meanes as are to be vsed by our selues alone the second sort are such as may be vsed both by our selues and also with others ioyning with vs. Of the former sort the first is Christian vigilance or watchfulnesse which well deserueth the first place because being rightly knowne and practised it will serue as a guide to direct and leade vs in all the rest Whereof my discourse need not to be so large as the argument is excellent and necessary seeing it is so religiously and learnedly The spirituall watch handled in a Treatise lately published that were not this Worke imperfect without it I should haue needed to haue said nothing of it seeing little can be added which hath not been better said already But that we may proceed in handling of this poynt I will consider the nature of this watchfulnesse and the meanes which inable vs vnto it In the former we will examine what it is and wherein it consisteth and the ends whereto it tendeth or the obiects about which it is exercised For the better explaning of the first poynt wee are to know that waking watching and watchfulnesse and contrariwise sleeping and neglect of watching are not here vsed in their natiue and proper signification but are metaphoricall words borrowed from the state and disposition of our bodies and from thence transferred to our soules and spirituall estate For we are said to sleepe whilest wee continue in the state of vnregeneration dead in trespasses and sinnes or when being recouered by the quickening power of Gods Spirit regenerating and reuiuing vs we doe in respect of some acts and operations relapse againe into our former condition And wee are then said to awake when we rise out of this estate either in our first conuersion or when we renue our repentance after our falling into sinne and doe againe recouer the operations of spirituall life And finally wee are said to watch when being through our naturall corruption inclined and disposed to fall into our former sleepe of sinne wee doe with all care and circumspection obserue our selues that wee be not ouertaken with spirituall sloth but that we may continue waking and able and actiue for the well-performing of all Christian duties and of our spirituall life in grace In which regard their ignorance and errour is much to bee pitied who imagine that they haue well obserued and kept the Christian watch vnto which we are exhorted in the Scriptures when as hauing abridged themselues of their sleepe and naturall rest they haue thereby wasted and wearied their bodies and weakened their corporall strength this errour arising out of another that the flesh by which the Scriptures vnderstand our originall and naturall corruption the body of sinne and death is nothing else but the body it selfe and that mortification of the flesh consisteth chiefly in the macerating and tormenting pining and pinching of our bodies by depriuing them of all necessaries and among others of their naturall rest and sleepe the which errour I haue at large refuted in Christian warfare the fourth part another place But we are to know that as we may nourish the flesh and consume the body and contrariwise nourish the body and mortifie the flesh so we may take our bodily sleepe as all the faithfull haue done in the state of Regeneration and yet maintaine the spirituall watch and watch euen whole nights as Iudas that betrayed Christ
naturally in vs no drop of grace and goodnesse but what we receiue from God who is the inexhaustible fountaine of euery good and perfect gift as the Apostle telleth vs. Now as hee Iam. 1. 17. hath appointed Christ to be the Conduit head so prayer to be as it were the Pipe whereby he will conuay vnto vs these waters of Life which if we intermit not hee will richly replenish vs with all his graces but if we neglect this holy duty and yet imagine to receiue any grace or spirituall strength from him it is all one as if we should cut off the pipe and yet imagine to fill the empty cisterne §. Sect. 3 That all the parts of prayer are singular helpes to a godly life Finally all the parts of Prayer seuerally serue as speciall meanes to further vs in the duties of a godly life For first the confession of our sinnes will withhold vs from the committing of them whilest aggrauating bewayling and adiudging our selues for them to those fearefull punishments which they haue iustly deserued our hearts are wrought vnto a true hatred of them when as we see and acknowledge the miserable fruits which spring from this cursed roote Secondly because wee cannot for shame commit those sinnes willingly which we haue humbly confessed and God hath graciously pardoned For what malefactour is so impudent as to commit those crimes againe which his Prince of meere loue hath lately remitted and whilest he hath as it were his pardon in his hand especially when he knovveth that he must the next day againe be arrained for them and stand at the barre at his Soueraignes mercy Thirdly because by often confession vve search out our hidden sinnes and ransacke our hearts and consciences so as they cannot lye lurking in them but are apprehended condemned and dravvne out to execution Lastly because vpon our confession receiuing at Gods hands assurance of pardon Pro. 28. 13. 1. Ioh. 1. 7. Luk. 7. 47. according to his gracious promises wee cannot but intirely loue him who hath forgiuen vs so great a debt whereby wee shall bee made loth to doe any thing which may displease him and ready to performe all good duties which may bee acceptable in his sight By petition also wee haue no lesse helpe seeing thereby wee come to a more thorow sight of our wants which worketh in vs an hungring and thirsting desire that they may bee supplied and of our imperfections in our best duties that wee may striue and labour after more perfection carefully and conscionably vsing all good meanes whereby our desires may bee satisfied seeing if wee should neglect them after wee haue made these earnest suites we should both tempt the Lord and discouer our owne grosse hypocrisie in asking those things which wee care not to obtaine Againe by these suites and requests made vnto God according to his Luk. 11. 13. will wee receiue the gift of his holy Spirit which inableth vs to all good duties by regenerating and sanctifying vs seeing God hath promised to giue him vnto those that aske him and together with him wee obtaine all Gods sanctifying gifts and graces which by the same meanes are daily confirmed and increased in vs and haue such a quickning power vertue and vigour added vnto them that they inable vs to the constant performance of all Christian duties which otherwise lying dull and dead in vs wee should become like a body without spirits lumpish and lazie in Gods seruice Finally by these suites and requests our loue is inflamed vpon our assurance that they are heard and granted which stirreth vs vp to yeeld vnto God cheerefull obedience our faith is confirmed and our affiance and hope strengthened in assured confidence and expectation of Gods helpe and assistance which will vphold vs when we are ready to faint inable vs to ouercome all difficulties and to performe all the duties of a godly life with much comfort and delight Lastly thanksgiuing is a singular helpe to the same end whilest we recount and call to minde Gods manifold blessings and rich mercies which of meere grace without any desert of ours he hath from time to time multiplied vpon vs. All which if we be not too too vngratefull will bee so many strong bands of loue to tye vs vnto obedience and to make vs cheerefull in all Christian duties seeing by them we serue so bountifull a Master which if we neglect to doe we shall play the notable hypocrites in professing that thankfulnesse with our lips which we neither haue in our hearts nor take any care to expresse in our liues CAP. XXVIII Of reading the Scriptures and other religious writings §. Sect. 1 Who are to exercise themselues in this dutie of reading THe second priuate meanes of a godly life which may be vsed by our selues alone or with others is reading which is the perusing and studying of religious writings for the information of our iudgements in the knowledge of God and his truth the sanctifying of our hearts and affections and the reforming of our liues and conuersations The which exercise may be performed when we are alone by the sight of the eye and the discourse of the minde either with or without the vse of speech but with all necessarily ioyned together when we performe this dutie with others In speaking whereof let vs first generally obserue who are to reade and then the sub●ect matter which is to be read of them For the first all sorts and conditions of men without exception are tyed to this dutie who are any way able to performe it both the learned and vnlearned the Ministers and common people the poore and rich men women yong old and of middle age seeing the Lord in the Scriptures hath imposed it as necessary and profitable for all men Thus he requireth that not onely the Leuites but his whole people of Israel should continually studie in the Booke of his Law and take all good occasions to speake and talke of it in all places that they should binde the words of it Deut. 6. 7 8 9. Matth. 22. 29. for a signe vpon their hands and that they should bee as frontlets betweene their eyes and that they should write them vpon the posts of their house and on their gates to no other end but that they might often take occasion thereby to reade and study them Our Sauiour Christ also doth exhort all to search the Scriptures and affirmeth this to bee the cause of all errours Ioh. 5. 39. both in iudgement and manners because men were not well acquainted with them And the Apostle Peter writing generally to all saith that hauing a more sure word of prophecie that is more infallible then any reuelations therefore they did well that they did take heede vnto it as vnto a 2. Pet. 1. 19. light that shineth in a darke place And the Apostle writing vnto the Romanes saith that whatsoeuer things were written aforetime were written for Rom. 15. 4.
away both these causes and effects of it And first wee must rowze vp our spirits and stirre vp Gods graces in 2. Tim. 1. 6. vs as the Apostle exhorteth that wee may not bee weary of well-doing by 2. Thes 3. 13. considering the waight and worth the profit and necessity of Christian and religious duties in comparison whereof all worldly things ought to be neglected as vaine and of no value Let vs remember that all the promises of grace life and saluation shall be assured vnto vs if we faint not whereas we shall haue no part or interest in them though we haue made neuer so good beginnings or proceedings if we doe not still goe forward and hold out vnto the end For if we indure Matth. 24. 13. to the end we shall be saued if we fight vnto the death we shall receiue the Crowne Apoc. 2. 10. of Life But if wee lay our hand vpon the Plough and looke backe we shall Luk. 9. 62. not be though worthy of the Kingdome of heauen Finally let vs dayly renue the meanes of Spirituall life and strength that so they also may be renued and repayred as hearing reading meditation prayer watchfulnesse holy conferences and the rest without which the soule will grow faint and languish like the body which is depriued of corporall food but especially when we feele our faintnesse and languishing wearinesse let vs vnite all the powers of our soules in prayer vnto Almighty God desiring him by the inward operation of his holy Spirit to quicken our deadnesse and strengthen our weakenesse that we may not waxe wearie of well doing but continue constant vnto the end Now concerning the effects of this slothfull wearinesse which are also great impediments to a godly life as hindring vs from entring into it or proceeding in it inconstancie and vnsettlednesse in performing Christian duties and want of feruencie in our loue and zeale in doing of them I shall not neede to adde any thing here for the remoouing of them seeing I haue spoken before of perseuerance and constancie in the dayly performance of all Christian duties and of that feruour of loue and zeale which ought to be vsed in doing of them And therefore thus much shall suffice to haue spoken of those impediments which arise from the flesh and corruption of our nature and also of the helpes and meanes whereby wee may remoue them CAP. XIII Obiections against a godly life made by the flesh answered and first such as pretend impossibility and difficulty §. Sect. 1 That a godly life is possible vnto vs. BVt the flesh doth not onely hinder vs in the duties of a godly life by those reall impediments which it casteth in our way of which I haue before spoken but also by suggesting into our mindes many strong obiections which tend to this maine end that wee may be discouraged from entring into the course of Christianity And first the flesh is ready to obiect that in this state of frailty and corruption it is vtterly impossible to lead a godly life in that manner as it hath beene before described For who can bring that which is cleane out of that which Iob 14. 4. is vncleane Who can leade such a life as is pleasing and acceptable vnto God whose pure eyes can indure nothing which is impure and imperfect seeing the Prophet telleth vs that our best righteousnesse is as Esay 64. 6. a polluted cloth and the Apostle who so farre exceeded vs that now liue in piety and righteousnesse notwithstanding complayneth that he could not doe the good he would but contrariwise did the euill he would Rom. 7. 15. not And therefore it is in vaine to wearie our selues about impossibilities and so to lose both the pleasures of this life and that which is to come And thus the flesh perswadeth vs to play the bankerupts and to resolue that because we cannot pay all our whole debt that therefore wee will pay nothing at all To which I answere with our Sauiour Christ that those things which are impossible to vs are both possible and easie vnto God who hath promised to assist vs if we desire and indeuour to serue and please him Secondly I answere that though nothing will please God but that which is pure and perfect all our best actions are full of corruption imperfection yet this need not to discourage vs from doing the best we can seeing Christ who hath perfitly fulfilled the Law for vs couereth our imperfections with his most perfect righteousnes washeth away our corruptions in his most precious blood so that we may doe the best we can then what is wanting on our part shal be supplied on his For what the Law could not doe in Rom. 8. 3. that it was weake through the flesh God sending his owne Son in the likenes of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnes of the Law might be fulfilled in vs who walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit as the Apostle speaketh Thirdly though that perfect obedience which the Law requireth be impossible vnto vs in respect of our frailty corruption yet that Euangelical obedience required in the couenant of grace namely that beleeuing in Christ we desire resolue indeuor to please God in al things is not so Though we haue no ability to performe seruice vnto God in that exact perfection which the Law requireth yet if we doe that which we are able in sincerity truth with vpright hearts good cōsciences we shal through Christ be accepted of God For he reiecteth not the least indeuours of his faithfull seruants who desire Nehem. 1. 11. to feare his name He will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking Matth. 12. 20. flax till he bring forth iudgement vnto victory He spareth vs as a father spareth Mal. 3. 17. his sonne that serueth him and if we haue a willing mind we shal be accepted according 2. Cor. 8. 12. to that we haue and not according to that we haue not He pittieth our frailties and infirmities like as a father pittieth his children that feare him Psal 103. 13 14. out of this pitty pardoneth them For he knoweth our frame remembreth that we are but dust And though he hath most pure eyes which can indure no pollution yet he beholdeth not iniquity in Iacob neither doth he see Num. 23. 21. peruersnes in Israel Nor is he any accepter of persons but in euery nation he that Act. 10. 35. feareth him worketh righteousnes not according to the rigor of the law from which Christ hath freed vs but in the truth and vprightnes of his heart is accepted of him And thus was Dauid accepted as a man according to Gods own heart because he applied himselfe to obserue his precepts alwaies Psal 119. 112. to the end notwithstanding his grieuous sins and fearefull fals
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
but presently like the body touched by Elizaeus 2. King 13. 21. in the graue we receiue such vertue and vigour from him that we are reuiued and raised from this graue of sinne vnto holinesse and newnesse of life We are by nature wild vines who bring foorth nothing but sowre grapes of maliciousnesse and sinne but when wee are ingrafted into the Ioh. 15. 1 4 5 8. true vine Iesus Christ we change our nature and receiuing the liuely sap of grace from this roote of righteousnesse we bring foorth the fruits of obedience whereby our heauenly Father is glorified and we assured of our election and saluation Finally without him wee can of our selues doe Matth. 5. 16. 2. Pet. 1. 10. nothing as he hath taught vs but being vnited vnto him we may say with the Apostle that we can doe all things through Christ which strengtheneth vs. Phil. 4. 13. And this is that which the same Apostle teacheth vs We are buried saith Rom. 6. 4 5 6. he with him by baptisme into death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the Father euen so we also should walke in newnesse of life For if we haue beene planted together in the likenesse of his death we shall be also in the likenesse of his resurrection Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sinne might be destroyed that hencefoorth wee should not serue sinne And therefore if we would bee new creatures let vs put on Iesus Christ and labour to be vnited vnto him by his holy Spirit and a Rom. 13. 14. liuely faith for in him alone we are elected vnto holinesse in him onely we are created vnto good workes which God hath before ordained that we should Eph. 1. 4. 2. 10 walke in them §. Sect. 7 That onely those can leade a godly life who are in the couenant of grace The third thing required is that we be in the couenant of grace made with vs in Iesus Christ whereby God hath assured vs that he will bee our God and that we shall be his people he our gracious Father and we his children whom he will accept in his best beloued For vntill we be in this couenant our persons are not accepted we remaining the slaues of sinne and in the state of death and condemnation and consequently nothing which we can doe seeme it neuer so glorious is pleasing in Gods sight We are till then vnder the law and couenant of workes if not as it was giuen to the Iewes yet as it was ingrauen in our hearts in our creation and Rom. 2. 14 15. consequently vnder the curse which is denounced against all that doe not Gal. 3. 10. continue in all which is written in the booke of the law to doe it namely in that perfection which the law requireth Of which fayling innumerable times we cannot according to this strict rule yeeld obedience nor performe the duties of a godly life But when we are admitted into the couenant of grace made in Iesus Christ then this rigour of the law is remitted and we are tyed onely to the obedience of sonnes which consisteth more in our wills desires and indeuours then in our abilities to performe our dutie in perfection The which obedience as this perfect law of liberty doth require so doth it inable vs to doe that which it requireth For in this couenant the Lord promiseth that he will take away our stony hearts which Ezek. 11. 29. 36. 26. Ioh. 16. 13. will rather breake then bow vnto his will and giue vs hearts of flesh which will incline to all good motions of his Word and holy Spirit And that hee will giue his holy Spirit vnto vs to conduct and rule vs in all our 1. Ioh. 2. 27. wayes and to support strengthen and comfort vs against all the difficulties and discouragements which doe affront and crosse vs in our Christian course That he will write his Law not in Tables of stone but in our Ier. 31. 31 32 33 34. hearts that we may not depart from him And if contrary to our purpose we slip in our way the Lord hath promised that he will not remember our Mal. 3. 17. sinnes to impute them vnto vs but will spare vs as a father spareth his sonne that serueth him Now what can bee a greater incouragement vnto the performance of all the duties of an holy life then to know that wee are accepted of God and that our obedience though imperfect and mingled with much corruption and weakenesse shall in Christ not onely be pardoned but highly regarded and richly rewarded by our louing Father And therefore let vs labour to be in the couenant of grace vnto which nothing on our part is required but a liuely faith in Christ applying all Gods promises made vnto vs in him and that we bring forth the fruits of this faith in vnfained repentance and new obedience §. Sect. 8 That a liuely faith is necessarily required vnto a godly life The fourth thing required in those who are to leade a godly life is a liuely faith whereby we vnderstand not onely a generall faith whereby we know and beleeue that the duties which we performe are agreeable to Gods will and warranted by his Word but a true liuely and iustifying faith whereby we are ingrafted into Iesus Christ and made partakers of all his benefits For we must first by him be made righteous before wee can doe the workes of righteousnesse wee must first become good trees Matth. 7. 18. before we can yeeld good fruits and be liuely branches of the true Vine Iesus Christ which sucke from this roote the sap of grace and holinesse before we can beare the sweete and ripe grapes of new and true obedience which are acceptable to God and well rellishing vnto his taste In which respect the Apostle telleth vs that without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. because whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Besides our best righteousnesse is Esa 64. 6. like a polluted cloth stained with our corruptions and mingled with our imperfections and consequently cannot indure the seuere triall of Gods strict iustice nor be accepted of him who being infinite in perfection in himselfe alloweth of nothing that is imperfect vnlesse being vnited vnto Christ we be made partakers of the benefit of his death and obedience and so haue the imperfection of our actions couered with his perfect righteousnesse and their pollution washed cleane away in his most precious blood And therefore if we would leade such a godly life as may be pleasing vnto God we must first labour to be indued with a liuely faith that all our fruits of obedience springing from this roote may bee accepted in and for Christ and be allowed through his righteousnesse and obedience which deserue to bee reiected in respect of their owne pollution and imperfection §.
Sect. 9 That the duties of a godly life must spring from the fountaine of loue The fifth thing required is that all the duties of a godly life which we performe doe spring from the fountaine of loue which is a fruit of a liuely faith wherby being assured of Gods loue towards vs in Iesus Christ we begin to loue him againe and our neighbours for his sake and receiuing the bright beames of his fauour into our hearts haue them illightened and warmed thereby and so reflect them backe againe towards God in our loue of his Maiesty and zeale of his glory abhorring whatsoeuer is displeasing and louing and practising that which is acceptable in his 1. Tim. 1. 5. Matth. 22. 40. Rom. 13. 10. sight For this loue is the end of Gods commandements and compriseth in it the whole summe and substance of the Law and therefore it is the base and foundation of all true obedience and whatsoeuer proceedeth not from loue cannot be accounted any seruice vnto God seeing it is not done for his sake but out of selfe-loue and for worldly respects which being sinnefull and corrupt doe pollute all the actions which doe spring from them §. Sect. 10 That the duties of a godly life must proceede from thankfulnesse The sixth thing required vnto a godly life is that we performe all holy and Christian duties out of our thankefulnesse towards God as for all his benefits spirituall and corporall bestowed vpon vs namely our election creation preseruation and the rest so especially for that maine benefit the great worke of our redemption by Iesus Christ whereby he hath made vs of the slaues of Satan his owne seruants of the children of wrath his owne children by adoption and grace of the seruants of sinne the seruants of righteousnesse and of the heires of hell and condemnation coheires with Christ and inheritours of heauenly happinesse The which benefits being rightly considered must needs make vs truely thankefull vnto him of whom we haue so great saluation and out of this thankefulnesse truely zealous of his glory to whom we are so deepely indebted and to expresse both the one and the other by our earnest indeuour and conscionable care to glorifie his holy name by shining before men in the light of a godly life And that this ought to be the maine motiue to incite vnto the practice of an holy conuersation it appeareth heereby in that the Apostles doe so frequently vse it as a forcible argument to prouoke vs vnto it You are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in 1 Cor. 5. 20. your Spirit which are Gods Ye were sometimes darkenesse but now are ye light in Eph. 5. 8. the Lord walke as children of light And therefore we must take heede that we doe not performe holy duties out of an opinion of merit to make God beholding vnto vs or to satisfie his iustice which is onely done by Christs perfect righteousnesse and obedience or to leaue our workes of supererrogation as a treasure vnto the Church to be sold vnto those who most wanting them will buy them at the highest price or to purchase by them Gods heauenly Kingdome which is a free inheritance and the meere gift Matth. 25. 31. Rom. 6. 23. of grace which God hath of his sole bounty and good will giuen vnto vs in and for Iesus Christ but let vs doe what wee are able and be sorry in our hearts that we can doe no more out of vnfained thankefulnesse vnto God for the many and inestimable benefits which of his free grace and vndeserued goodnesse he hath multiplyed on vs. §. Sect. 11 That the duties of a godly life must bee done in humility The seuenth thing required vnto a godly life is that all the Christian Esa 57. 17. duties which we performe bee done in humility and lowlinesse of spirit for this is a grace most acceptable vnto God which will mooue him to inhabite in vs as his Temples by his holy Spirit for hee dwelleth with him that is of a contrite and humble spirit to reuiue the spirit of the humble and to reuiue the heart of the humble ones It mooueth him to bestow all other graces and inlargeth our hearts that they may be fit to receiue them for the meeke will he guide in iudgement and the meeke will he teach his way And Psal 25. 9. this Argument the Apostle Peter vseth to perswade vs to bee clothed with 1. Pet. 5. 5. humility Because God resisteth the proud and giueth grace vnto the humble It is the ornament and signe of all other graces and of all Christian duties whereby we may know whether they be counterfeit and hypocriticall or in sincerity and truth for the oyle of sauing grace and the water and winde of pride will not mixe together and therefore we must bee emptied of the one before we can be replenished with the other According to the song of the blessed Virgin He hath filled the hungry with good Luk. 1. 53. things and the rich he hath sent empty away So that if we would be inriched with Gods graces and be strengthened by his Spirit vnto the duties of a godly life we must as we increase in them increase also in humility and as our Sauiour hath taught vs When we shall haue done all those things which are Luk. 17. 10. commanded vs we must acknowledge that we are vnprofitable seruants who haue done nothing but that which was our dutie to doe To which purpose let vs often meditate of the imperfections and corruptions of our best actions which might iustly mooue the Lord to reiect them and vs also for them if in the seuerity and strictnesse of his iustice he should looke vpon them Let vs thinke not onely of the good we doe but also of the euill which we commit and the good which we leaue vndone and then there will be no place for pride but rather for that bitter and lamentable complaint of the Apostle That which I doe I allow not for the good that I would I doe not Rom. 7. 15 19 24. but the euill which I would not that I doe O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Let vs consider not so much how farre we haue proceeded in the Christian race but rather how much remaineth and how farre we yet come short of the goale of perfection according to the Apostles example I count my selfe saith he not to haue apprehended but this one thing I doe forgetting those things which are behind Phil. 3. 13 14. and reaching foorth to those things which are before I presse towards the marke for the price of the high calling in Christ Iesus Finally though we had attained vnto some perfection yet there were no place for pride but rather for the greater humility seeing wee are the more indebted vnto God for his aboundant grace and bounty for as the Apostle saith
or speciall The generall is either the creation of all things of nothing or the gubernation of them being made by his prouidence The speciall execution of his decree respecteth either Angels or men To say heere nothing of Angels wee are to know that God hauing created the earth of nothing did make man of the earth in respect of his body and breathing into him the breath of life did create him a liuing soule that man was created according to Gods owne image in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse made Lord of all the creatures and happie in the vision and fruition of God and his fauour and of the ioyes and pleasures of Paradise That being created good and yet but mutable God left him to the freedome of his will and to be tempted of the deuill Vnto which tentation when hee had yeelded by transgressing Gods commandement in eating of the forbidden fruit he fell from this estate of happinesse into the state of sinne misery and death The which sin is imputed vnto vs who sinned in his loynes he being no priuate person but the roote of mankind and the corruption of his nature deriued vnto all his posterity by naturall propagation the which we call originall sinne whereby Gods image is defaced in vs and we disabled vnto all good and made prone vnto all euill From which originall corruption which is the fountaine of all maliciousnesse haue sprung the cursed streames of actuall transgressions whereby wee haue broken Gods whole Law and euery commandement of it in thought word and deed both by omitting the duties which are commanded and committing the sinnes which are forbidden Whereby we haue made our selues subiect to the curse of the Law and all the plagues and punishments therein threatned both temporall and eternall out of which miserable estate and condition it was altogether impossible to recouer by our owne meanes or the helpe of any or all the creatures §. Sect. 10 Of our recouery out of our misery And this was the execution of Gods decree in respect of mans creation fall and misery Vnto which we must adioyne the knowledge of our recouery out of this wretched condition To which purpose we must know that when we were thus deepely plunged into this state of death and condemnation and in respect of our selues or any meanes of our owne hopelesse and helpelesse for our recouery it pleased the Lord of his meere grace and free mercy to send his Sonne into the world to take our nature vpon him and therein to worke that great worke of our redemption The which hee did perfectly performe both by his merits and efficacie The former hee did by satisfying Gods iustice both by his actiue obedience in fulfilling the Law for vs and by his passiue obedience in suffering death in his body and the anger of God in his soule The which is a sufficient price of redemption for all that doe apply it because he that did this for vs was God and man And so as his humane nature made him capeable of these sufferings so the diuine nature which was the Altar vpon which this sacrifice was offered sanctifyed the gift and gaue vnto it infinite value and dignitie so as it became a sufficient and fit satisfaction for sinne For as sinne being nothing in it selfe but a priuation became of infinite guilt in respect of the infinite Maiesty of God offended by it so the sufferings of Christs humane nature though temporary became of infinite value in respect of the dignity of the person who suffered being God and man And as thus Christ saued vs by his merits so also by his efficacie applying the vertue of his merits vnto vs by his Spirit and Word which begetting in vs a liuely faith that bringeth foorth the fruits of vnfained repentance we performe thereby the Couenant of grace and so are made partakers of Christ and all his benefits which are therein promised For in the preaching of the Gospell this couenant is proclaimed and we are effectually called to the knowledge and participation thereof God giuing Christ vnto vs to be our Sauiour and vs to Christ to bee saued by him yea vniting vs vnto him in one mysticall body whereof hee is the Head and we his members by vertue whereof as we are partakers of him so haue we also right and interest vnto all his benefits Of which vnion the chiefe bond on Gods part is his holy Spirit and on our part a liuely and iustifying faith which is wrought in vs by the preaching of the Gospell made effectuall by the inward operation of the Spirit of God and confirmed and increased by the vse of the Sacraments which are the seales annexed to the Couenant to assure vs that God will not faile to performe all his promises And these things are the obiect of our sauing knowledge or the maine points which we are to know vnto saluation and to inable vs to walke in the way of a godly life that leadeth vnto it The which I would not heere haue touched were not this knowledge necessary heereunto or would haue handled them more fully and exactly but that I feared that they would cause this Treatise too much to swell and farre to exceed the limits which I haue proposed vnto it and also considered that there are already published many Catechismes and summes of Diuinity in which all men at their pleasure may finde these and many other the like points of our Christian Religion thorowly discussed CAP. VII Of the quantity and quality of sauing knowledge and how necessary it is to a godly life §. Sect. 1 Of the quantity of knowledge and the diuers degrees of it THe next point to bee considered in our knowledge is the quantity and measure of it the which is imperfect in the greatest perfection which in this life can be attained For as the Apostle though he had receiued aboundance of the Spirit and such reuelations as were not lawfull to bee vttered confessed of himselfe together with others We know but in part and see 1. Cor. 13. 9 12. 8. 2. through a glasse darkely and if any man thinke that hee knoweth any thing namely in perfection he knoweth nothing as he ought to know For wee 2. Cor. 5. 7. Heb. 11. 1. walke by faith and not by sight And faith is of things vnseene and not in vision and fruition Neither can wee attaine to perfect knowledge vntill we attaine vnto perfect happinesse which is not in this life but the life to come when we shall see God face to face and shall know as we are knowne not by the knowledge of faith which is but by hearing signes semblances and reuelations but of vision fruition and most firme experience For the perfection of our knowledge heere consisteth most in the knowledge and acknowledgment of our imperfection and not in the high degree of quantitie but in the sincerity and truth The which knowledge discouereth our ignorance that we may bewaile it and
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
is prayer whereby lifting vp our hearts vnto God with more feruency then prolixity wee doe in some short manner render vnto God praise and thanksgiuing for our quiet rest whereby our bodies are refreshed for preseruing vs from all dangers of the night both in our soules and bodies especially from sinfull dreames and the tentations and assaults of Satan who would easily haue ouercome and vtterly destroyed vs had not God watched ouer and defended vs by his power and prouidence For letting vs againe inioy the light and granting vs another day wherein we may doe him further seruice and so make our owne calling and election sure Vnto which with like breuity wee are to adioyne the confession of our sinnes especially of that night if any such come to our knowledge and remembrance and by reason of them our great vnworthinesse of these fauours and testimonies of Gods loue desiring the pardon of them and the sanctification of the Spirit whereby wee may be more and more freed from them And finally wee are to cast our selues into the armes of his prouidence commending our soules and bodies vnto his protection and direction and desiring to bee so assisted with his grace and holy Spirit that all the thoughts of our hearts and words of our mouthes and the workes of our hands may the day following and for euer be acceptable in his sight And especially that he will so illighten rule and assist vs in our following meditations that they may tend to his glory and to our owne comfort and saluation §. Sect. 2 Of the subiect matter of our Morning meditations And so we must from prayer proceed to meditation the which may bee longer or shorter according to our opportunity occasions and leasure and the measure and feruency of our zeale and deuotion In which our maine scope must bee to glorifie God to increase our communion with him by these familiar conferences of our soules to strengthen our faith inlarge our hearts with loue and thankfulnesse and to replenish them with ioy and comfort in the sweet fruition of God and tokens of his loue To which purpose we must fit the subiect matter of our meditations and because present occasions are ready at hand and not onely more familiar and easie to be remembred but fit to affect our hearts which are more apprehensiue of present then past benefits we are to make vse of such by meditating on them But yet principally we must begin with the fountaine and raise our thoughts from the ground and foundation of all blessings which is Gods infinite loue testified chiefly in giuing vnto vs that singular pledge thereof his onely Sonne to die for vs that we might be freed from euerlasting death and attaine vnto eternall life and happinesse For whose sake hee hath freely forgiuen vs all our sinnes and bestowed vpon vs together with him all things needfull for our soules and bodies and whatsoeuer is necessary to life and godlinesse From which we may descend to the particular testimonies of Gods loue lately receiued as that hee hath by his power and prouidence watching ouer vs the night past preserued vs from all dangers and out of the hands of our spirituall enemies who otherwise wanted neither will nor power to haue brought vs to destruction That he hath kept vs from all terrours of the night with which others haue beene affrighted and hath graciously preserued our liues from sudden death with which others lying downe in health and security haue been attached before the morning adding vnto our dayes and giuing vs still time of repentance with ability to serue him and to bee instruments of his glory After which meditation on Gods mercies we may take such occasions as are presently offred to furnish our mindes with holy thoughts and to worke in our hearts good affections and desires As our awakning out of sleepe may put vs in mind of our awakening out of the sleepe or rather Eph. 2. 1. death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse by the quickning power of Gods holy Spirit in our regeneration and of the daily renewing of this our Eph. 5. 14. quickning and awakning by continuall sanctification The light of the Sun may put vs in minde of the Sunne of righteousnesse who first in his Kingdome of grace hath shined vnto vs by the light of the Gospel who before Luk. 1. 79. sate in darkenesse and the shaddow of death guiding our feet into the way of peace With which light we are to desire our mindes may be more and more inlightened and freed powerfully and effectually from their naturall ignorance without which spirituall illightning the outward light of the Sun and sight of our eyes wil bring vnto our hearts no sound comfort Secondly of the light of glory which shall infinitely exceed the light of the Sun and much more then it exceedeth a Gloworme or the smallest spark of fire For if euery one of the innumerable numbers of the glorified Saints shal be more glorious then the Sun in his chiefest brightnesse then how infinite is the glory of the now vnaccessable light which we shal then see face to face who giueth both vnto the Sun and them their beauty and brightnesse our rising out of our beds may put vs in mind of the rising of our bodies out of our graues when as at the last day by the sound of the Trumpet we shal be summoned before Gods Tribunall seate to giue an account of all that we haue done in the flesh the which should make vs to resolue of preparing our selues daily to meet our Iudge because the time is vncertaine when he will call vs to Iudgement When we see our nakednes let it put vs in mind of our sin which caused vs first to see and be ashamed of it whereas when we were couered with innocency and had the Image of God shining in vs we no more needed garments to couer vs then the Sun a cloud And let this make vs to long after the garment of Christs righteousnesse with which when we are perfectly clothed we shal be without sin or shame appeare glorious in the sight of God yea let vs earnestly desire to put on Christ not Rom. 13. 14. only for iustification but also for sanctification wherby that clothing of innocency before the fall will be presently in part renewed repaired till at last it come to more perfection then it had in our first creation When we put on our apparell let vs remember that they were first giuen vs to couer our shame not as ornaments to be proud of but as couerings to hide our nakednesse to preserue vs from the iniuries of the weather And as we are carefull not only to prouide fit clothes for those ends but also to put them on and apply them to our vse so let vs be no lesse carefull to prouide fit clothing for our soules whereby their spirituall deformities may be couered and they beautified in the eyes
something of the method and right disposing of the parts The parts of prayer to be vsed ordinarily of vs are three confession petition and thanksgiuing In our priuate confessions of our sins we are hauing first a true sense and feeling hatred detestation of thē to acknowledge them bewaile them not only generally but also specially and particularly and those aboue the rest which we haue last committed and with which we haue most often and grieuously displeased and dishonoured God and wounded our owne consciences according to the example of Dauid in the one and fiftieth Psalme and withall aggrauate them by their seuerall circumstances especially the consideration of the person against whom they were committed our glorious God and gracious Father in Iesus Christ adiudging and condemning our selues in regard of them to bee lesse then the least of Gods mercies and worthy of his greatest plagues and punishments Vnto which we are to adioyne petition and first that God for his mercies sake his promise sake and his Christs sake will forgiue vs all our sinnes and neuer lay them to our charge seeing our Sauiour hath fully satisfied his Iustice for them and so that being iustified and freed from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes he will be reconciled vnto vs and receiue vs into his loue and fauour Secondly that God will be pleased to seale vp the assurance hereof in our hearts and consciences by the gracious testimony of his holy Spirit and giue vnto vs the spirit of Adoption crying in our hearts Rom. 8. 15. Abba Father and witnessing to our spirits that wee are his children by adoption and grace Thirdly that he will sanctifie vs by the same Spirit mortifying and crucifying in vs more and more our sinfull corruptions so as they may not rule and raigne in vs as at former times and that he will also quicken vs vnto holinesse and newnesse of life and inable vs to yeeld obedience to his holy and heauenly will Fourthly that he will to these ends graciously vouchsafe vnto vs the meanes which may inable vs vnto them and make them effectuall by his good blessing vpon them Especially that he will indue vs with the sanctifying gifts and graces of his holy Spirit as sauing knowledge a liuely faith vnfained repentance firme affiance feruent loue and ardent zeale hope patience humility the true feare of God and the rest Fifthly that God will daily increase his graces in vs and our strength and ability to serue him that wee may grow from one measure to another vntill we come to a perfect age in Christ Sixthly that he will establish vs with his free Spirit that we may constantly perseuere in the profession and practice of true godlines vnto the end and in the end and that he will thereby so assist and strengthen vs against all the assaults of our spirituall enemies that we may haue victory ouer them and not be hindred by their tentations from proceeding in our course of godlinesse or from finishing the great worke of our saluation Seuenthly we must heereunto adde petitions for speciall benefits whereof wee stand in neede concerning things either temporall or spirituall and eternall and particularly such as are necessary and profitable for the well passing of the day following especially preseruation from all dangers direction in all our courses our thoughts words and actions and the blessing of God vpon all our labours with a right vse of all Gods benefits and chastisements Finally we must pray for the good estate of the whole Church of that in which wee liue and for all the principall members of it for our friends and benefactours for the afflicted for those of the same family and such vnto whom wee are bound by any speciall bond of duty And lastly we must from petition descend to thanksgiuing praysing God for all his blessings both corporall spirituall and eternall and especially for those peculiar benefits which he hath vouchsafed vnto vs in the whole course of our liues for those of late receiued and namely the night past in our preseruation and quiet rest And this I hold to bee the best method and order to bee obserued in our prayers ordinarily although I would tye no man vnto it but that he may herein vse his discretion beginning with confession thanksgiuing or petition as his heart leadeth him and fit occasion shall be offered §. Sect. 5 What duties are to be performed after wee haue prayed And these are the duties which are to bee daily performed in this holy exercise of prayer Now after wee haue thus prayed there are certaine other things required of vs. First a liuely faith whereby we doe not onely giue our vnfained assent vnto our prayer made but also rest perswaded that the Lord hath heard vs in the things for which we haue prayed and will assuredly accept of our humiliation and thanksgiuing and grant all our suites and requests as it will best stand with his owne glory our spirituall good and eternall happinesse And this our Sauiour requireth What Mark 11. 24. things soeuer yee desire when yee pray beleeue that yee shall receiue them and ye shall haue them Secondly hope patience and humility whereby we make no haste nor prescribe vnto God any time of doing the things which we haue desired but meekely acknowledging his infinite wisedome in himselfe and goodnesse towards vs doe resigne wholly our selues and suites vnto his good pleasure expecting with all patience his leasure when as he shall thinke it fittest to bestow vpon vs those gifts and graces which wee haue begged at his hands Thirdly there is required of vs after prayer an earnest indeuour in the vse of all good meanes whereby we may obtaine those things which wee haue prayed for whereby wee shall serue Gods prouidence and be his instruments to further the accomplishment of his promises and also make it manifest that in our hearts we sincerely desired those things which we begged with our mouthes For example after we haue prayed for the pardon of our sinnes we must vse carefully all good meanes whereby we may be further assured that God hath forgiuen them after we haue craued sanctification we must labour and indeuour that we may be sanctified and exercise our selues in the duties of holinesse after we haue desired spirituall and sauing graces we must vse all the helpes and meanes whereby we may attaine vnto them For otherwise we shall discouer our selues to be but meere hypocrites who with our lips haue prayed for those things which we haue neither esteemed in our iudgements nor affected in our hearts and therefore receiue nothing at Gods hands who giueth his gifts not to idle loyterers but vnto such as pursue them with thirsting desires and earnestly labour and indeuour in the vse of all good meanes whereby they may obtaine them §. Sect. 6 Of the time in the morning when we are to vse priuate prayer The last direction which I will set downe
of our health and strength For howsoeuer some may lawfully haue their tables thorowly furnished yet none may rise from them with full and glutted bellies though our cups with Dauids may be filled till they runne ouer yet the ouerflow must not bee into our owne bellies and much lesse mount so high as to our heads but like Salomons cisternes they must haue their waste into the streets and Pro. 5. 15 16. serue as fountaines to water and refresh the thirsty lands Though it be a blessing of God promised vnto the faithfull that they shall eate in plenty and Ioel 2. 26. be satisfied that they may take occasion thereby to praise the name of the Lord for all his bounty and goodnesse yet it is a fearefull curse and heauy iudgement to be giuen ouer vnto our owne carnall appetite and a grieuous sinne to minde so our bellies as that we take more care and paines to please them then to please God which is to be a right belly-god indeed to be transformed from men to beasts who are led more by their sense and appetite then by reason and Religion and haue their gluttonous panch the chiefe state of their soules and not in their head and heart herein like as Clemens compareth them to the sea-Asse which onely among all other Clem. Alex. paedagog l. 2. c. 1. liuing and sensible creatures hath his heart in his belly as the Philosopher hath obserued It is true that we may lawfully vse the creatures not only for the necessity of nature but also for our comfort and seasonable delight and that we may at some times more then other take our liberty to feed Gen. 43. 34. Ioh. 2. 10. Psal 104. 15. Esa 5. 18 19. Hag. 1. 6. vpon them more liberally as at the time of our feasting and reioycing one with another for it is one chiefe end of the blessing of plenty that wee should haue the fruition and benefit of it and a punishment which God threatneth for sinne that the people should be scanted in their food and haue only sufficient for necessity of nature to hold life and soule together but not enough to satisfie the appetite and strengthen the body But to exceede in gluttony and to pamper the belly with superfluous excesse to surcharge the stomacke and to oppresse the minde and heart to make the body with too much eating and drinking heauy and lumpish and the minde dull and blockish is neuer seasonable at any time nor suiteable for Pro. 23. 29 30. 25. 16. 31. 4 5 6 7. Luk. 21. 34. any person For this is expresly forbidden in many places of Scripture and of our Sauiour Christ himselfe by a speciall Mandate and Memento Take heede to your selues lest at any time your hearts be ouer charged with surfetting and drunkennesse and so that day come vpon you at vnawares c. So that we are with equall care to auoyd excesse in meates as well as drinkes for Plures quippe sunt scili●et virgines quae cum vino sint sobriae ciborum largitate sunt ebriae c. Hier. ad Eustoch de custod virg howsoeuer drunkennesse aboue gluttony exposeth to worldly shame because it hath not so many colours and excuses to hide and couer it and hath not like the other the wits at home to make apologies in its owne defence yet is it no lesse to bee auoided as being a sinne alike odious vnto God and pernicious and hurtfull vnto vs and our poore neighbours For it is a shamefull abuse of Gods rich bounty when wee take occasion thereby to disable our selues vnto the duties of his seruice and a miserable seruitude which we bring vpon his good creatures when as we make them serue our filthy lusts It is a notable meanes to weaken Cum Graeci gulosos 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appellarunt benè mihi videntur eorum finem significasse vt qui eos 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 h. e. a salute alienos intellexerint Clemens paedag lib. 2. cap. 1. our bodies and fill them with diseases to impaire our strength and shorten our liues It filleth them with crudities noysome humours and dangerous obstructions quencheth the naturall heate dulleth the senses and deaddeth both the vitall and animall spirits And consequently it disableth all the faculties of the soule vnto their functions and operations seeing it worketh by the body as by its instrument and so maketh it vnfit and vnable slothfull and sluggish vnto all good duties It maketh vs slaues vnto our meates and drinkes ouer which God hath made vs Lords and rulers and hurtfull and iniurious vnto the poore whilest we deuoure that portion of our superfluity which God as their right hath allotted vnto them It maketh vs foolishly for a short delight which lasteth no longer then the meate is in eating and swallowing downe to indure many houres grieuances through the discension of the belly the oppression of the stomacke the paine of the head yea oftentimes dangerous surfets and sicknesses accompanying them which hazzard life it selfe Yea in truth for a forced and false delight for what true pleasure is there in eating and drinking when hunger and thirst are fully satisfied it forfeiteth that pleasure of the meale following making vs to forgoe our meate or to eate it with loathing which would be equally delightfull with that which went before if wee came vnto it with like appetites Finally this worse then brutish delight which is so short and momentany depriueth vs of those heauenly ioyes which are euerlasting and plungeth vs into woes and miseries which neuer haue end whilest it armeth the flesh against the Spirit and inableth it to foyle and cast vs head-long into many sinnes as our Sauiour hath implied in the parable of the rich glutton who tooke his Luk. 16. 19. chiefe pleasure in going richly apparelled and faring deliciously euery day §. Sect. 7 Other directions concerning the quantity of our meates and drinkes Now for the quantity of our food which euery one ought to eate and drinke no certaine rule can be giuen no more then wee can appoint any one size of apparell to fit men of all statures seeing one mans stomacke health and strength requireth more and another mans lesse and that which is but sufficient to satisfie one is excessiue and superfluous to another and would cause him to surfet with too much fulnesse And therefore the proportion of our meates and drinkes is to bee measured vnto euery one by Christian prudence which we may helpe by obseruing these generall rules As first euery man must carefully obserue out of his owne experience how much is ordinarily sufficient for the nourishing of his body and the preseruing and increasing of his health and strength and keepe himselfe vnto this proportion as neere as hee can not pleasing his greedy appetite by adding to this sufficiency that which by experience he findeth to be superfluous and more then enough Secondly that being in health
and strength or troubled with such infirmities which cause greater appetite then good disgestion they doe not fully satisfie hunger nor eate so much as the stomacke craueth seeing this fulnesse within a few houres will turne to a superfluous burthen and this enough will proue too much but they must as we say rise with an appetite and not make such a churles feast as we can eate no more For heerein Christian temperance is exercised when we stint the stomacke of its desire and teach it good manners following heerein the direction of reason and not like bruite beasts of sense and appetite In which respect one giueth this rule that our ordinary Sunt tibi quotidiana ieiunia refectio satietatem f●giens c. Hyer ad Eustoch diet should be a daily abstinence and our refection without all glutting satiety for it profiteth not to goe two or three dayes with empty bellies if afterwards we surcharge them with too much fulnesse and recompence our fast with saturity and excesse Lastly seeing the end of our eating and drinking is that we may bee fitted and better inabled for the seruice of God in the common duties of Christianity and the particular duties of our callings wee must therein respect grace as well as nature the glory of God as well as the preseruing of our health and strength and the thriuing of our soules as well as the nourishment of our bodies In which regard the best rule of Christian moderation in our diet is that we eate and drinke so much onely as may make vs fit to serue God in religious duties as hearing reading conferring praying and in the duties of our callings that we may hauing our spirits refreshed and our strength repaired more cheerefully and vigorously vndertake and performe them and not so much as dulleth our spirits and maketh our bodies heauie and sluggish whereby we faile of our ends and become lesse fit for any good duties And this the wise Salomon requireth euen of Princes themselues that Eccl. 10. 17. they eate in due season for strength and not for drunkennesse And our Sauiour Christ would haue vs so to eate and drinke as that thereby we should Luk 21. 34 36. not be disabled vnto continuall watchfulnesse and prayer To which purpose one saith well that when we rise in the night to prayer our stomakes Ad orationem tibi nocte ●ergenti non indigestio ructum faciat sed inita● Hier ad Eustoch Non est ergo omnino à varijs cibis abstinendum Sed in ijs non est studium ponendum Clemens paedag l. 2. c. 1. should rather vpbraide vs with their emptinesse then with their crudities and indigestion And as we must auoide excesse in quantity so also in variety not that it is vnlawfull to eate of diuers dishes so farre foorth as it will stand with our health and strength but that we doe not too much affect it and pitch our studie vpon it For if wee doe it will be a notable meanes to draw vs on to excesse and gluttony when as hauing eaten enough we will still feede on new and more dainty dishes then the former because we would please our taste with this variety It is a notable meanes vnlesse we haue Ostridge stomackes to disturbe concoction and impaire the health when we make them like a Noble mans kitchin furnished and fraughted with all varieties which land and sea can yeeld vnto them iumbling together like wares in a Brokers shop things of a farre different nature some whereof are of easie disgestion and some of hard and some also of a middle nature as if herein also they would make this Microcosme and little world of man like vnto the greater world containing in it at least some small fragments of innumerable creatures Finally as it is hurtfull for the body so not good for the soule the which is wained from spirituall comforts whilest it is too much affected with these carnall delights For as one saith When the body is resolued and as it were melteth Cum corpus refectionis delectatione resoluitur cor ad inane gaudium relexatur Gregor in this pleasure of refection the heart is loosened vnto vaine ioy and sensuall delight §. Sect. 8 Of moderation in respect of the quality of our meates In respect of the qualitie of our meates and drinkes Christian temperance and moderation must be vsed in bridling our appetite and taste that they doe not licourously long after at least in our ordinary dyet such as Luk. 16. 19. are curious and costly daynty and delicious which was the sinne of the rich Glutton who in the parable was condemned vnto hell and tormented in that part wherein he had chiefly offended For howsoeuer it is lawfull for all men at some times to feede vpon the choysest of the creatures if the cost exceede not their state and meanes and if they bee not much affected but come into their way without any great care or trouble and though it be lawfull at all times for those that are weake and sickly 1. Tim. 5. 23. and cannot safely eate courser and and ordinarie meates to prouide if they be able such dainties and meates of good nourishment and easie concoction as will agree with their stomacks yet for those that are healthy and strong it is not lawfull that they should with the rich Glutton euery day fare deliciously nor conuenient though it were lawfull to doe it often and ordinarily seeing he who will doe all that is lawfull Citò enim adducuntur vt ea faciant quae non licent qui faciunt omnia quae licent Clemens paed l. 2. c. 1. Solus in illicitis non cadit qui se aliquando à licitis cautè restringet Greg. in Moral Exod. 19. 12. will within awhile doe also that which is vnlawfull he that will walke vpon the brinke is still in danger of falling into the water though yet he be vpon firme ground and hee that will stretch his desires to the extreme borders of vertue is within one step of vice the which was typically implied at the giuing of the Law where the Lord forbiddeth the people not only to come into the Mount but also to touch the borders of it And therefore if we would shun intemperance in diet which is vtterly vnlawfull we must moderate our appetite euen about those things which are lawfull and auoide carefully all meanes that tend vnto it Among which one of the chiefest is delicacie of meates which draweth on the appetite vnto excesse with the strong Cable of bewitching delight And not much lesse dangerous are pleasant sawces curiously cooked both which are to be ordinarily shunned of all who would be temperate in their diet For as wee cannot attaine vnto Iustice by coueting much wealth nor vnto temperance by the meanes of intemperancie so neither as one saith can we be Clem. Alex. paed l. 2. c. 1. brought vnto a Christian-like course in our diet
the fruition of his benefits Againe the chiefe end of our eating and drinking is that being thereby refreshed we may be made more fit for the duties of Gods seruice now the body is no more cheared with wholesome meates then the heart and mind with honest mirth and consequently the one is no lesse profitable then the other Neither is it onely necessary for the soule whose refreshing and recreation consisteth in delight but also for the body and preseruing of health and therefore mirth is worthily esteemed one of the chiefe doctors amongst Physicians because if it be seasonable and moderate it cheareth the spirits and so causeth better concoction whereas contrariwise melancholy and lumpish heauinesse damping and dulling them doth turne much of our nourishment into the same humour But yet our care must be that as wee season our meate with mirth so our mirth with the salt of grace that wee may glorifie God in it who is the chiefe cause of our reioycing and mutually profit one another In which regard we must take heede that our liberty burst not out into licenciousnes and that wee doe not make our selues merry with prophane iests by abusing the Scriptures and taking Gods holy name in vaine nor with ribauldrie and scurrilous conceits which tend to the corrupting of maners and the poysoning of our owne hearts and theirs that heare vs nor with biting and bitter gibes and frumps which wound the good name of our neighbour and as much vexe his heart with anger griefe and discontent as wee are delighted with the salty wittinesse of the conceit Finally we must be carefull because here going with the winde and tide we may easily ouer-shoote our selues that wee bee not immoderate in our mirth but keepe our selues within the bounds of sobriety lest our mirth degenerate into phrensie and so iustly incurre the Wise mans censure I said of laughter It is madde in which respect it is fit that wee bee Eccles. 2. 2. carefull to keepe the reines still in our hand that we may checke and curbe in our mirth when it beginneth to gallop lest it giue vs a fall and cause vs to discouer much weakenesse and infirmitie But as the Lord is the cause of our mirth so hee must bee the chiefe end of it and as our reioycing is of and from him so it must bee for him and in him according to that of the Apostle Reioyce in the Lord alwayes and againe I say Phil. 4. 4. Reioyce so that wee may reioyce euen with a double ioy not onely in spirituall but also in ciuill and temporall things if our ioy and mirth be honest and harmelesse witty without the froth of vanity and so ingenuous and charitable that it tend not onely to make our selues merry but to delight them also that beare vs company §. Sect. 3 Of our conferences and discourses at our tables The fourth Christian duty to be done at our meales respecteth our speeches and conferences vnto which is required that they be profitable tending to make vs more holy and religious or more wise and morally vertuous or more liuely and cheerefull vnto the performance of all good duties The first kinde of Colloquies and discourses are chiefly to bee preferred seeing wee must first seeke the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse Matth. 6. 33. and worldly things in an inferiour place which are incomparably of lesse worth Of which conferences wee may reape more fruit and benefit then of our bodily nourishment seeing that preserueth the outward man onely but these are the spirituall food and repast of the soule which is by much the more excellent part that is but perishing food which corrupteth and wee with it but this food of our soules will indure to life eternall Now because our hearts being barren in good meditations wee cannot easily finde out vpon a sudden fit matter for these discourses and when wee doe are easily put out and drawne vpon euery occasion to fall againe to worldly and idle talke therefore it were good for vs to thinke before-hand on some profitable subiect whereon wee may discourse and conferre or at least that wee doe lay hold on the best opportunities that for the present are offered vnto vs and slightly passing ouer things which are impertinent and vnprofitable as wee doe those meates which doe not please vs pitch vpon that which best maketh for our purpose and make our spirituall meale of it as beeing that wholesome and well-rellishing dish for which putting all the other backe wee haue all the while reserued our stomackes But though these religious conferences at meales bee most profitable yet may wee also lawfully talke of ciuill and morall points yea euen of our owne affaires and ordinary businesse or things some way pertinent to the bettering of our selues or some in our company either for the increasing of our wisedome and prudence or the fitting of vs for action and imployment especially when wee obserue that our company cannot bee easily drawne to entertaine such speech as wholly tendeth to piety and Religion Yet may wee as occasion serueth powder euen these discourses with piety and lying as it were at the spirituall lurch take all good aduantages to insert and interlace into these discourses something profitable for the soule and to bring as much as wee can ciuill premises to pious conclusions Finally it is neither vnprofitable nor vnseasonable if our speeches at our meales doe sometimes tend to the refreshing of our wearied mindes after serious studies with pleasant conceits and honest mirth because though these bee of no great worth in themselues yet they looke to things of more value and serue as helpes and meanes to fit and prepare vs for imployments of an higher nature The which being a thing which wee chiefly ayme at in taking our repast and in refreshing thereby both our mindes and bodies I dare not exclude all pleasant discourse from such meetings for though wee may not make our spirituall meale of such light meates yet may they well serue as sawce to quicken our appetite and though wee may not dwell in such merry conceits yet when our wits are dulled and blunted with more serious discourses wee may vse them as the Israelites did the Philistines forges for our necessity and descend vnto them for a while to sharpen our tooles The which course in our conferences I doe not commend as most excellent in it owne nature for it were to be wished that wee were so spiritually and heauenly-minded that our hearts might be at all times euen rauished with delight when wee are exercised in high and holy meditations and speeches or bringing them to their full effect in our workes and actions but I onely allow it as lawfull and well agreeing and suteable to our present estate full of frailty and infirmitie Vnto which hauing respect I will conclude this point with this one caueat that neither in matters appertaining to Religion nor ciuill wisedome we doe in these
table-conferences either propound or admit knotty and hard questions or polemicall disputes and difficult and subtill controuersies both because these often-times through pride and ouer-eager handling doe heate the heart and cause wrangling and contention and also because they are not suteable and seasonable to the time and the ends at which wee ayme For it is a time of refection and refreshing and not of toyle and labour either to body or mind and we must let our bowes stand vnbent that they may afterwards be more fit for shooting and not be still drawing our arrow to the head It is a time to recouer our spent spirits not to consume and waste them which will not onely make our mindes vnfit for imployment for if we toyle them when they should rest they will bee dull and slothfull when they should labour but also much hurt our bodies and impeach our health whilst these ouer-earnest discourses about points of great difficultie doe disperse the naturall heate and dissipate the spirits calling them away from the worke in hand to assist the soule in the exercise of the braine and so cause ill concoction and indisgested crudities §. Sect. 4 Of the choyce of our company at our meales The last duty in our eating and drinking respecteth the choyce of our company for if we be of ability it were to be wished that we would follow Iob 31. 16 17. Iobs practice who would not eate his morsels alone making to this end choyce of fit company to consort with vs. Neither is it commendable in a Christian to keepe open house for all commers and so to make it worse then a common Inne a cage of vncleane birds and a place of all mis-rule and disorder which was the hospitality of able men in the dayes of ignorance who are more to be praised for their bounty and zeale to house-keeping then for their piety and prudence But seeing our ghests must be our companions for the time of which there ought to be made great choyce therefore besides those whom bonds of society kindred trading and commerce and such like respects and those that resort vnto vs as strangers or by some casuall and extraordinary accidents wee are in our common course as neere as we can to make choyce of such only as are knowne vnto vs at least in the iudgement of charity to be vertuous and religious and among these such especially as are most fit for our spirituall trading either to make vs more rich in knowledge faith obedience and all spirituall graces or at least to be inriched of vs. By which kind of meetings we might receiue singular comfort and benefit seeing this good society and kind familiarity betweene Christians is a notable bond of loue and an excellent and effectual meanes for the mutual stirring vp of Gods graces in one another and for their strengthning incouraging vnto euery good duty In which respect it were much to be desired that that ancient custome in the Primitiue Church of loue-feasts among Christians were more in vse in these Act. 2. 46. dayes that we might not so deseruedly lye open to that aspersion of worldlings namely that where Religion is planted there all good neighborhood and friendly meetings are almost quite laid aside To which end let vs take notice of the causes of this decay that so they being remoued this communion and fellowship among the faithfull may be restored And first when men are wholly carnall and set altogether on fleshly delights it is no maruaile if they take pleasure in one anothers company seeing they are mutual helpers in this worldly ioy and so if we were in any perfection spiritually minded we would take much more delight in consorting together because it would tend much to the increasing of our Christian comfort but when by the preaching of the Gospell those carnall ioyes and vnlawfull pleasures are so cryed downe that some forbeare them out of conscience and some to auoyd the shame of profanenesse there followeth a breach of society and familiarity because the bond is broken that held it together The which is not repaired and re-vnited till in stead thereof there be a spirituall bond to linke vs together and this being so weake among most Christians which still remaine more flesh then Spirit it is no maruaile if there be seldome any good meetings seeing the bond is no stronger of such society and familiarity whereas if they were more spirituall they would finde in them more spirituall ioy and so entertaine them with more ardencie of affection Another cause which is but a branch of the former is that in the time of the Gospell carnall loue which was of old a strong bond of fellowship is not so hot and strong as it was neither to mens persons nor yet to the pleasures of sinne and delights of the flesh nor spirituall loue so feruent as it should be either vnto our neighbours themselues or yet to Christian conferences religious duties and exercises and those sweet comforts which we should take in mutuall society and should be the chiefe motiue to bring vs together for were we inflamed with this ardent loue it would make vs greatly delight in one another and to seeke all good occasions of such sweete society §. Sect. 5 Of the manifold abuses of our feasting one another Vnto these we may adde the many abuses of these meetings which are notable meanes of their dissolution as because we faile in the maine ends of them not chiefly ayming at our spirituall good and that we may mutually stirre vp Gods graces in vs by Christian conferences edifie and strengthen one another vnto all good duties and reioyce together in the Lord by setting foorth his praises the which were the ends that the Saints in the Primitiue Church propounded to their feasts of loue but for the most part inuiting one another to pamper the belly with good cheere and to please the flesh with carnall pleasures which leauing behind them a sting of conscience it is no maruaile if we take small comfort to meete after this manner often together seeing the sweete is exceeded by the sowre and keepe our hand from tasting of the honey which indangereth vs to be wounded with the sting of sinne and though it be sweete in the mouth yet is turned in the disgestion into bitter choller And as wee faile in our ends of meeting so also in our carriage when wee are met together in which regard we iustly deserue the Apostles censure that wee come together 1. Cor. 11. 17. not for the better but for the worse For either the time is spent in idle and vaine talking vnprofitable discourses hurtfull inuitations to excesse in eating and drinking Or if some religious conference bee admitted yet through pride and want of charity it is often crossed of the mayne ends For not being as we ought fast linked together in the bond of loue euery difference in opinion disioynteth our affections and wanting
mistresse whom hee vsed Gen. 39. 11. as his wicked instrument to assault his chastity And thus hee assaulted righteous Lot vnto incestuous lust not in Abrahams company nor yet in Gen. 19. 30 31. Sodom it selfe though in respect of their professed filthinesse it was a fit Theater for such a fearefull Tragedy but when hee liued solitarily in the mountaine and had none but his daughters to beare him company who were to prouoke him vnto this vncleannesse And thus when hee would tempt Dauid vnto lust he chooseth his time when hee walked alone vpon the roofe of his house and then allured him by presenting vnto his sight a fit obiect of vncleannesse The which he found by often experience to be so great an aduantage that when he was to combate with our Sauiour Christ he made choyce to set vp his lists in the wildernesse that hauing in this Matth. 4. solitary place none of the former helpes hee might haue full liberty to bend against him all his engines of battery and vse without any interruption the vttermost of his power and skill to giue him a foyle Finally as solitary places are fittest for Satans filthy imbracements and to pollute Iam. 1. 12 13. the soule with sinne so also for the vnlawfull conceptions of our wicked lusts which afterwards are brought to the birth and grow to their full maturity in outward actions when wee come into company as the Apostle Iames implyeth in the like Allegory Thus also the Prophet Micah denounced a woe against them who deuised iniquity and in their meditations Micah 2. 1. plotted the worke of wickednesse vpon their beds and when the morning is light practised it because it was in the power of their hands And when they had by themselues coueted their neighbours fields they did afterwards seaze vpon them with open violence c. In which regard wee are in our solitarinesse to watch most carefully ouer the purity of our soules because they are then most indangered to these spirituall rapes and in vaine shall wee labour to hinder the birth and growth of sinne when wee come into company if when vvee are alone we be not as carefull to shunne Satans imbracements and so to preuent its first conception CAP. XXVII What duties wee ought to performe when wee are in company §. Sect. 1 That ciuill conuersation excelleth solitarinesse BVt howsoeuer there is a fit time for solitarinesse vvhere in the former duties belonging to it are to be practised of vs yet we are not chiefly to affect it much lesse to put such perfection in it as to deuote our liues wholly vnto it contemning and shunning all ciuill conuersation and all entercourse and dealings with one another but leauing vnto it due place and deserued commendation if it bee seasonable we are if they come in comparison generally both in respect of persons and times to preferre ciuill conuersation before solitarinesse and a life taken vp in vertuous action before that which is spent in bare theorie and contemplations For God is more glorified the Kingdome of Christ aduanced and inlarged the good both of Church and Common wealth with all the members of them both more furthered and increased and our owne present comfort and future ioyes in our heauenly happinesse much more multiplied and augmented when by our Christian conuersation and vertuous actions our holy profession and good example our admonitions exhortations counsayle consolation our workes of iustice charity and mercy and all other good offices mutually performed we edifie and build vp those which are about vs in their most holy faith and draw many others to accompany vs vnto the Kingdome of heauen then in the strictest course of a solitary life to goe by our selues alone vnto this place of happinesse And this the Lord hath ratified by his Word when as he said that it was not good for man to Gen. 2. 18. bee alone and two are better then one because they haue a good reward for their labour namely in that mutuall society and in those good offices of piety and Christian charity which they performe to one another for if they Eccl. 4. 9 10. fall one will lift vp his fellow but woe to him that is alone when he falleth for hee hath not another to helpe him vp And the Apostle layeth it as a charge vpon all men that they should consider and watch ouer one Heb. 10. 24 25. another to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes not forsaking the assembling of our selues together as the manner of some is but exhorting one another c. The which also is commended vnto vs by his workes both of creation and renouation For he hath made vs in our natures not like vnto wilde beasts who take their pleasure to lurke alone in their dennes but politicall and sociable creatures who take all their chiefe ioy and and comfort in conuersing with one another and so in his wise prouidence hee hath disposed of vs that we should not bee absolute and able to liue of our selues but neede the mutuall helpe one of another so that the King needeth the subiect as much as the subiect the King the rich the helpe of the poore as well as the poore the hire of the rich the city the countrey as well as the countrey the city and so hath hee combined and linked all men together into societies as it were particular members of the same bodies and hath so furnished them with diuersity of gifts and seuerall abilities vnto sundry offices that no sort of men can bee wanting without a maime nor any part vtterly pulled from the whole but that hee must necessarily become a dead and vnprofitable member and worke his owne ruine by this divulsion and separation So in our renouation wee are as it were anew created into one body whereof Christ Iesus is the Head and as diuers members haue our seuerall functions and offices allotted vnto vs which are not onely for our peculiar vse but for the good of the whole body and of euery other of our fellow members as the Apostle excellently sheweth in his first Epistle to the Corinthians So as none are so perfect in themselues that they neede not their fellowes that there might not bee any schisme in the body 1. Cor. 12. 1. but that the members should haue the same care one for another and that they Vers 15. 25 26. might both suffer together and reioyce together Of which sweete society singular benefits redound to the whole body and to all the particular members of it for they are linked together by the same Spirit and in the bond of loue performing all mutuall offices of Christian charity which may aduance their good They communicate in the same blessings and reioycing in one anothers good haue according to their number their ioyes redoubled in their troubles and afflictions they also communicate in one anothers griefe euery one comforting his fellovv and making the burthen
and that with her Spirit within her shee would seeke him early So the Spouse in the Canticles By night on my bed I sought him whom my soule loueth And the Prophet Dauid was careful euen in the night to approoue himselfe vnto God by performing these religious exercises I haue saith he remembred thy Name O Lord in the night and haue kept thy Law And this the Lord requireth of vs as being Lord both of night and day according to that of the Psalmist The day is thine and the night also is thine And will be serued as Psal 74. 16. Infoelix tota quicunque quiescere nocte sustinet somnos praemia magna vocat Ouid. Amor. El. 9. with our whole hearts so with our whole time seeing he is the God of our saluation who day and night preserueth vs and multiplyeth his blessings vpon vs whereby he incourageth vs to doe him seruice Yea euen in the night the Lord goeth in his visitation to see how wee carry our selues and will call vs to account either to reward vs if we doe well or to punish vs if wee neglect our dutie as Dauid sheweth by his owne experience Thou hast prooued my heart saith he thou hast visited mee in the night thou hast Psal 17. 3. tryed me and shalt finde nothing And therefore wee must in the night approoue our hearts and actions vnto him and not thinke that the darkenesse giueth vs any priuiledge to doe the workes of darkenesse seeing as the Psalmist speaketh The darkenesse hideth not from him but the night shineth as the day the darkenesse and the light are both alike to him Now the Psal 139. 12. duties of the night doe consist chiefly in Prayer and Meditation For when wee awake out of sleepe we must not suffer our mindes to roue after worldly vanities nor our hearts to be fixed vpon them but as wee are to esteeme the Lord and spirituall and heauenly things our chiefe treasure so our hearts and minds at our first awaking must be exercised about them as their chiefe ioy and comfort And first we must lift them vp vnto God in prayer according to the example of holy Dauid who professeth that in the night his song should be with him and his prayer vnto the God of his life Psal 42. 8. And againe O Lord God of my saluation I haue cried day and night before Psal 88. 1. thee The which is chiefly to be done when the hand of God is heauy vpon vs by some grieuous affliction because then being freed from all worldly distractions we may with greatest zeale and feruency of Spirit powre foorth our soules before God for helpe and deliuerance And thus Dauid in his great extremity calleth vpon God day and night O my God saith he I cry in the day time but thou hearest not and in the night season I am not silent Psal 22. 2. So the afflicted Church and people of God in their heart cryed vnto the Lord O wall of the daughter of Sion let teares runne downe like a riuer day Lam. 2. 18 19. and night giue thy selfe no rest let not the apple of thine eyes cease Arise cry out in the night in the beginning of the watches powre out thine heart like water before the face of the Lord lift vp thine hands towards him for the life of the yong children that faint for hunger in the top of euery streete And our Sauiour Christ himselfe in his bitter agonie made choyce of the night as Luk. 22. 44. the fittest time for those powerfull and effectuall prayers which hee made for himselfe and his Church vnto God his Father Whereby wee learne that when we haue suits of great importance which wee would sollicite with all earnestnesse and importunity the night is a fit time to commend them vnto God in our feruent prayers Yea euen at ordinary times if there be any speciall suite which we would make vnto God either for the assistance of his holy Spirit for the mortifying of some strong corruption which cleaueth vnto vs or the pardon of any sinne which hath lately wounded our consciences or for the obtaining of some speciall grace wherein we finde our selues most defectiue or for deliuerance from some imminent danger it is most profitable that at our first waking we presently pitch vpon them and in some short Prayer and earnest desire of the heart offer vp our suites vnto God in the mediation of Iesus Christ And as we are thus in the night to pray for the things we want so also ought we to praise and giue thankes vnto God for his gifts and blessings already receiued according to the example of Dauid who did not content himselfe to shew foorth Gods louing kindnesse in the morning but also his faithfulnesse Psal 92. 2. in the night The which duty vpon extraordinary occasions must be extraordinarily performed and in some set and solemne manner as when our hearts are rauished with the apprehension of Gods mercy and bounty after the receiuing of some speciall and singular benefit as we see also in Dauids practice who at midnight did rise to giue thankes vnto the Lord as Psal 119. 62. he professeth The which his night-songs as they were his solace in the time of his flourishing prosperity so the remembrance of them were his chiefe comfort in his deepest distresse as being infallible signes of Gods loue and his owne integrity For when his afflictions both of body and mind were so great that he had no manner of consolation in his present sense and feeling he calleth to remembrance his songs in the night and the sweet visitations of Gods holy Spirit in these spirituall exercises Psal 77. 6. Which example let vs learne to imitate and if no other occasion come presently to our minds yet at least let vs when we awake lift vp our soules vnto God praising him for his gracious preseruation hitherto and our quiet rest and commending our soules and bodies into his gracious protection for the rest of the night desiring the continuance of his fauour for our preseruation and of our quiet sleepe for the refreshing and strengthening of our fraile and weake bodies §. Sect. 7 Meditations fit for the night The other duty is meditation in which we are to exercise our mindes after an holy and religious manner when wee cannot or list not to sleepe and not suffer them to range and roue after idle or hurtfull vanities which will not bring vnto vs any profit The subiect matter of which our meditation may be diuers according to our seueral occasions and estates As first and principally we must call God to our remembrance and meditate on his sauing attributes his infinite loue mercy goodnesse and bounty towards vs wherein holy Dauid tooke singular comfort and delight My soule saith he shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatnesse and my Psal 63. 6. mouth shall praise thee with ioyfull lips when I remember
not spend too much time in sloth and sluggishnesse §. Sect. 1 That this moderation is commanded in the Scriptures and the contrary sloth condemned ANd these are the duties of the night which are to be performed whilest we are waking In respect of sleepe our dutie is that wee vse it with moderation not satisfying thereby our carnall and sluggish concupiscence but taking only so much as is fit and necessary to satisfie nature that we may be more strong and vigorous actiue and able to performe all Christian and ciuill duties Of which there can be giuen no certaine rule on more then of the measure of meates and drinks for as one mans stomacke requireth more and anothers lesse so one mans body for the preseruing of health and strength needeth sleepe in a greater and anothers in a lesser and shorter proportion as youth more then age those of a melancholike complexion Inprimis autem cubilis mollitiem commoderatè et conucnienter virilem esse oportet masculam c. Clem. paedag lib. 2. cap. 9. Dormiens autē homo nullus vllius est pretij non magis quàm qui non viuit Ibidem lesse then those of a sanguine or flegmatike and the weake and sickly more then the strong and healthy Yet generally wee may say thus much that as in other things so in this nature is content with a little in comparison of that which satisfieth the carnall appetite That our sleepe ought to bee moderate and conuenient and as Clemens speaketh masculine and manly and not effeminate and luxurious not a solution and weakning but only a remission of the body and therefore not to bee taken for sloth and idlenesse but for the better inabling vs for action and imployment For as the same Author saith A sleeping man is of no worth no more then he that liueth not Neither must we measure our sleepe according to our businesse taking too much because wee haue nothing to doe for a true Christian will neuer want imployment either for the good of his neighbour or himselfe of his soule or body and therefore howsoeuer vpon some waighty occasion a man may abridge himselfe of his ordinary measure yet ought he not to exceede and spend his time which is so precious in sloth and lazinesse vpon pretence that he wanteth imployment nor sleepe any longer then is sufficient for the refreshing of his body that it may serue his soule as a fit instrument for vertuous and ciuill actions For sleepe was ordained not to serue our lust but for the repairing and chearing of the spirits and refreshing of the body and therefore we must not out of a slothfull humour take so much as may dull the spirits and make the body more lumpish and heauie For as there is a sinfull excesse in eating and drinking so also in sleeping when as wee exceede that which nature requireth and therefore as it were an ill excuse for gluttonie and drunkennesse to say that we sit eating and drinking more then inough because we haue no other businesse so is it alike absurd to spend our precious time in slothfull and excessiue sleeping because wee want other imploiment seeing as one saith There is no part of our liues Nihil temporis tam perit de vita nostra quàm quod somno deputatur Bern. ad fratres de monte more desperately perisheth then that which is deputed to excessiue sleepe Which that wee may auoid let vs consider how the holy Ghost disgraceth the sluggard in the Scriptures For first he maketh him more foolish and brutish then the silly Ant and therefore as it were putteth him to schoole to learne of her that he might become wiser Go to the Ant thou sluggard consider her waies be wise Secondly rowzing him vp from his sleep How long wilt thou sleepe O sluggard when wilt thou arise out of thy sleepe hee Pro. 6. 6. Vers 9. 10 11. bringeth him like one halfe drunke answering in imperfect and broken sentences and begging for a little more sleepe as the drunkard for more drinke when as already hee hath had too much Yet a little sleepe a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleepe Thirdly he sheweth that he is vnprofitable and good for nothing and ready to pretend friuolous and foolish excuses when as he is perswaded to any good action saying There Pro. 26. 13 14 15 16. is a Lyon in the way and that which is more ridiculous a lyon in the streetes as though the City were a Wildernesse and the houses dennes for wilde beasts That like the doore vpon the hindges he turneth and tumbleth vpon his bed and cannot be drawne from it by any perswasion no more then the doore from the hookes by much pulling and tugging yea that hee is so besotted on his sloth that he had rather forgoe his meate then take any paines to eate it for hee hideth his hand in his bosome and it grieueth him to bring it againe to his mouth The which his follie is so much the more desperate because in all this hee applaudeth his owne wisedome for the sluggard is wiser in his owne conceite then seuen men that can render a reason Secondly let vs consider that the holy Ghost forbiddeth this sluggish sloth Therefore let vs not sleepe as doe others but let vs watch and be sober 1. Thes 5. 6 7. for they that sleepe sleepe in the night c. Which howsoeuer it is to be vnderstood principally of the spirituall sleep of security that by this Allegorie and similitude the Apostle implyeth that Christians ought not now so much to addict themselues to sloth and sleepe as before their conuersion because they haue farre better imployments for the spending of their time besides that corporall sluggishnesse is a meanes and also an effect of carnall security euen as the bodily watchfulnesse and sobriety is a meanes of the spirituall And thus our Sauiour Christ by like implication Matth. 25. 1. 2 Matth. 26. 40. condemneth it in the Parable of the foolish Virgins who spent that time in sleeping which should haue bin bestowed in furnishing preparing themselues to meete the Bridegroome and directly reprooueth it in his Apostles when euen in the night the ordinary time of rest they were ouertaken of sleep when as the waighty occasions which presently pressed them and the speciall commandement of our Sauiour required that they should giue themselues to watching and prayer §. Sect. 2 The manifold euils which excessiue sleepe bringeth Thirdly cōsider the manifold euils which it bringeth vpō vs for first like a slie and cunning thiefe it robbeth vs of our time which is our most precious iewell and when it is lost cannot be recouered yea euen of that part of time which is chiefe and principall the prime of the morning which is fittest for spirituall exercises as prayer reading and meditation and also for the ciuill duties of our callings It maketh likewise that which remaineth
lesse seruiceable and profitable for any good vse for when our strength is repaired by moderate rest excessiue sleepe weakneth vs againe making our bodies heauie and lumpish and lesse able and actiue for any good imployment and as wee consumed the fore-part of the morning in drowzy sleeping so the latter part in lazy stretching and slothfull yawning making vs sluggish with too much sleeping as the drunkard becommeth more dry with too much drinking And when the spirits are refreshed and quickned with moderate sleepe by that which is excessiue they become dull againe and being drowned and stupified with slothfull vapours they are made vnfit instruments to the soule for any good actions and imployments Whereby we are notably hindred both in the duties of Gods seruice and in the duties of our callings not onely because it consumeth much of our time which should bee spent in them but also greatly disableth vs in that which remaineth when we set our selues to pray heare the Word reade meditate or any ciuill duties which belong vnto vs. Finally this excessiue sleeping is exceeding hurtfull both for our soules bodies and states for it hurteth the braine dulleth the wit and much impaireth the memory making all these faculties vnfit for their functions and operations It breedeth obstructions and superfluous humours and so filleth the body with innumerable diseases It impouerisheth the estate and bringeth them who immoderately vse it if they bee of meane condition to beggerie and penurie and much disableth those who are wealthy to the workes of mercy and Christian charity And on this mischiefe accompanying sloth and sluggishnesse the Wise Salomon much insisteth For hee telleth the sluggard that by his sleeping and slumbering and his folding of his hands together pouerty should come vpon him as one that trauaileth who still approcheth though hee commeth but slowly and his want like Pro. 6. 11. an armed man which cannot possibly be resisted by one that lyeth naked in his bed So else-where hee saith that the soule of the sluggard desireth Pro. 13. 4. and hath nothing but the soule of the diligent shall bee made fat that because he will not plow by reason of the cold therefore he shall beg in haruest Pro. 20. 4. and haue nothing and so in the chiefe time of others plenty hee through his sloth shall pine in penurie Finally that as hee shall haue an emptie famished belly so also a cold and tottred backe for drowzinesse shall cloath a man with ragges whereas they which haue a vigilant eye and Pro. 23. 21. diligent hand cloath both themselues and those that belong vnto them Pro. 31. 15 21. with purple and scarlet as hee sheweth in the example of the vertuous huswife Neither is this sluggish sleepinesse lesse pernicious to our spirituall estate seeing it bringeth the soule also to beggery and to penurious want of all sauing graces by taking vp the time wherein we should trade and traffike for them in spirituall exercises of which it causeth an vtter neglect or a short and slubbering performance because it scarce leaueth sufficient time for the necessary dispatch of such important businesse as doth belong to our place and calling For no sooner is the sluggard out of his bed but euen halfe vnready hee choppeth vpon his worldly imployments and vtterly neglecting prayer meditation and all spirituall exercises hee thinketh himselfe sufficiently excused because hee is scanted of time and called away by some that attend his rising or by the importunitie of his owne affaires though hee haue voluntarily by his sloth brought himselfe into these straights and might easily haue escaped them and had time inough both for religious exercises and his worldly businesse yea euen for the benefiting of his neighbours that neede his helpe if he would not haue consumed so much in superfluous sleepe §. Sect. 3 That the expence of our time in sloth is displeasing vnto God and how this is to be auoided But let vs know that this wastfull expence of our precious time in sloth and sluggishnesse is very displeasing to God who hath lent it vnto vs that wee should spend it in his seruice and that this account will not well passe at the day of Iudgement when God shall finde it written in the booke of our consciences so much time consumed in superfluous sleepe and so little imploied in the necessary duties of Gods seruice prayer reading hearing meditation in the religious duties which wee owe to our charge and family or in the workes of charity and mercy helpe and comfort which wee are bound to performe vnto one another as being children of the same Father fellow members of the same body At which day fearefull will the estate be of those nice wantons and idle sluggards who diuide the morning betweene sloth and pride hauing scarce time after they are risen out of their beds to paint and dresse themselues before they come to dinner vtterly neglecting all duties of Gods seruice and the honest labours of a lawfull calling But it was not my purpose to haue touched their abuses who haue learned to out-face all that admonish them to put off all that can be said with some merrie iest or scornefull smile like the foole laughing with great iollitie when they are going to the stockes and are ready to be called to the barre and carried out to execution but onely to admonish those who desire to leade a Christian life that they auoid such wastfull expences of precious time consuming those good houres in superfluous sleepe which being well imployed would make them rich in grace and thrice happy in this life and the World to come Which whosoeuer would doe they must carefully obserue these two rules first they must be temperate in their meates and drinkes as being a notable meanes to preserue vs from excessiue sleepe and sloth and to make vs watchfull vnto all Christian duties which is the reason why in the Scriptures they are conioyned Bee sober and watch 1. Pet. 5. 8. because as sobriety is a cause of vigilancie so excesse in meates and drinkes is the common cause of excesse in sleepe And this helpe Clemens propoundeth Let not saith he our meates oppresse but rather lighten Ne ergo cibi nos grauent sed al●euent c. Clem. paed l. 1. c. 9. vs that as much as may be our sleepe may not hurt vs as those that swim are oppressed when heauy burthens are fastened vpon them The second rule is that we doe not suffer an ill custome of lying long in bed to bring an habit of sloth vpon vs which is almost as hard to breake as to alter nature Or if wee haue already yeelded vnto it our best course is to dis-vse our selues from it by little and little and so attaine by degrees to a contrary habit For as the stomacke which is inured to hote waters is still crauing them and becommeth such a slugge that it will disgest nothing without these
gouernours of the family doe examine them and require of them an account of that which they haue heard that they may see how they haue profited by the publike Ministery For if they thinke it necessary that they should giue them an account of their worldly businesse or how they haue layd out their moneys when they haue sent them to the Market then much more should they examine them what spirituall Markets they haue made for the good of their soules and how much they haue gained by the vse of Gods holy Ordinances for the inriching of them with the treasures of knowledge In all which the Master of the family must shew much loue and patience commending those who answere well and bearing with the infirmities of such as are of meaner capacities and weaker memories when they see that they doe their best and doe not faile through grosse negligence that they may not by being shamed and disgraced be altogether discouraged in these religious exercises To which purpose they must make the best they can of their imperfect answeres by inlarging and perfecting them and supplying that in which they are defectiue And on the other side the inferiours must shew themselues tractable and teachable and with willingnesse and cheerefulnesse submit themselues vnto Gods holy Ordinances that they may profit by these exercises and increase more and more in the knowledge of God and his will §. Sect. 3 Of other priuate duties to be done on the Lords Day After the finishing of which family exercises wee are to spend the rest of the time before Supper in other Christian duties as in visiting and Mat. 25. 35. comforting those that bee sicke or in any other great affliction and ministring vnto their necessities if they stand in need of our helpe In making peace and friendship betweene those who are at variance by compounding the differences which are betweene them In meditating vpon the great Booke of the creatures and obseruing in them the infinite and admirable wisedome and goodnesse power and prouidence of our gracious God that wee may take occasion to render vnto him the glory and praise of his owne workes when wee see their wonderfull variety and comely order their qualities and formes their beauty and excellencie their vse and profit for the seruice of man Obseruing likewise in them such good properties as are worthy our imitation and bee ashamed that they should exceed vs in them who haue the vse of reason and so many religious helpes and meanes and their ill properties that wee may auoyd them taking occasion thereby to be humbled in the remembrance of our fall from our created purity and integrity as being the principall cause of all their defects and imperfections So also vvee may in this respect make good vse of the Creatures when by them wee take occasion of some spirituall Meditation As when wee see their beautie to thinke how infinitely beautifull hee is that created them when we consider how delightfull and profitable they are vnto man to conceiue thereby what surpassing excellencies God hath prepared for his owne Children in his Kingdome of Glory when wee obserue how seruiceable they are to man to thinke how much more diligent wee should be in seruing our great Lord and Master who hath giuen both to them and vs our birth and being More particularly when we behold the earth whereof we were made let vs take occasion to thinke of our owne basenesse and that we shall be resolued into earth againe when we see the flowers of the field let vs thinke of the momentany mutability of worldly prosperity and of Eccl. 12. 7. Esa 40. 6. our owne mortality who are like vnto them when we looke vpon the Suns glorious brightnesse let vs take occasion thereby to thinke of Gods glorious Maiesty and of the glory and brightnesse of the Saints in heauen who shall farre exceed it Of which we haue our Sauiour Christ an example for Iob. 4. and the 6. our imitation who tooke occasion from corporall bread and water to discourse of the spirituall Manna and Waters of life from a worldly feast to Luk. 14. 15 16 17. Iob. 7. 38 39. speake of a spirituall banket and of the liuing waters of his grace and holy Spirit giuen to all that beleeue in him And this is a fit and profitable exercise on the Lords Day commended vnto vs by the Scriptures and practice of the Church as heereby it appeareth in that the Psalme which was Psal 92. specially appointed for the Sabbath containeth in it for the most part a Meditation vpon the workes of God §. Sect. 4 That the euening must be spent ●n religious exercises In the euening of the Lords Day we are not to surcease our Christian and religious exercises but after wee haue at supper refreshed our bodies with the vse of Gods creatures and our soules with holy conferences wee are to spend some time in singing of Psalmes and in reading the Scriptures or other religious and profitable writings After which duties performed all in the family ought to ioyne together in hearty and effectuall prayer not thinking themselues excused from priuate duties because they haue beene at the publike exercises of Religion wherein as wee are to acknowledge other sinnes and imperfections so those especially wee haue shewed the day past in our cold formall weake and negligent performance of the duties of Gods seruice And as we are to craue other blessings so especially that the Lord by his grace and holy Spirit will blesse vnto vs the meanes of our saluation and Ministery of his Word whereof we haue been partakers on that Day writing the things we haue learned in our memories and hearts and inabling vs to put them in practice and to make vse of them in the whole course of our liues And finally as we are to praise God for all his other mercies so particularly for giuing vs time to sanctifie his Sabbaths and suffering vs to inioy the blessed light of his Word and Gospell for granting vs liberty with such peace and safety to tread in his Courts and to make our suits and supplications knowne vnto him with assurance to haue them heard and granted And thus hauing finished this holy exercise and the time of sleepe approching we must prepare our selues thereunto with such religious Meditations as on other dayes were prescribed the which at this time are to be done with extraordinary zeale and deuotion and so commending our soules and bodies into the hands of God we are to desire him that he will watch ouer and sanctifie vs so with his grace and holy Spirit that we may spend the night also in an holy Rest being freed from worldly carnall and sinfull dreames and hauing our phantasies and thoughts our hearts and affections both sleeping and waking taken vp and exercised in good and godly Meditations And that he wil so season our hearts with the sauour of the Dayes religious exercises that euen
euill And of the Apostle Paul Wee must all appeare before the Iudgement seat of Christ that euery man may receiue the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it bee good or bad And then naked sincerity will shine most gloriously when the gilded vaile of hypocrisie being pulled off the filthy corruption which was hid vnder it will appeare vgly and abominable in the sight of the holy Saints and blessed Angels Then shall the vpright in heart hold vp their heads in the confidence of a good conscience when the hypocrites and dissemblers shall be confounded with shaine their deceit and secret wickednesse being discouered in the sight of all men Then shall they who haue serued God in sincerity and truth receiue their heauenly Inheritance with triumphant ioy when guilefull and double-hearted men shall bee banished out of Gods presence and cast into outer darknesse Math. 24. 51. where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth CAP. III. That we must ioyne with inward integrity the seruice of the body and the outward man §. Sect. 1 That God requireth outward seruice to be ioyned with the inward BVt howsoeuer the Lord doth chiefly require and delight in the inward seruice of the soule and the integrity and sincerity of the heart yet doth he not rest in it alone but requireth also the seruice of the body and outward man and that we should at all times and vpon all occasions expresse and approoue our inward piety in our externall practice and the vprightnesse of our hearts which is onely knowne to him by our holinesse and righteousnesse shining in the whole course of our liues and conuersation which is subiect to mans view that thereby we may be iustified that is declared righteous before them as by the other we are knowne vnto our selues to be iustified by faith before God of which that inward holinesse and obedience is a principall fruit And because euery one would be ready to boast of the sincerity of the heart which cannot be discerned God would haue vs to approoue and make it knowne by bringing foorth the fruits of it in our outward and bodily seruice So the Apostle exhorteth vs not to let sin raigne in our bodies that we should obey it in the lusts thereof neither yeeld our Rom. 6. 12 13. members as instruments of vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne but yeeld our selues vnto God as those that are aliue from the dead and our members as instruments of righteousnesse vnto God And as we haue yeelded our members seruants to vncleannesse and to iniquity so we should now yeeld our members seruants to righteousnesse Vers 19. vnto holinesse That we should present not onely our soules but our bodies likewise a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable vnto God which is our reasonable Rom. 12. 1. 1. Thes 4. 3. seruice that we should possesse our vessels in purity and honour and preserue our bodies from all defilement as it becommeth the Temples of the 1. Cor. 3. 16. holy Ghost For God who hath created redeemed and doth continually preserue both soule and body will bee serued and glorified by them both and as he is in these respects Lord and owner of the whole man so hee will haue the whole to serue him according to that of the Apostle Ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirits 1. Cor. 6. 20. which are Gods The inward seruice of the heart therefore is not sufficient vnlesse it be expressed in the outward seruice of the body but wee must be sanctified thorowout and our whole Spirit and soule and body must be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ 1. Thes 5. 23. And we must clense our selues from all filthinesse as well of the flesh as of the Spirit and perfect our holinesse in the feare of God We must with the Apostle 2 Cor. 7. 1. Act. 24. 16. Heb. 13. 18. Rom. 12. 17. Inter Christianum gentilem non fides tantùm debet sed etiam vita distinguere diuersam religionem per diuersa opera monstrare Hier. ad Celant exercise our selues to haue our consciences voyde of offence both towards God and towards men and labour not onely to haue in all things a good conscience before him but also to liue honestly in the view of the world and prouide things honest in the sight of all men as well as those which are holy and religious in the sight of God For as one saith Not onely faith ought to distinguish betweene a Christian and an heathen but the life also and our diuers religions ought to bee demonstrated and shewed by our diuers workes Yea in truth these will alwayes necessarily and inseparably goe together neither is it possibly for a man to haue a sincere and vpright heart but it will shew it selfe in the outward conuersation words and actions seeing it is the fountaine and roote from which they flow and spring and such as it is either good or euill cleane or polluted such will they be also For if the heart be the Inditer of a good matter the tongue will Psal 45. 1. 108. 1. be the pen of a ready Writer If the heart be prepared so will the tongue also and both ioyning together will sing and giue praise whereof it is that the Apostle Iames concludeth that if any man seeme religious and bridleth not Iam. 1. 26 27. his tongue this mans religion is vaine And also that pure Religion and vndefiled before God will shew it selfe in the workes of mercy and Christian charity before men for as in the bodily so in the spirituall estate the health and welfare of the heart is best discerned by the pulse in the hand neither can there be an vpright heart where the actions are vniust And therefore the Psalmist describing a true Citizen of Heauen doth ioyne heart hand and tongue all together He that hath cleane hands and a pure heart speaketh Psal 24. 4. 15. 2. the truth from it and hath not lift vp his soule vnto vanity nor sworne deceitfully §. Sect. 2 Reasons mouing vs to performe outward seruice Now the reasons which may mooue vs to ioyne outward practice with inward integrity respect God our neighbours or our selues In respect Mat. 5. 16. of God first because he commandeth that we haue not only in our selues the oyle of Grace but that we also cause the light of it to shine outwardly before men He would haue vs inwardly to repent with vnfained contrition in our hearts but withall that we bring forth fruits meete for repentance in Mat. 3. 8. our liues He desireth aboue all that we should loue him with all our hearts Ioh. 14. 15. 15. 12. and soules but he would haue vs also to approoue the sincerity of our affection by keeping his Commandements especially by louing one another as Christ hath loued vs. Secondly we must bring
nor make any attempt against his enemies but all these things must be purchased and atchieued by labour and diligence then how shall wee thinke euer to inrich our soules with the vnvaluable treasures of Gods graces to attaine vnto that high and supernaturall learning which teacheth vnto vs the knowledge of God and of our selues our Sauiour Christ and his will and truth or to get the victory ouer the spirituall enemies of our saluation which shall be rewarded with a Crowne of glory and triumph seeing they are so many mighty and malicious if we doe not shake off all sloth and with all study and diligence vse all good meanes whereby wee may ouercome all difficulties and compasse these things so much to be desired and so hardly obtained Neither must we thinke it an easie matter to serue the Lord in the duties of a godly life and so slight it ouer as requiring no paines seeing they are things of such high excellency that they are farre aboue our naturall reach and seeing also wee cannot proceed in them but against the violent streames of mighty opposition For the spirituall enemies of our saluation are alwayes ready to stop and hinder vs in our course of Christianity and we wrestle not against flesh and blood but against Ephes 6. 9. principalities and powers and spirituall wickednesses in high places who vsing all diligence to worke our destruction by spoyling vs of all Gods graces and hindring vs from doing any Christian duty it behoueth vs with no lesse diligence to preuent their malice Our arch-enemy Satan neuer resteth but like a roring Lion rangeth still about seeking to deuoure vs and how 1. Pet. 5. 8. then doth it beseeme vs to stand continually vpon our gard and as the Apostle Peter exhorteth vs to watch and to be sober The world is euer forward to allure vs vnto wickednes by euill perswasions and bad examples or to thrust vs into it by threats and violent courses and what diligence then becommeth vs to vse in escaping these snares and preseruing our selues from falling in these tentations But especially our selues are greatest and most dangerous enemies vnto our selues nourishing in our owne bosome such natural corruptiō as maketh vs most auerse vnto all good duties and headlongly prone vnto all sins what diligence therefore should we vse in subduing the strength defeating the wiles of this secret traytor that lyeth still lurking in vs seeking all aduantages to hinder vs in all Christian exercises and to betray our soules as captiues vnto Satan by drawing them into sinne Through this corruption of nature wee are backward vnto all good duties and in our course of Christianity doe as it were row against the streame No longer can wee goe forward then we ply the oare with all diligence indeuor no sooner giue our selues to ease and remit our labor but we are carryed back againe with the wind and tide of our carnall corruptions We wrestle with a cruell monster our own sinful flesh against which we preuaile no longer then we squeeze and crush it with our spiritual gripes for no sooner do we surcease this holy violence against this corruptiō of our nature but it recouereth as it were a new life with increased strength againe setteth vpon vs putting vs to a second labour danger for the obtaining of the victory as we see in the example of Dauid who euen after that hee had well profited in the practice of mortification and gotten the victory ouer his sinfull corruptions by his earnest indeuours in this spirituall exercise intermitting for a while his wonted diligence and giuing himselfe to sloth and ease was shamefully foyled by his traiterous flesh and lamentably plunged into diuers fearfull sinnes Finally by reason of our fall that heauie curse which was denounced against the earth seazeth also vpon our soules which are barren in bearing any good fruits of holinesse and righteousnes and naturally bring forth nothing but the thornes and thistles of sinne and wickednesse vnlesse we spiritually manure them with all painfull diligence and make them more fertile and fruitfull with the sweat of our labours Neither can we expect any haruest of holy duties to spring out of such barren soyles vnlesse we doe well husband them and vse all diligence in tilling and breaking vp these fallow grounds in sowing them with the good seed of heauenly doctrine and in weeding out of them daily some vices and corruptions Againe this diligence is necessary for as if it bee remitted the strength of sinne continually increaseth so the graces of Gods Spirit in respect of the vigour of their operations do daily decrease and languish in vs. For as to the welfare of our bodies it is necessarily required that they be nourished and sustained by the same elements whereof they were first composed which being but a while neglected the spirits languish the strength is abated and the whole body is infeebled and fainteth so also is it no lesse necessary that we vse all diligence in nourishing Gods spirituall graces in vs by the same meanes whereby they were begun in vs as the Word Sacraments Prayer and the rest for if wee doe not giue them continually this spirituall refection and refreshing they will soone abate of their strength wax faint and languish Neither are these graces connaturall with vs or like plants thriuing and well-liking euen when they are neglected in their owne soyle but like trees transplanted out of hot countries into ours as suppose the Orange Lemon tree or such like which need much tending watring in the Summer couering and keeping warme in the Winter that what is wanting in nature may be supplied with art and diligence They are like fire burning not in its owne element or in combustible matter where it needs not labour to continue it but in greene wood which is ready euery hand-while to goe out till it be thorowly kindled vnlesse we diligently blow it and take great paines to make it burne Whereof it is that the Apostle vsing this metaphor exhorteth Timothy to stirre vp and relieue Gods gifts and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Tim. 1. 6. graces in him as it were by blowing the fire which otherwise would decay and languish in him Finally the necessity of this diligence heereby appeareth in that without it we can neither escape Gods curse nor attaine vnto blessednesse For he is accursed of God not onely who is diligent in the seruice of the diuell but also who is negligent in the duties of his seruice seeming like Meroz in a cold neutrality to take neither part and not Judg. 5. 23. he alone who contemneth or omitteth the workes of God but hee also who doth them negligently In which number are our ciuill worldlings Jer. 48. 10. who contenting themselues with their morall honesty iust dealing and keeping their word doe either wholly neglect the religious duties of Gods seruice further then the Law compelleth them or else performe
14. if we hold out the beginning of our confidence stedfast to the end And therefore if we meane to haue any part in Gods promises we must constantly perseuere in the profession and practice of true godlinesse and the Christian duties of an holy life The second meanes of perseuerance is carefully to The second meanes of perseuerance is to auoyd the causes and meanes of apostacy and defection auoyd the causes and meanes of apostasie and defection And these are diuers first voluntary liuing in any knowne sinne which will harden the heart and dead the conscience and so make way for many others till wee be wholly carried away from God in a streame of wickednesse Secondly we must carefully take heed of the least declinations in Christian graces and holy duties for if we be once going downe the hill wee shall hardly keepe our selues from running headlong to the bottome vnlesse wee stop speedily in the very beginning And as for the preseruing of our bodies in a sound estate we labour with seasonable physicke to preuent diseases and when we finde our health to decline a little doe vse all good meanes at the first because if the sicknesse seaze thorowly vpon the vitall parts it will hardly be remoued and indanger our liues so must we take the same course for the good of our soules carefully obseruing the first declinations of our spirituall health that we may stop them at the beginning before they breake out into any extremities And considering that those diseases both of body and soule are most dangerous and desperate not which come suddenly with some sensible violence but which steale vpon vs by degrees vpon no apparant causes and impaire the health by little and little because they are hardly discerned and when they are knowne not easily cured as in the outward man the consumption hectique feuer and the like and in the inward and spirituall part carnall security hardnesse of heart and others of like nature let vs not therefore neglect the least declinations in sauing grace and holy duties but keepe a carefull watch ouer our selues that none of these diseases of our soules steale vpon vs and become desperate before we discerne them Let vs bee as good husbands for our soules as wee are for our clothes houses and grounds mending little holes before they teare out into great rents repairing the first decayes ere they become rotten and ruinous and making vp the breach as soone as wee discerne it before it come to an inundation and carry vs away in a floud of wickednesse And this counsell the Apostle giveth vs. Lift vp saith he the hands which hang downe and the feeble knees and make straight paths to your feet lest that which is lame be turned out of the way but let it rather be healed c. Looking diligently lest any man faile of the grace of God lest any root of bitternesse springing vp trouble you and thereby many be defiled A third cause of apostasie is a great opinion of our owne strength which causeth God to leaue vs that we may see our weaknesse as we see in the fearfull defection of the Apostle Peter And also a fond conceit that we are so rich in grace that we may spend vpon the stocke and labour for no more and that we haue already so well profited in religious duties that we need not take any care or paines to make any further progresse For there is no standing still in the wayes of Christianity but when we cease to goe forward wee begin to goe backward when in our owne opinion we are at the full we will begin to wane and decline towards a change and when our godlinesse is come to a standing water it presently declineth and neuer ceaseth vntill it be come to a low ebbe For the preuenting whereof let vs not measure our vertues and good proceedings by the false mete-yard of pride and selfe-loue which will make vs ouerweene our owne gifts and good parts nor compare our selues with our selues or others that come behind vs and haue not attained vnto Gal. 6. 4. our measure but with the perfect Law of God which like a looking-glasse will discouer our blemishes and imperfections and with our Sauiour Christ the perfect paterne of holinesse and righteousnesse according Ephes 4. 13 14 15. to whose Image we ought to be conformed A fourth cause of defection from God and godlinesse which we must shunne is the immoderate loue of the world and worldly vanities which cooleth and quencheth in vs the loue of God and of spirituall and heauenly things and so choketh in vs all good desires and indeuours of seeking after them that wee may obtaine them For as our Sauiour telleth vs we cannot serue God and Mammon Math 6. 24. Jam. 4. 4. And the Apostle saith that the amity of the world is enmity with God and therefore whosoeuer will be a friend of the world he is Gods enemy Which argument the Apostle Iohn vseth to disswade vs from this carnall loue Loue not the world saith he nor the things that are in the world If any man loue the world the loue of the Father is not in him A fifth cause is slacknesse 1. Ioh. 2. 15. and negligence in the vse of those meanes which both beget and begin Gods graces in vs and also nourish and preserue them when they are begun as the hearing of the Word reading prayer meditation the Sacraments and such like For as the strength of the body languisheth and consumeth if we refuse our bodily food whereby it is preserued so must also our soules needs fall into a consumption of all grace and goodnesse if we neglect that spirituall nourishment by which onely they are sustained in vs. A sixth cause is the grieuing of Gods Spirit dwelling in vs by quenching the good motions of it and defiling our soules with sinnes Ephes 4. 30. 1. Thes 5. 19. that waste the conscience being committed wilfully against the knowledge which loathsome filthinesse polluteth our soules and bodies and maketh this holy Ghest weary of his lodging going away to withdraw also with him his gifts and graces by which alone wee are inabled vnto all good duties And therefore if wee would not fall away from all grace and goodnes let vs louingly entertain the Author of them and not grieue Gods holy Spirit by resisting those good motions which he putteth into vs and by making our hearts and bodies which should be his holy temples and place of residence a loathsome stie of sinfull vncleannesse A last cause of apostacy is neere and inward familiarity with prophane and wicked persons who will corrupt vs with their euill examples and poyson vs with the contagion of their sinnes alluring and drawing vs by degrees Deut 7. 2 3 4. to accompany them in their euill courses vntill at last wee runne on Pro. 22. 24 25. with them into the same excesse of outragious wickednesse and so giue a
horse full of courage which being well backed may doe good seruice but if he be ill managed carryeth his rider into headlong danger But zeale ioyned with prudence is most necessary for our well proceeding in all vertuous actions seeing like the spirits in the body it giueth to our soules liuely heat wherby they are moued in the course of godlinesse and are made actiue in all Christian duties laboriously vsing all good meanes whereby they may bee furthered and couragiously opposing and remouing all lets and impediments which crosse vs in our way And therefore if we would deserue the name of true Christians wee must take heed that wee incline not to that damnable errour of carnall worldlings who make zeale and prudence flat opposites thinking those that are most feruent most foolish and with Iehu his companions censuring them as mad fellowes that with 2. King 9. any zeale performe their duty seeing holy Dauid who in wisedome exceeded Psal 119. 100. and 69. 9. his teachers and ancients was so zealous in Gods seruice that scoffing Michol condemned him of folly yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe 2. Sam. 6. 20. Col. 2. 3. who is the Wisdome of his Father and in whom all the treasures of wisedome are hid as the Apostle speaketh as hee excelled all men in prudence so also in holy zeale seeing he was not onely thorowly heated but Joh. 2. 17. euen consumed in this diuine flame as hee professeth Neither can true prudence be more seuered from holy zeale then zeale from prudence being Calor innatus humor primogenius siue radicalis herein like the naturall heat and radicall moysture of the body which preserue mutually one another and both faint and faile when either languisheth and decayeth For prudence without the warmth of zeale like frozen waters loseth its motion in Christian duties and like the parts of the body from which the animall spirits are stopped becommeth senselesse and benummed falling as it were into a dead Palsie Yea if zeale doe not put into it Christian courage it groweth so wary and full of caution that it attempteth nothing because in all things it foreseeth danger and so at last degenerateth into worldly wilinesse and irreligious policie Finally we must decke our selues and all Christian duties with true humility ascribing all the glory of them vnto God alone from whom onely we had power and will to doe them and reseruing nothing vnto our selues but the shame of their imperfections and corruptions let vs acknowledge that we are sufficiently rewarded if our frailties and infirmities be graciously pardoned But of this also I haue spoken in the beginning of this Treatise §. Sect. 9 That we must chiefly esteem chuse affect the duties of godlinesse according to their worth and excellency The fifth rule is that in our iudgements we esteeme in our wills chuse with our affections desire and imbrace and in our actions practise and exercise Christian vertues and duties according to their worth and excellency profit and necessity keeping as much as in vs lyeth a due proportion betweene them in our iudgements esteeming and preferring in our wills chusing in our affections louing and desiring and in our actions seeking after and practising euery good grace and duty in their due time and place preferring in our estimate choyce desires and practice the chiefe and principall vertues and duties before the meane and the meane before others that are inferiour vnto them Not that we may neglect the least grace of God or Christian duty or so regard the greatest and most excellent as that we dis-esteeme the least and meanest for as our Sauiour saith Whosoeuer breaketh one of these least Commandements and shall teach men Mat. 5. 19. so he shall be called the least that is none at all in the Kingdome of heauen but that we must when they may all stand together giue the priority and precedencie in iudgement desire and practice to the chiefest both in time and earnestnesse of indeuour spending our first and best time the feruour of our zeale and chiefe vigour and strength both of body and minde about them or if wee are brought into such straights of necessity that all cannot bee done but some must necessarily bee omitted that then the lesser giue place to the greater till wee can get fit opportunity of performing both Thus wee must preferre Theologicall vertues as faith affiance hope charity humility and the feare of God before those which are humane and ciuilly Morall as temperance chastity ciuill iustice almes-deeds and such like and generally our duties towards God before our duties towards our neighbours and our selues the Commandements of the first Table before those of the second a due proportion being obserued Morall duties being compared with Morall degree with degree as the greatest with the greatest middle with middle and least with least more desiring and zealously indeuouring to get the chiefe graces and performe the religious duties of Gods seruice then those which meerely concerne our selues or our neighbours Thus wee are more feruently to effect and diligently to practise Morall and substantiall duties then those which are ceremoniall and circumstanciall yea to reiect these latter when both will not stand together according to that I will mercy and not sacrifice and the practice of our Sauiour Hos 6. 6. who neglected the outward rest of the Sabbath that hee might doe the workes of the Sabbath in curing and healing the lame and diseased The contrary whereof God condemneth in the Iewes and reiecteth Esa 1. 11 12 17. 66. 1 2 3. their ceremoniall seruice as odious and abominable because they tooke occasion thereby to neglect the Morall And thus they offend who spend their chiefe zeale about ceremonies and circumstances of Gods seruice and imploy their best strength and indeuour either in defending or opposing them being in the meane time more cold and slacke in the mayne parts of Gods seruice and the principall duties of a godly life Thus we must preferre the seruice of God it selfe before the meanes of it and the duties of piety and charity before the helpes which further vs in them as the doing of the Word before hearing the practice of godlinesse before the teaching or learning of it when both cannot well stand together prayer and the workes of piety and righteousnesse before fasting and outward abstinence In which regard the Lord reiecteth Esa 58. 3 4 5 6. the fasts of the Iewes because they preferred them before the workes of Iustice and charity neglecting these vnder colour of doing the other And thus likewise they faile who place their Religion chiefly in hearing the Word in the meane time neglecting the practice of what they heare and learne in the duties of their callings and in the workes of Iustice and mercy towards their neighbours heerein like vnto rich misers which spend all their time and strength in gathering riches and when they haue got them into their
preseruing and nourishing of all our other parts §. Sect. 2 That the ministery of the Word is a chiefe meanes of our spirituall life The first meanes of a godly life is the ministery of the Word the which is the ordinary meanes of begetting vs to the life of godlinesse and of beginning in vs all spirituall and sauing graces by which as inward causes we outwardly mooue in all Christian and holy duties Of raising vs from the death of sinne and cleansing and purging vs from the guilt and corruption of it and also of so quickening and reuiuing vs that we are inabled to performe the actions of holinesse and to bring forth the fruits of a godly conuersation Thus the Apostle calleth it Gods Rom. 1. 16. strong power whereby hee pulleth vs out of the state of death into the the state of life and saluation and the Apostle Peter The immortall and incorruptible seed which begetteth vs vnto God liuing and abiding in vs for 1. Pet. 1. 23. euer And hence it is that the Ministers of the Word are called our spirituall 1. Cor. 4. 15. fathers who beget vs vnto God because being dispensers of the Word of grace they are instruments and meanes of our Regeneration Thus our Sauior saith that the houre was comming yea euen then was that Joh. 5. 25. the dead should heare his voyce and liue that is those which were dead in trespasses and sinnes should be quickened and haue their part in the first Resurrection by vertue of his Word preached for at this death and Resurrection that whole discourse aimeth And as we haue first our spirituall life from the ministery of the Word so also our cleansing and sanctification from the corruption and filth of sinne whereby we are wholly disabled vnto all holy duties of a godly life For so our Sauiour telleth his Disciples that they were cleane through his Word which hee had spoken vnto Ioh. 15. 3. them By which meanes he desireth his Father in his holy Prayer to sanctifie them more and more Sanctifie them with thy truth thy Word is truth Ioh. 17. 17. So the Apostle saith that our Sauiour gaue himselfe for his Church that hee Ephes 5. 26. might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word and implyeth elsewhere that we cannot ordinarily haue faith by which the iust man liueth but by the preaching and hearing of the Word How can they Rom. 1. 17. beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard and how shall they heare without a Preacher And after expressely affirmeth That faith commeth by hearing and 10. 14 17. and hearing by the Word of God And in another place he intimateth that we cannot put off the old man and being renewed in the spirit of our minds Ephes 4. 21 22. put on the new which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse vnlesse we haue first heard Christ and been taught by him in the ministery of his Word But here we must take heed that we doe not attribute our new birth and spirituall cleansing vnto the Word preached as hauing in it any inherent power to giue life and grace in it owne nature or as it is by man preached vnto vs for then all that heare it would be quickened vnto holinesse and new obedience whereas common and wofull experience teacheth vs that after the Gospell hath been long preached in diuers places the greatest number remaine vnregenerate and dead in their sinnes nor yet as vnto a principall and chiefe cause of reuiuing vs for this were to make an Idol of it by attributing vnto it Gods prerogatiues and peculiar Math. 23. 9. actions who alone is able to regenerate vs as hee onely could first create vs. But we are to attribute this vertue of giuing spirituall life to the Word preached not as comming from man but as it is the Word of God and his holy ordinance which hee hath instituted and sanctified to this vse of giuing spirituall life and the begetting and increasing of his graces in vs. By vertue of which ordination and the blessing of God vpon it the Word receiueth all its power and vigour to quicken and preserue our spirituall life euen as by the ordinance of God and his blessing wee receiue our naturall life by generation and the preseruation of it by food and clothing which in themselues exceed not other creatures in their vertue for these vses but onely so far forth as God by his blessing inableth them vnto them The which if he withdraw our meate will not nourish Math. 11. 21. Luk. 12. 47. vs but rather become our bane and poyson and the Word preached will be so farre from being a Word of life and saluation that it will become the sauour of death vnto death to our deepe condemnation In which regard 2. Cor. 2. 16. wee must not rest in the preaching and hearing of the Word as in the deed done for the begetting of Gods graces and beginning in vs the life of godlinesse for thus it is onely the Spirit that quickeneth making the Ioh. 6. 63. same Word and at the same time effectuall vnto some for these ends by an inward secret and powerfull operation which for want hereof is heard of others without any profit but vse it as Gods ordinance vnto which his blessing is promised and doth so ordinarily accompany it in the harts of all those that vse it in obedience to God and desire to profit by it for the former ends that we may as well hope for spirituall life by feeding on this food as for the preseruing of naturall life by meate and drinke seeing both alike are Gods ordinance and by his power he is effectuall in the one as well as the other And so contrariwise the neglect of this meanes when God giueth it doth take away all hope of the spirituall life of grace seeing we tempt the Lord in refusing the meanes and despising his ordinance like those who pretending that they rest vpon Gods sole power and promise for the preseruing of their liues should vtterly refuse to eate or drinke Againe whereas I say that the preaching of the Word is the ordinary meanes of life and grace when the Lord granteth it vnto vs we are to beware that we doe not limit Gods power vnto it as though hee could not any other way quicken sanctifie and saue vs. For he is able without all meanes to doe all these by the sole and secret worke of his holy Spirit being such an All-sufficient workman in himselfe that he needeth not the helpe of any instruments as we see in his sanctifying and sauing of elect Infants dying whilest they are vncapable of outward meanes for euen in them these two goe together seeing the rule is generall that without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. And hee is able to sanctifie other Heb. 12. 14. meanes for these vses as he ordinarily doth where
helpe of their notes and examining their children and seruants and putting them to giue an account of what they haue heard and learned Lastly we must make what we haue heard our owne by applying it to our owne vse and bringing it to practice in our liues and conuersations whereby we shall Luk. 11. 28. Ioh. 13 17. Iam. 1. 25. intitle our selues to that blessednesse which is promised to all those who both heare the Word and keepe it And so much of the first meanes of inabling vs to the duties of a godly life the ministery of the Word and the things that are required vnto it The which I haue the more briefly Christian warfare 1. part lib. 2. cap. 26. passed ouer because I haue touched diuers of the poynts before and more fully handled some of them in another Treatise CAP. VII Of the second publike meanes of a godly life which is the administration of the Sacraments §. Sect. 1 That the Sacraments further vs much in a godly life as they are seales of the Couenant THe second meanes of inriching vs with all sauing graces and strengthening vs vnto all the duties of a godly life is the right vse of the Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper both which doe much conduce hereunto and each of them seuerally For the Sacraments are seales annexed to the Couenant of grace purposely instituted of God to strengthen and confirme our faith in this assurance that Christ and all his benefits doe belong vnto vs that in him and for his righteousnesse death and full satisfaction vnto Gods Iustice he hath pardoned and forgiuen vnto vs all our sinnes that in him he is well pleased with vs and hath giuen vnto vs iust title and interest to all his promises both of grace in this life and glory and happinesse in the life to come that hee will giue vnto vs his holy Spirit and thereby write his Law in our hearts that we shall not depart from him mortifie our corruptions and quicken vs vnto new obedience Of all which benefits the Sacraments are not onely significant signes but also infallible seales annexed purposely by God vnto his Couenant to assure vs that he will performe all his promises and to giue vnto vs like a bond and conueyance legally signed and sealed iust title and interest vnto all those blessings euen before we sensibly haue them in possession and fruition Yea not onely so but they also serue like instruments and conduit pipes to conuey to the worthy receiuer Christ and all his benefits Now what can more forcibly perswade or more powerfully inable vs to the duties of a godly life then the representing assuring and exhibiting of all these inestimable benefits in the right vse of the Sacraments What can more inflame our hearts with most feruent loue towards God then the consideration yea sense and feeling of this admirable loue of God towards vs in giuing vnto vs when wee were sinners strangers and enemies vnto him and his grace Christ Iesus and with him all these vnspeakable benefits and what more then loue can effectually mooue vs to an holy desire in all things to glorifie and please him and to walke worthy his loue in all holinesse of life and conuersation What can more lighten the burthen of our labour and make vs to thinke all too little which we can doe and suffer for him Againe the Couenant of grace sealed vnto in the right vse of the Sacraments doth singularly incourage vs to lay aside all doubts and difficulties seeing God thereby assureth vs that he will yea hath giuen vnto vs his holy Spirit to direct and assist vs in all our good indeuours in the mortifying of all our sinfull corruptions seeme they neuer so strong and vnresistable and strengthening vs to the performance of all good duties seeme they neuer so difficult and vnpleasing vnto flesh blood And what can more effectually moue vs to go on in the worke of sanctification then to haue such an assistant to ioyne with vs vnto whom nothing is difficult being infinitely able to performe and perfect whatsoeuer he vndertaketh What can more powerfully perswade vs to doe God faithfull seruice then to haue the pardon of our sinnes put into our owne hands signed and sealed so dearly purchased and so freely giuen then to haue the present pledges and pawnes of Gods loue and fauour the earnest of his Spirit the first fruits of his graces and the conueyances of our heauenly Inheritance sealed and deliuered into our own keeping For who would be so sluggish as not to doe faithfull and diligent seruice to such a glorious and gracious Master for such liberall and bountifull wages Finally seeing in the right vse of the Sacraments wee doe really and truly though spiritually and by faith receiue Christ that he may dwell in vs and we in him and not onely communicate with him in his diuine graces imputed by God and applyed by faith but also by vertue of his Spirit assisting this ordinance haue all sanctifying and sauing graces confirmed and increased in vs whereby wee are strengthened vnto all the duties of a godly life hence also it appeareth how much they conduce and further vs in them seeing we haue Christ himselfe a co-worker with vs who by his holy Spirit sustaineth the greatest part of the waight of that his easie yoke and light burthen which he layeth vpon vs in which respect we may take courage vnto vs and say with the Apostle that we are able to doe all things through the power of Christ which strengtheneth Phil. 4. 13. vs and seeing also they cherish and increase his gifts and graces in vs whereby we are moued and inabled to worke together with him in all holy duties of Gods seruice and of a godly and Christian life §. Sect. 2 That the Sacraments further vs in godlinesse as they are testifications of our seruice to God Secondly the Sacraments are helpes vnto vs for this purpose as they are solemne testifications of our seruice and obedience vnto God seeing they are his liueries and cognizances whereby his seruants are knowne from others and the sacramentall oath which he causeth all his souldiers to take when he entertaineth them into his spirituall warfare and the pres-money which he putteth into their hands whereby hee obligeth and firmely bindeth them to continue constant in this warfare and to fight couragiously vnder his colours Now this may mooue vs to doe faithfull seruice vnto our great Lord and Master partly because hee hath so innobled vs by giuing vs entertainment into his Family and graced vs by letting vs weare his liuery and cognizance seeing it is a farre greater aduancement and dignity to be one of his meanest seruants euen a doore-keeper in his House then to be the greatest Monarch in the earth partly Psal 84. 10. because he incourageth vs to faithfull and diligent seruice by such bountifull wages and inestimable rewards and partly because wee shall otherwise
of the Sonne of man and drinke his blood ye haue no life in you Yea this Supper of the Lord is not such a spare meale and bare Commons as onely holdeth life and soule together and doth not reuiue the spirits increase the strength and fit vs for action and imployment but it is a plentifull feast for our soules which maketh vs grow in grace and spirituall strength and stature vnto a perfect age in Christ making them strong and vigorous vnto all Christian duties of Gods seruice Whereof it is that as Baptisme is called the Sacrament of our imitation and new birth so this of our augmentation and growth in grace affording vnto vs plentifull nourishment for this end For as God is so bountifull in affording man meanes for the preseruing his bodily life that he alloweth him such things not onely which are absolutely necessary but also for delight and not bread alone to strengthen mans heart but also wine to make it glad and oyle to expresse this ioy in the face and countenance So hee hath dealt Psa 104. 14. 115. much more bountifully for our soules prouiding for their nourishment a plentifull feast the strengthening Bread of Christs Body and the cheering and gladding Wine of his precious Blood the delicious viands and dishes of his spirituall benefits and sauing graces and sweet comforts of his holy Spirit and not onely setteth these things before vs to looke vpon but giueth vnto vs gracious entertainement inuiting vs to feed vpon them not onely vnto necessity but also to delight So that our welcome is no lesse worth then our cheere and as the Spouse speaketh his loue better Cant. 1. 2. then wine Yea vnto his feast he addeth a banket of spirituall comforts imbracing vs with the armes of his loue cheering vs with the consolations of his Spirit and rauishing our soules with the sweet feelings of his fauour and such inward ioy that being with the Spouse thus brought into Cant. 2. 4 5 6. his Banketting-house and hauing for a Canopie ouer our heads his Banners of loue we are ready as it were in an extasie to cry out Stay me with flagons comfort mee with Apples for I am sicke of loue Now how can our poore soules being thus royally feasted and cherished at the Supper of the great King but bee inwardly replenished with all thankfulnesse towards God for his so rich mercies What can they doe lesse then enter into a serious consideration with themselues what they may returne vnto God that they may expresse their loue and gracefulnesse for so many and inestimable fauours without any desert vouchsafed vnto them saying with the Prophet Dauid What shall I render vnto the Lord for all his benefits towards Ps 116. 12 13. mee And finding themselues to be vtterly vnable to make any other requitall then by remaining thankfull debters what can they doe lesse then conclude with him that they will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the Name of the Lord praising and magnifying his mercies in the sight of all the people And finding our selues preserued in spirituall life growne 1. Pet. 1. 18. in Gods graces and strengthened and fitted for all good imployment by the royall bounty of our heauenly King feasting vs with such cordiall restoratiues and delicious food aboue the price of siluer or gold or any other corruptible thing how vngratefull should we be if we did not imploy this strength which he hath giuen vs in the duties of his seruice that we may glorifie his holy Name and bee accepted of him by doing that which is pleasing in his sight §. Sect. 8 Fourthly because it is an action which we doe in remembrance of Christ Fourthly the right vse of the Lords Supper much conduceth vnto a godly life as it is an action which we doe in remembrance of Christ and are thereby put in minde how much he hath done and suffered for vs. For who can lightly esteeme of any sinne which cost Christ no lesse then the price of his precious blood Who will not bewaile his sinnes past with bitter griefe abhorre his present corruptions with mortall hatred and vtterly renounce and forsake them for the time to come who duly considereth that they were the nayles which fastened our Sauiour Christ to the Crosse and that vnsupportable waight which made his soule heauy to the death pressed out of his innocent body that bloody sweate and extorted from him that lamentable complaint My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Who will bee hired with the base wages of worldly vanities to defile his soule againe with the filth of sinne which could no otherwise be clensed and purged then by the precious blood of Iesus Christ of infinite more value then ten thousand worlds And so on the other side who can bee slacke in the seruice of so gracious a Sauiour or bee sparing in his paines to glorifie him who for his redemption hath not spared his dearest blood Who would not worship him in all the duties of holinesse who hath purchased his happinesse at such a rate as men and Angels were not able to discourse who is so vnthankfully slothfull that will not spend his sweate in his seruice and his teares because he cannot spend so much as he should and euen his blood to make vp what is wanting in them both for him and his sake that hath clensed our bodies and soules from the ingrained spots and vncurable leprosie of sinne with his bloody sweate yea full streames of his precious blood Who will now grudge to doe works of mercy or to feed the poore members of Iesus Christ with his spare food to clothe them with his cast apparell which remembreth that this bread of life came downe from heauen to be our food and hath not spared to feast vs at his owne royall Table with his owne body and blood for our spirituall nourishment vnto eternall life that he who is the liuely and expresse Image of his Father and equall vnto him in glory and Maiesty dis-roabed himselfe of this glorious garment and tooke vpon him the shape of a seruant yea was content to be stripped of those poore clothes he had suiting with his meane condition and whilest he bore our sinnes to beare our shame hanging naked vpon the Crosse that he might clothe vs that were spiritually naked with the rich and glorious robe of his righteousnesse and obedience §. Sect. 9 Because thereby we are occasioned to renew our Couenant with God Finally the Lords Supper rightly vsed is a notable meanes to confirme and strengthen vs vnto all duties of a godly life because it giueth vs occasion in our preparation that we may come as worthy ghests to the Lords Table to renew our Couenant with God by renewing our faith in Christ our repentance for our sinnes our loue towards God and our neighbours and all other sauing graces in vs. We renew our faith by meditating vpon Gods infinite mercies
leaueth not his eyes loose to their owne liberty but ruleth and gouerneth them with wisedome and discretion not suffering them to behold vnlawfull obiects or those which are lawfull vnlawfully either in respect of manner or measure whereas a foole vseth no restraint but suffereth them to roue into all the corners of the world Into which folly Dauid fell when he suffered his eyes to gaze their fill vpon the beauty of another mans wife this folly drawing him on to commit a greater folly in Israel and therefore hauing lamentable experience of his owne frailty he keepeth afterwards ouer them a surer watch which yet not being sure enough he desireth the Lord to watch ouer him and to turne away his Psal 119. 37. eyes lest he should behold vanity With like care wee must watch ouer our eares to keepe them from hearing any thing which is vaine and sinfull tending to the corrupting of our soules or the hindring of them in the growth of grace As all filthy communication and speeches tending to Gods dishonour and our owne or our neighbours hurt all infulse and vnsauory talke bitter taunts and vnchristian and spitefull iests all whisperings backbiting and slandering and all such discourses as feed the flesh and starue the spirit wed vs to the world and weane vs from God For though like the Syrens songs they tickle and delight the eare yet they wound the heart and conscience with sinne and bring vs into such a spirituall phrenzie that we are ready to leape ouer-boord into a sea of perdition And therefore we must stop our eares against these bewitching sorcerers and not for the pleasing of our carnall sense hazard the destruction of our precious soules The hearing is called the learned sense and happy are they who by their care and watchfulnesse prouide for themselues profitable and good Masters of whom they may learne sauing wisdome and not such as teach nothing else but vanity and sinne And the eares like conduit-pipes conuey vnto the soule either the cleere streames of the water of Life or the filthy puddles of sinne and death and therefore let vs be carefull to bring them daily to be filled at Gods Fountaine lest the diuell abuse them to draine the filth out of the polluted sinkes and channels of wicked mouthes Thus we must watch ouer our taste that we doe not to please the palate vse such excesse in our diet as will disable vs to Christian duties and that the end of our eating be chiefly the refreshing and comforting of our bodies that they may be fit for Gods seruice who hath fed them and not the pampering of the flesh with sensuall delight For if we giue way to our appetite this short and brutish pleasure will bring vpon vs innumerable euils As vpon our bodies sicknesses and short life and vpon our soules and bodies both sloth and idlenesse lumpish heauinesse and vnaptnesse to any good action drowzie dulnesse or vaine mirth and futilous babbling shortnesse of memory and blockishnesse of vnderstanding wanton dalliance and inflammation of our hearts with vnlawfull lusts And thus finally wee must watch ouer our sense of touching that we doe not to please it inslaue our selues to effeminate daintinesse thinking that wee are quite vndone if wee may not tumble at our ease vpon our beds of downe and goe like those in Kings Math. 11. 8. houses in soft rayment or like Diues be clothed in Purple and fine linnen Luk. 16. 1 2. euery day But let vs inure this sense to man-like hardnesse that wee may not thinke it strange and intolerable to lye hardly and goe barely if Christ who suffered so much for vs doe call vs to suffer a little for the testimony of his truth And much more must wee restraine this sense from all vnlawfull obiects as vnchaste kisses lasciuious imbracements and wanton dalliances which tend to the inflaming of our hearts with vncleane lusts and make our bodies which are the Temples of the holy Ghost polluted brothel-houses and filthy styes for wicked spirits §. Sect. 2 That we must watch ouer our tongues Secondly we must keepe a carefull watch ouer our tongues according to the example of the Prophet Dauid I said I will take heed to my wayes that I sinne not with my tongue For the well-ruling and ordering of our tongues is a matter of great moment for the furthering or hindering of vs in the course of a Christian conuersation according to that of Salomon A wholesome tongue is a tree of life but peruersenesse therein is a breach in Prou. 15. 4. the spirit If we vse it well it will be our glory as being a notable instrument of glorifying God whilest we speake to his praise and those that honour him he will honour but if wee abuse it vnto sinne it will become 1. Sam. 2. 30. our shame seeing thereby we dishonour God who hath giuen it vs and all good things If we order it wisely and speake things profitable and worth the hearing we shall edifie our brethren For the lips of the wise disperse Prou. 15. 7. and 25. 11. knowledge and a word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of siluer that is pleasant and profitable like workes of gold curiously and artificially grauen by a cunning workman but if we vent nothing but filth and folly bringing vp as it were our excrements by a wrong way we shall annoy our hearers with our rotten and vnsauory speeches and by our euill words 1. Cor. 15. 31. corrupt their good meanes as the Apostle speaketh If we speake wisely and to edification we shall in profiting others haue the comfort of it in our owne hearts For as Salomon speaketh A man hath ioy by the answere of his Prou 15. 23. and 18. 20. mouth and a word spoken in due season how good is it both to the speaker and to the hearers But when a man hath pleased himselfe for the time with scurrilous iests the fome and froth of wit it is his sinne and shame and leaueth nothing behind it but sorrow the tormenting sting of an euill conscience If our discourse be religious and honest such as becommeth Christian grauity it is a good signe comfortable euidence vnto vs that we are iust and vpright in Gods sight For the mouth of the righteous speaketh Psal 37. 30. wisdome and his tongue talketh of iudgment And If any man offend not in word Iam. 3. 2. the same is a perfect man and able also to bridle the whole body but if our talke be corrupt and vnsauoury it is a signe of a rotten and wicked heart for as our Sauiour telleth vs out of the abundance of the hart the mouth speaketh A Mat. 12. 34 35. good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things and an euill man out of the euill treasure bringeth forth euill things In a word Life and death are in the power of the tongue
teach vs what time we can best spare from our other waighty and ordinary imployments and when wee are best disposed and fitted for the deuout performance of this religious duty yet sauing other mens better iudgement ordinarily and for the most part the first houre of the morning as I suppose is fittest for it first because generally the morning is fittest for all studies and exercises of the minde when the decayed strength is repaired and the spent spirits refreshed and renewed by our rest and all the faculties of our soules more strong and vigorous Secondly because if by our waighty imployments wee are scanted of time in the rest of the day wee may to performe so good a duty borrow an houre from our ordinary time of sleepe without any hinderance to our other businesse Thirdly because hauing not as yet intermeddled with worldly affaires we may performe it with lesse distraction And lastly because meditation is a good preparatiue to our morning sacrifice of prayer Yet if any man vpon other reasons or his owne experience teaching him that he is best fitted both in respect of his deuotion and other occasions doe chuse rather to meditate in the euening I leaue it as a thing indifferent to his free choyce onely I would aduize that wee make choyce of such a time wherein we are fresh and vigorous in our spirits and minds and not when they or our bodies are spent and wearied either with bodily labour or studies of the mind §. Sect. 4 Constancy in this exercise The third thing respecting the time is that as we must be constant in setting apart obseruing of some certaine time of the day for the vndertaking and beginning of this exercise so much more in continuing our meditations the time appoynted Neither must it bee performed by fits and snatches intermingling with them our worldly thoughts or other businesse sometime intermitting and then againe afresh setting vpon them For when the mind is thus distracted betweene things so opposite in nature the one is an hindrance to the other and like the dog that runneth or hunteth after two Hares at once it catcheth neither Besides when our minde is let loose to wander after earthly things it is not easily againe composed and reduced into order but we shall stand in need of a new preparation and so be still beginning and neuer bring any thing to perfection And therefore when wee haue begun this exercise wee must constantly proceed as neere as we can without distraction or intermission for that whole space of time which we haue allotted vnto it not breaking off our meditation vntill wee haue brought it to some issue and receiued by it some spirituall refection Now what proportion of time is to be allotted to this exercise we cannot prescribe any certaine stint or limits but must leaue it to be measured out vnto euery one by his owne deuotion which is not a like in all nor in the same man at all times Besides there is great difference betweene one another mans leisure in respect of variety of important occasions pressing some more then others and euery man more or lesse at sundry times Neither are wee alwayes a like fitted but sometimes are more dull and dead to spirituall exercises and sooner weary of them sometimes more cheerfull and heauenly-minded and able to hold out in this spirituall race without breathing or intermission at one time sooner prepared and better able to performe and at another longer in working our backward hearts to this duty Onely this in general may be said that our outward exercise must not in time exceed our inward abilities nor the burthen which wee impose our spirituall strength Both because the Lord is onely delighted with cheerfull seruice and cannot brooke that which is dead and forced and also because if we ouer-weary our selues it will coole and quench and not inflame and increase our deuotion and make vs the more loth to come the next time to take our spirituall repast when as wee did not leaue with an appetite but departed away glutted with lothing satiety §. Sect. 5 Of the disposition and gesture of the body The last circumstance to be obserued is the disposition and gesture of the body which doe not a little further the deuotion of the soule In which there is required first that the body be composed to rest and quiet that it doe not by much agitation and violent motion disturbe and distract the mind nor by spending the spirits and wearying of the outward parts make the exercise tedious and toylesome Secondly here is required silence that the mind may more freely discourse with it selfe without any interruption of outward noyse vnlesse it be in case that the heart be surcharged with the heat and vehemency of our passions and feruour of deuotion and doe need some vent to giue it ease As for the gesture of the body no certaine rules can be giuen but it must be left to be ordered and disposed by Christian prudence and experience Onely in generall wee may obserue these things First that our gesture and carriage of our bodies be reuerent in respect of that glorious presence before which we present our soules and bodies and the waightinesse of the duty about which we are imployed seeing this may somewhat further the inward reuerence of the heart Secondly that wee vse that gesture which in our experience we find most auaileable to stirre vp our deuotion for these outward gestures of the body are but the hand-maids of the mind and heart which must giue their attendance that they may bee ready to yeeld vnto them that seasonable seruice which they shall appoint as most fit and profitable To which purpose diuers gestures are diuersly commended Some in their Meditations preferre quiet resting of their bodies vpon their bed or pallet whereby they find their minds and soules best fitted for spirituall motion and discourse and most free from the distraction of all outward obiects Some sitting and inclining their bodies to one side their table or cheare supporting their elbow and their hand their head Some standing still with their eyes lifted vp towards heauen the Hauen of their hopes and visible place of Gods inuisible presence but yet closed to auoid distractions Some walking which being a healthfull exercise refresheth the body and maketh it a more fit instrument of the soule to performe this duty without wearinesse But which of these we vse it is not much materiall seeing in themselues one is not better then another though in respect of vs they may be more or lesse conuenient in regard of the variety of seuerall mens dispositions Thirdly and lastly it is not vnprofitable to frame the gesture of the seuerall parts according to the matter in hand vpon which we meditate and our inward affection in thinking of it As when wee are humbled in the sight and sense of our sinnes and are ashamed and grieued because we haue by them dishonoured and
displeased our gracious God and louing Father we may with the Publicane cast downe our eyes vpon the earth as not worthy to looke vp vnto heauen and smite our brest as lamenting the corruptions that are therein contained When we offer vnto God the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing humble hearts and holy desires and beg in the name of Christ with confidence the benefits which he hath commanded vs to aske and hath promised to giue we may lift vp together with our hearts our eyes and hands towards heauen from whence we expect to receiue the things we aske with the hand of faith When our hearts are rauished with the apprehension of Gods gracious promises and the sweet and delightfull feelings of his loue and assured hopes of those inestimable ioyes which he reserueth for vs in heauen we may hold vp our Luk. 21. 28. heads with comfort and reioycing as our Sauiour speaketh eleuate our hearts towards that place whither our bodies and soules shall one day triumphantly ascend and with Abraham testifie vnto our owne soules and Gen. 17. 17. God the Author of them these rauishing comforts with secret smiles and outward cheerefulnesse of our face and countenance seeing these inward feelings of Gods loue are better then wine to glad the heart and this vnction of the Spirit with these diuine consolations do make the countenance Cant. 1. 1. more cheerefull then the choysest oyle Psal 104. 15. CAP. XVIII Of our entrance into Meditation by due preparation §. Sect. 1 That this preparation is necessarie and wherein it consisteth ANd so I come from the circumstances to intreate of the exercise it selfe In which I will consider first the ingresse and entrance into it then the progresse and manner of proceeding in it and finally the egresse and conclusion of it The ingresse or entrance consisteth in a due preparation which the gloriousnesse and Maiesty of Gods presence before whom this action is to bee performed the important waight of the duty to bee done the profit and necessity of doing it well and our owne frailty and imbecillity wants and weakenesse auersenesse and great indisposition to this high and holy exercise doe necessarily require For if wee dare not without due preparation approch into the presence of an earthly king to deale with him about such waighty businesse as importeth vs no lesse then our whole estates yea our liues themselues how much lesse should wee presume to come into the presence of the Soueraigne Monarch of heauen and earth about such important affaires as concerne our spirituall estates and the euerlasting saluation of our soules vnlesse before-hand wee be duely prepared And if we cannot hope to make any good musicke vnlesse we first string our Instruments and put them in good tune so neither shall wee euer be able to make any harmonious melody in Gods hearing vnlesse we duely prepare all our powers and parts and put our minds and hearts our wills and affections in good tune and prouide spirituall Songs and diuine Ditties as the subiect matter of our Musicke about which we are to exercise our Art and skill In which two points our preparation chiefly consisteth For either it is taken vp in preparing and fitting our persons for this exercise or in prouision of profitable matter as the subiect of our Meditation In the former respect besides that generall preparation before spoken of by renewing of our repentance that we may not come polluted with our sinnes into so holy a presence nor touch such pure things with vnwashed hands wee are with all care and diligence to prepare all and euery of our speciall faculties and parts both of soule and body And first we must come with prepared minds and vnderstandings both in respect of their illumination and intention For before wee can meditate aright our minds must be inlightened by Gods Word and holy Spirit that we may vnderstand in some measure the matter on which we are to meditate with the causes effects properties and circumstances of it without which wee cannot at all performe it Neither must this knowledge bee onely in speculation and theorie but also a fruitfull sauing knowledge which sanctifieth the heart and worketh it and all other parts to an holy practice without which this exercise cannot be done profitably and as it ought In the intention of our mindes wee must not chiefly and principally propound vnto our selues our owne profit and benefit but performe it in obedience to God as a dutie which he requireth and whereby we are made more fit to doe him seruice aiming therein chiefly at the setting foorth of his glory And then as subordinate heereunto we may and ought to ayme at the inriching of our soules with all spirituall graces the cheering and comforting of our hearts with diuine consolations the increase of our holinesse and the strengthening of vs vnto all Christian duties of a godly life §. Sect. 2 That we must chiefly prepare our hearts and affections Secondly before we vndertake this holy exercise we must prepare our hearts and affections by laying aside all worldly cares and earthly desires which if they bee retained will interrupt and distract vs in our spirituall Meditations And as Moses was to put off his shooes before he could be admitted to heare God speaking vnto him or so much as to stand vpon that ground which was sanctified by Gods presence so must we cast off the worldlinesse of our wills and desires before there can be any profitable conference betweene him and vs. For there is such dissimilitude yea contrariety betweene God and the world spirituall and earthly things that when we turne vs to speake vnto the one wee turne away from the other and when our minds and hearts are fixed vpon the cares of this life and transitory trifles by reason of the great distance betweene them they are quite deuided and distracted from those which are heauenly and spirituall so that it is more possible to mixe together gold and clay oyle and water then the gold of diuine Meditations and the oyle of spirituall thoughts with the clay of our earthly affaires and water of worldly vanities The fountaine of our hearts must be cleere and well settled the mud of earthly cares being sunke to the bottome if wee would behold in them any diuine Contemplations for if they be stirred and troubled nothing will appeare through this muddy thickenesse And as before wee can see the brightnesse of the Sunne the clouds must be dispelled so before our minds and hearts can be illuminated and cheered with any heauenly light or the beames of Gods loue in our spirituall Meditations the foggie vapours and mists which rise from the earth and sea of the world must first be blowne away and scattered Neuer saith one can heauenly contemplation ioyne with earthly commotion neuer is the troubled minde possibly Nunquam commotioni contemplatio iungitur nec praeualet mens perturbata conspicere ad quod vix
tranquilla valet inhiare Gregor Moral lib. 5. able to behold those diuine things which without much difficulty it cannot see when it is most quiet And therefore if wee will meditate with any fruit and profit wee must not be more carefull to sequester our selues outwardly from company then our hearts inwardly from worldly cares nor according to our Sauiours counsell to shut our Closet dores then to shut the doore of our hearts against earthly distractions and to keepe a narrow watch ouer them that none may enter at vnawares and distract vs in this holy exercise Neither must we onely take care to exclude at this time such wicked thoughts and such carking and carnall cares as are alwayes vnlawfull but euen those which are at other times honest and necessary about our ordinary imployments and duties of our callings yea those likewise which are religious and spirituall if they be vnseasonable and nothing pertinent to the present purpose nor any way suteable to the matter we haue in hand seeing though in respect of their matter they be good and holy yet they are cunningly thrust into our hearts and minds by the tempter who can transforme himselfe into an Angell of light in an ill manner vnseasonably and vnprofitably and to a worse end namely to distract our present Meditations and that by thinking on two things at once of a diuers nature we should receiue benefit by neither nor brings our thoughts vnto any good issue In which regard we are not vtterly to banish such things out of our hearts but onely to shut them out for the time and to let them stand at the doore like suters till we haue dispatched with those vnto whom for the present we haue giuen hearing lest rushing in vncalled and speaking altogether after a tumultuous manner nothing be dispatched through this disorder whereas by seasonable admittance in due course and conferring with one after another all may be brought to good effect Secondly as we must clense our hearts from these incumbrances so we must decke and adorne them with the ornaments of vertue that they may be fit to entertaine so high and holy a Ghest but especially we must decke them with humility in which he so chiefly delighteth that he will not onely be content to conferre with vs for a little while but will Esa 57. 15. euen dwell and keepe residence with vs if wee be of an humble spirit And therefore when we approch into Gods presence to performe this duty let vs thinke and consider of his glorious greatnesse and awfull Maiestie and of our owne basenesse and vilenesse weakenesse and vnworthinesse saying in our soules with Abraham Behold I haue taken vpon mee to speake Gen. 18. 27. vnto the Lord which am but dust and ashes O let not the Lord be angry and I will speake And without this humility we cannot profitably performe this duty for as one saith None can contemplate the wisedome of God who Contemplari Dei sapientiam non possunt qui sibi videntur esse sapientes c. Greg. in Moral lib. 18. are wise in their owne conceits because they are by so much distant from his light by how much they come short of humility in themselues For whilest the swelling of pride increaseth in their minds it closeth the sight of contemplation and thinking themselues inlightened aboue all others they are depriued of the light of vertue Finally wee must prepare our hearts for Meditation by sharpening our appetites and whetting our stomackes after this spirituall repast and food of our soules by considering seriously of those arguments by which formerly it hath beene commended vnto vs. For as it is a singular helpe to our bodily nourishment when wee come to our meate with an hungry appetite and that food doth vs but little good which wee feed vpon with lothing satiety so also is it in the nourishment of our soules for if wee receiue our food with a good stomacke we shall the better feed vpon it retaine and disgest it whereas if we come vnto it with a cloyed appetite wee shall soone cast it vp againe and neuer disgest nor conuert it to any spirituall nourishment Lastly there is some preparation also required in respect of our bodies for as we must take heed that they bee not too much pampered with excessiue diet seeing this fulnesse and fatnesse of body causeth emptinesse and leanenesse in the soule dulleth the minde drowneth the spirits and oppresseth the heart so must we on the other side beware that the body and minde bee not wearied and the spirits spent with former studies and labours so as they are wholly disabled that they cannot as fit instruments performe any good seruice to the soule in this spirituall exercise as being rather disposed to rest and sleepe then to take any profitable paines in this laborious imployment §. Sect. 3 Of the subiect matter of our Meditations And thus hauing prepared our persons the next thing to bee done is to prouide fit matter whereupon wee may meditate without which our Meditations are alwayes vnprofitable and oftentimes hurtfull and pernicious In which respect the greatest part of men doe pittifully faile for though all are willing to meditate the mind delighting in its owne motion and in discoursing vpon those subiects which it most esteemeth and vpon which the heart is wholly fixed yet few make choice of such matter as may be fit for their soules nourishment but some meditate mischiefe in their hearts thinking vpon the readiest meanes how they may atchieue it with least danger some how they may satisfie their carnall desires with worldly riches pleasures and preferments and raise themselues by other mens ruines some meditate vpon naturall things with naturall mindes neuer drawing them to spirituall vse some on domesticall matters how they may best contriue their businesse or on ciuill affaires and high points of state yea many men spend a great part of their Meditations about matters meerely concerning other men and nothing at all appertaining vnto them Vpon which and a thousand such like subiects we may spend our spirits weare out our bodies and weary our minds and yet bee neuer the holier in this life nor happier in the life to come But the matter of these Christian Meditations whereof we intreate ought to be wholly spirituall and diuine either in respect of the things themselues or at least the vse which we are to make of them And thus the whole Scriptures and euery part and parcell of them may be the subiect matter of our Meditations when wee seriously consider of the right and naturall sense and meaning of them and draw them vnto vse either for instruction admonition reproofe consolation or the reformation and amendment of our sinfull liues In which kind of Meditations whoso exercise themselues they are by the Psalmist pronounced blessed But besides the text of holy Scriptures Psal 1. 1 2. any point of the doctrine of diuinity contained in them may
such manifold and plentifull meanes to presse it vpon thee for thine owne inestimable benefit For hee sendeth daily his Ambassadours vnto thee to call and inuite thee to repentance by preaching vnto thee the glad tidings of reconciliation Hee by them instructeth thee in the right way wherein thou must returne admonisheth thee of thy errours reprooueth thy transgressions and wilfull wandrings comforteth and incourageth thee against all difficulties and oppositions perswadeth thee by his gracious promises terrifieth thee in thy course of sinning with his seuere threatnings allureth thee by his manifold blessings discourageth thee in the way of sinne by his chastizements and gentle corrections all which outward meanes he presseth vpon thee that they may become effectuall by the inward motions of his Spirit drawing thee from thy sins and driuing thee to God O thrice vngratefull soule if thou sufferest so great grace to be spent in vaine O more then miserable if thou like the barren earth drinkest so many gracious showres of heauenly blessings and bringest forth no other fruits vnto him Heb. 6. 6 7 8. by whom thou art dressed but thornes and briers seeing then thou shouldest be reiected of God and neere vnto his fearefull curse But I am perswaded Vers 9. better things of thee my soule and things that accompany saluation though I haue thus spoken For though this and all other thy graces are but weake and imperfect yet are they in sincerity truth Acknowledge with thankfulnesse Gods graces in thee and thine owne wants Behold with sorrow thy imperfections labour without discouragement after more perfection He that could begin this worke of grace when it was wanting can increase Phil. 1. 6. it now it is begun Hee that could raise thee who wast dead in thy sinnes can quicken thee more and more seeing it is a farre greater worke Eph. 2. 1. to giue life to the dead then health to the liuing §. Sect. 3 Motiues to perswade vs to the renewing and perfecting of our repentance and first our humiliation and vnfained sorrow for sinne Rest not then thy selfe O my soule in some first beginnings of this worke but goe vnto him that is both able and willing to finish it Content not thy selfe in some small degrees seeing that is no true grace which standeth at a stay and tendeth not towards perfection Thou hast already repented but let not that suffice thee He seemeth to repent of his repentance that doth not renue it againe and againe Doe not cease to sorrow till thou ceasest to sinne Neuer leaue striking at this many-headed monster whilest any one remaineth If thou willingly suffer any one to liue they will multiply and such mortall enemies they are vnto thee that their life will be thy death God begun this worke and inioyned thee to continue it giue it not ouer till hee call thee from it to pay thee thy wages Mourne for thy sinnes till hee come and wipe away the teares from thine eyes and with thy sinnes take away thy sorrowes and thinke not that it is time to cease amending till thou commest to perfection and art made compleate both in holinesse and in happinesse Practise repentance O my soule not by patches and pieces but in both the parts ioyntly together Repent and amend Sorrow for thy sinnes and withall forsake them For he that lamenteth his sinnes and indeuoureth not to leaue them doth it not out of hatred but of loue which maketh him to grieue because feare of Gods Iudgements make him thinke of their parting But first humble thy selfe my soule in the sight and sense of thy sinnes that God may exalt thee in his due time Humble thy selfe thorowly with vnfained sorrow and bitter griefe for the deeper thou layest the foundation of thy repentance the more substantiall shalt thou finde thy building Thy sinnes are many and grieuous and great sinnes would haue great sorrow Thy God whom thou hast offended and dishonoured is not onely glorious and full of Maiesty but infinitely gracious and of abundant mercy Yea thou my soule hast not onely seene and tasted how good thy God is but hast drunke deepe draughts out of the fountaine of his bounty Hee hath giuen thee thy being and preserued thee in it he hath multiplied his blessings vpon thee temporall and spirituall and is the Author and giuer of all the good which thou inioyest or expectest And which is first of all and aboue all he hath loued thee vnworthy sinfull rebellious soule before thou couldest loue him yea so loued thee that he hath giuen his onely begotten and best beloued Sonne that by his death thou mightest liue Admire this infinite loue O my soule and loue thy God againe as much as thou canst and be sorry thou canst loue him no better Loue him who is most worthy in himselfe and best deserueth it of thee which if thou truely doest thou canst not but lament thy sinnes with bitter griefe whereby thou hast displeased him who so loueth thee and whom thou so louest Looke also vpon thy Sauiour whom by thy sinnes thou hast pearced and lament thy sinnes which haue beene the causes of his sufferings as a man mourneth for his sonne and be sorry for them as one is sorry for his first borne It is not so much Iudas that betrayed him nor the Scribes and Pharises that accused him nor Pilate that condemned him nor the Souldiers that crucified him nor the deuill himselfe that set them all on worke as thy sinnes deliuering him into their hands that haue beene the chiefe causes of his death These these my soule were the whips that scourged his innocent body the nailes that fastened him to the Crosse the speare which pearced his blessed side and heart Mourne then and lament thy sinnes O my soule whereby thou hast caused him to be condemned that came to iustifie thee to be killed that came to saue thee to be put to a cursed death who being the Lord of life was content to die that hee might Eph. 2. 3. giue vnto thee life and happinesse that wast dead in thy sins and liable to Gods wrath as well as others Thinke not much my soule to shead teares for thy sins seeing thy Sauiour was content to shead his blood for them nor that it is too much trouble to bee a little grieued in the sight and sense of their burthen and thy heauenly Fathers displeasure seeing Christs innocent soule was troubled for them and heauy vnto the death yea was so Mat. 26. 38. oppressed with their waight and his Fathers wrath that it forced out from his body a bloody sweat and from his distressed and afflicted soule that lamentable complaint My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Consider also O my soule how often thou hast vexed and grieued the good Spirit of God dwelling in thee and made him weary of his lodging by polluting it with thy sinnes How often thou hast tyred this peaceable Ghest by contending with him
perfect obedience Hee is infinite and therefore the actions of all things finite must tend vnto him and bee determined in him as their supreme end And being infinite hee is but one onely God and therefore requireth our whole seruice there being none other to be worshipped and serued but he alone He is an holy Spirit and therefore must be serued not onely outwardly with our bodies but also with our soules in spirit and truth He is in his nature most pure Joh. 4. 24. and simple without mixture or composition and therfore we must yeeld vnto him simple and pure obedience without any by-respect or the mixture of humane inuentions with his most pure and perfect will Hee is eternall and is therefore to be serued and glorified in all ages and from the beginning to the end of times seeing he is to day yesterday and Heb. 13. 8. the same for euer and alwaies liueth to reward those that serue him and to take vengeance of them who rebell against him He is immutable and vnchangeable in himselfe and in his loue goodnesse bounty mercie and iustice toward vs and therefore ought to be serued of vs dayly and constantly without any leuity or wauering seeing there is no change in him towards vs. He is immense and omniscient so that wheresoeuer we are we are in his presence whatsoeuer we doe we are in his sight and therefore we are alwaies and in all places to carry our selues in all dutifull obedience as being euer in the view of our Lord and Master who standeth by and taketh notice of all our actions He is all-sufficient to reward our seruice and to preserue all those who depend vpon him against all enemies and therefore we must not be discouraged in his seruice by any worldly or spirituall wants seeing he is abundantly able to supply them nor by the aduerse attempts of any that oppose vs seeing he alone though we had no other helpes is sufficient to protect vs and to bring to nought whatsoeuer might or malice seeketh to hinder vs in the waies of godlinesse He is God blessed for euer yea blessednesse it selfe in whose fruition consisteth all happinesse and therefore ought to be serued with all the powers of our bodies and mindes seeing he only is able to make vs blessed He is Almighty and able to doe whatsoeuer pleaseth him the which also should effectually withdraw vs from all 1. Cor. 10. 22. Ier. 7. 19. sinne seeing thereby wee prouoke him to wrath who is powerfull to punish vs and moue vs to serue him in all Christian duties seeing hauing all power in heauen and earth he is able to reward vs in our wel-doing He is true yea truth it selfe and in this regard ought to be serued seeing he will most assuredly make good all his gracious promises which he hath made to all that serue and please him and contrariwise will bring to passe all his fearefull threatnings against those who neglect and disobey his commandements His will is absolutely good and the most perfect rule of righteousnesse and therefore our wills and actions must be conformable vnto it seeing so farre as they digresse and differ they are wicked crooked and erroneous So also the Lord is good yea the chiefe and supreme Goodnesse vnto which all things are to be destinated as their principall and supreme end the which should make vs deuote our selues wholy vnto his seruice seeing thereby both wee and our actions doe attaine vnto their supreme end and chiefe perfection and contrariwise become vaine and to no purpose if we and they be not thus imployed He is holy yea holinesse it selfe and therefore ought to be serued in holinesse and righteousnesse of all that approch neere vnto him and would be esteemed of his family for being himselfe holy he delights in those who are like him in holinesse neither can his pure eyes indure sinnefull pollution as being most contrary to his diuine nature He is gracious bountifull and munificent and therefore is to be serued with all diligence and cheerefulnesse seeing he who is so beneficent and liberall to all his creatures will be vnspeakeably bountifull towards those who glorifie him by their willing obedience He is louing gracious yea Grace and Loue it selfe and therefore being also infinitly louely deserueth worthily all loue and that wee should bring forth the fruits of it by doing all things that are pleasing in his sight He is most mercifull gentle patient and long-suffring and therefore is to be serued with all cheerefulnesse and comfort seeing he is so mercifull that he pardoneth all our sinnes so milde and gentle that he passeth by all our infirmities so patient and long-suffring that when wee are slack and slothfull in our dutie he doth not presently inflict deserued punishment but beareth with vs and expecteth our amendment He is iust yea Iustice it selfe the which also should make vs spend all our time in his seruice seeing without any respect of persons Act. 10. 34. he is the same to all that obey him and will not faile to recompence to the full our labour of loue nor to giue vnto vs that rich inestimable wages wherewith he hath graciously bound himselfe by couenant to reward our seruice nor contrariwise to inflict deserued punishments vpon those who being bound to serue him neglect their dutie And thus also those attributes which are improperly ascribed vnto God as shewing rather his actions then affections and his workes towards vs rather then his nature in himselfe may also yeeld vnto vs powerfull reasons which may moue vs to serue him As his anger and hatred against sinne and sinners which is nothing but his rewarding Iustice recompencing them as they haue deserued may moue vs effectually to flee all sin and wickednesse seeing his wrath is a consuming fire and wee like stubble before it in which regard it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the euerliuing God His ioy whereby he Heb. 10. 31. delighteth himselfe in those that feare and loue him and so also replenisheth them with all ioy and happinesse in the fruition of him and his loue His sorrow and displeasure when wee vnkindly grieue him by our sinnes who hath beene so kinde vnto vs and if we make him sorry who is our ioy who shall glad our hearts in the day of our sorrow and comfort vs in our mourning His repenting in doing vnto vs the good he hath promised when wee doe euill and in bringing vpon vs his Iudgements threatned when wee turne from our sins and reconcile our selues vnto him by our wel-doing Finally his iealousie which is mixt of loue and anger should make vs wholy deuote our selues to his seruice seeing he can abide no corriuals in our loue and dutie but will be loued serued with all our hearts and with all our soules and therefore wee must not deuide our selues betweene God Matth. 22. 37. and the deuill the world and our
Couenant of Grace God doth not stand vpon strict termes with vs exacting legall and perfect performance but onely Euangelicall sincerity and truth and that we desire and indeuour to keepe our promise as much as we are able And seeing also because our strength is but small the Lord hath graciously promised the assistance of his holy Spirit to strengthen vs in our good indeuours and inable vs to performe what he requireth and we haue vndertaken in some such manner as may be acceptable in his sight Now what stronger motiue can there be vnto the duties of a godly life consisting in a liuely faith and vnfained repentance then to consider that wee are tyed hereunto by this couenant which is the maine ground of all our good the remission of our sinnes grace and glory which if wee make voyd by our impenitency and infidelity wee can haue no part in Gods mercies and gracious promises nor in Iesus Christ and all his benefits Especially considering that if we but resolue and indeuour to please God in these holy duties both wee and our seruice shall bee accepted in Iesus Christ our imperfections being couered with his perfect obedience and our corruptions washed away with his blood which if we neglect to performe and liue stil in our infidelity and impenitency without any serious desire or constant indeuour to know God or to feare and serue him whatsoeuer profession and shew we make to the contrary yet most certaine it is that we are not yet in this Couenant nor shall as long as we continue in this state haue any part in the benefits promised seeing the Lord who cannot faile of his word hath in this couenant assured vs that he will not Ier. 31 33 34 35. and 32. 40. onely bestow his blessings but will also fit and inable all his Elect with whom onely he maketh it to performe what he require that their hands that he will inlighten them with the knowledge of himself his will and write his Law in their hearts thereby working in them these resolutions and indeuours to obserue and keepe it that he will be their God and they his people and that he will knit them so vnto him as that they shall neuer depart from him and therefore so long as wee finde no such things wrought in vs we can haue no assurance that as yet we haue any part in this Couenant or in any of the benefits therein promised CAP. XXXVIII Of two other reasons mouing vs to a godly life the one taken from our effectuall Calling the other from our free Iustification by faith §. Sect. 1 That the benefit of our effectuall Calling should moue vs to serue God in the duties of a godly life THe sixth benefit is our effectual Calling whereby the Lord vouchsafeth by the preaching of the Gospell to make knowne vnto vs his good will and pleasure concerning the eternall saluation of our soules in and for Iesus Christ and by the inward operation of his holy Spirit working with the outward ministery to beget in vs a true and liuely faith whereby wee apply vnto our selues Christ Iesus and all his benefits For in the ministery of the Word God not onely offereth vnto vs Christ to be our Sauiour and Redeemer but also prepareth and fitteth vs to receiue him giuing vnto vs a true sight of our sinne and misery by which our hearts are humbled and broken and working in them an earnest hungring and thirsting after Christ and his righteousnesse that by him wee may be recouered out of our wretched estate and attaine vnto life and saluation by his merits and obedience The which feruent desires he graciously satisfieth by working faith in vs grounded vpon his infinite mercies the all-sufficient merits of Christ and his free and indefinite promises whereby we apply him vnto vs with all his benefits So that in this benefit of our effectuall Calling three things chiefly concurre first the sauing hearing of the Word whereby our eares and hearts are opened and our minds inlightened with the knowledge of the great worke of Redemption wrought by Christ Secondly the donation of God the Father whereby he offereth and giueth Christ vnto vs to bee our Sauiour and vs vnto Christ to be saued and redeemed by him Thirdly incision into Christ and vnion with him he becomming our Head and wee his members the bond whereof on his part is his holy Spirit and on our part a true and liuely faith All which affoord vnto vs strong motiues to perswade vs vnto all duties of a godly life For first what an incomparable benefit is this that the Lord passing by innumerable others who either neuer heard the sound of the Gospell or hearing haue made no benefit by it wanting the inward assistance of his holy Spirit hee should both grant vnto vs this light and also open our eyes that we should behold it and that he should hereby chuse and call vs out of the corrupt masse of mankinde which stil lyeth dead in sinne and make vs true members of his Church giuing Christ vnto vs and vs vnto Christ and vniting vs vnto him as liuely members of his body that we might be partakers of him and all his benefits And how should this affect our hearts and prouoke vs to make a right vse of such inestimable blessings which is the end why God hath bestowed them For why hath he inlightened our eyes more then others but that by the benefit of this light we should walke in the wayes of holinesse Iob. 12. 35. and righteousnesse and so glorifie him in our saluation Wherefore hath he called and culled vs out of the world but that wee should walke worthy of this high calling and renouncing the world and worldly lusts deuote our selues wholly to his seruice Why hath hee giuen Christ vnto vs and vs vnto Christ but that hee might saue vs from our sinnes not onely in respect of their guilt and punishment but also from their corruption and that he raigning in vs by his grace and holy Spirit might depose sinne and Satan from their regency and suffer them no longer to rule and raigne in our mortall bodies Why hath he vnited vs vnto Christ by his Spirit but that wee should bee led and ruled by it and not by our owne lusts and that we should submit our selues as becommeth members to his gouernment seeing it were a thing monstrous in the body for any inferiour part to rebell against the Head and to withdraw it it selfe from its regiment and iurisdiction and vtterly vnsutable that so holy an Head should haue any members delighting in wickednesse and drawing it as much as they are able into the fellowship and communion 1. Cor. 6. 15. of the same sinnes And that this is the maine end of our calling that we should glorifie God by seruing him in holinesse and righteousnesse it is cleere and euident by the Scriptures For the Apostle telleth vs that God hath not called vs
vnto vncleannesse but vnto holinesse that the grace of 1. Thes 4. 7. Tit. 2. 11 12. God which bringeth saluation appearing or shining vnto vs in the ministery of the Gospell teacheth vs to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world which lesson if we learne not we had been better to haue sate still in darknesse seeing our knowledge will but aggrauate our sinne and increase our condemnation according to that of the Apostle To him that knoweth to doe good and doth it not to him it is sinne and that of our Sauiour The seruant that knoweth his Ioh. 9. 31. Jam. 4. 17. Luk. 12. 47. Masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes Finally our Sauiour telleth vs that if we be grafted in him we must bring forth fruit seeing euery branch that beareth not fruit he taketh away and casteth forth as a branch that is dead and withered and men gather them and cast them into the Ioh. 15. 2 6. fire and they are burned And therefore if wee would haue any assurance that we are effectually called that Christ is ours and we his and that being vnited vnto him as liuely members of his body we haue right vnto him and all his benefits let vs as the Apostle exhorteth walke worthy the vocation Ephes 4. 1. 2. Pet. 1. 10. wherewith we are called and as the Apostle Peter perswadeth Let vs make our Calling and Election sure by adding one vertue vnto another and bringing forth the fruits of them all in a godly and Christian life §. Sect. 2 The second reason taken from our Iustification and the fruits which follow it Finally the benefit of our Iustification with all the fruits that doe follow it are so many strong motiues to incite vs vnto the duties of a godly life for God in our Iustification of his free grace imputing vnto vs the death and obedience of Iesus Christ hath forgiuen vs all our sinnes and pronounced vs iust and righteous in his righteousnesse By which inestimable benefit he hath bound vs to serue and glorifie him in all holy duties who hath done so great things for vs. For seeing there is no euill like the euill of sinne no tyranny and bondage alike miserable therefore when God of his free grace hath freed vs from it wee must with all care flee sinne and take heed that wee doe not againe come into this thraldome And seeing he hath forgiuen vs so great a debt let this make vs Luk. 7. 47. loue him much and expresse our loue by seruing and pleasing him in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse The which vse the Apostle maketh of this benefit namely that being dead vnto sinne that is freed from Rom. 6. 10 12 18. the power and tyranny of it and aliue vnto God we should not let sinne any longer raigne in our mortall bodies that we should obey it in the lusts thereof but that we should yeeld our selues vnto God as those that are aliue from the dead and our members as instruments of righteousnesse vnto God and that being made free from sinne we should become the seruants of righteousnesse Which if we doe not we can haue no assurance that wee are redeemed by Christ and iustified seeing the same vertue and power of Christs death and Resurrection which taketh away the guilt and punishment of our sinnes in Ephes 5. 25 26. 1. Pet. 2. 24. our Iustification is as effectuall to sanctifie vs in the killing and crucifying of our corruptions and our spirituall quickening to holinesse and newnesse of life in our sanctification and as well did there issue out of his pierced side the water of ablution to cleanse vs from the pollution of sinne as the blood of Redemption to free vs from the guilt and punishment The fruits also which follow our Iustification doe effectually perswade vs to serue God in all the duties of a godly life For seeing wee are reconciled vnto God by the death of Christ our care must bee to walke in such a course as may preserue vs in his loue for Christ hath as the Apostle speaketh reconciled vs in the body of his flesh through death to present Col. 1. 21 22. vs holy vnblameable and vnreprooueable in his sight We haue receiued the Spirit of Adoption crying in our hearts Abba Father that it may be also Rom. 8. 15. in vs the Spirit of Sanctification and inable vs to please God in al things as it beseemeth his children And in whomsoeuer this Spirit is them it regenerateth raising them from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse Ephes 3. 12. So our free accesse to the Throne of grace should make vs take heed of sinne which will be as a wall of separation betweene God and vs and to liue in such holinesse of life as may still preserue our confidence in making our suits knowne vnto God The loue of God shed abroad in Rom. 5. 5. our hearts by the holy Ghost will inflame them with loue towards him and make vs carefull to approue it by liuing according to his will The peace of God following our Iustification by faith and passing all vnderstanding Rom. 5. 1. must make vs diligent in shunning those things which might disturbe it and imbracing and practising such vertues and holy duties as will preserue it Our spirituall ioy and reioycing in God will make vs auoyd all knowne sinnes which would interrupt our ioy and turne it into Rom. 5. 3. sorrow and to please the Lord in all things that his face and fauour may make vs still glad Our hope of heauenly happinesse will also much incourage vs in the worke of our sanctification for as many as haue this 1. Ioh. 3. 2 3. hope that they shall be like Christ in glory purge themselues as he also is pure as the Apostle teacheth vs. In a word there is no benefit accompanying grace and saluation which may not serue as an effectuall reason to moue vs to the practice of all holy duties both out of thankefulnesse towards God for such inestimable gifts and for the better assuring our selues that we haue receiued them seeing God hauing giuen them all vnto vs for this end we haue no reason to perswade our selues that wee haue any interest in them vnlesse they further vs to it and stirre vs vp in some measure to glorifie God in all the duties of an holy life And therefore if wee haue any loue towards God wrought in vs by so many rich mercies or any true loue towards our selues which is chiefely shewed in seeking the assurance of such inestimable benefits let vs aboue all things labour and indeuour to serue and pleased God by bringing forth the fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse in the whole course of our liues and conuersations CAP. XXXIX Other motiues arising from those duties which we owe vnto God and our neighbours §.
tentations that they shall not be able to doe vs any hurt For whereas those who liue in their sinnes and neglect the duties of a godly life doe giue vnto him all aduantage against them and by leauing off the brest-plate of Righteousnesse doe lie open to his poysonous darts so as he may easily perswade them that they are subiect to Gods wrath and the curse of the Law seeing they continue in their sinnes that they are not ingrafted into Christ seeing they bring forth no fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse that they are out of Gods fauour seeing they haue no care to please him by performing such duties as are acceptable in his sight and finally that they are not the children of God because they are nothing like him nor reformed according to his image nor heires of heauenly happinesse seeing they haue not purged themselues as it becommeth those who haue this hope Contrariwise when we keepe this brestplate of Righteousnesse fast buckled vnto vs wee may without danger repell all his fiery darts seeing we are assured that we are in Gods fauour whilest wee labour in all things to please him that wee are in Christ seeing without him wee could doe nothing that we are Gods children seeing we resemble him Ioh. 15. 5. in holinesse and righteousnesse and labour after perfection as he is perfect That we are freed from the curse of the Law and the guilt and punishment of all our sinnes seeing we feele the vertue of Christs death effectuall in vs for the mortifying and subduing of our corruptions And finally that maugre all the malice of our spirituall enemies we shall attaine vnto heauenly happinesse seeing our mercifull God hath graciously promised that he will reward our temporary seruice with this inestimable and eternall wages and crowne his owne graces in vs and the fruits which wee haue brought forth of them in the Christian duties of a godly life with endlesse ioy and immortalitie §. Sect. 5 That by a godly life we are prepared against the day of death The fourth benefit of a godly life is that thereby wee are continually prepared against the day of death so that the manifold euils Heb. 9. 27. which accompany it cannot hurt vs nor the dreadfull terrours thereof daunt and dismay vs. For howsoeuer it is appointed that all must die and this sentence like the lawes of the Medes and Persians is irreuocable yet to those that walke in the waies of godlinesse the nature of death is quite changed and the sting thereof taken away For of the last and greatest euil it is made vnto them a preparatiue to the chiefest good of an enemy it is become a friend of a Sargeant to arrest vs and imprison vs in hell it is become a ioyfull messenger sent of God to deliuer vs out of all worldly miseries and to bring vs into the ioyes of heauen In which regard the Wise man saith that howsoeuer Pro. 14. 32. the wicked is driuen away in his wickednesse yet the righteous hath hope in his death And that riches profit not in the day of wrath but righteousnesse deliuereth Chap. 11. 4. from death that is from the sting of death and all the euils that doe accompany it And the Spirit of God pronounceth them Blessed Apoc. 14. 13. that die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Namely that they may be crowned with ioy and immortality The which if it were well weighed might iustly not onely free the faithfull from the immoderate feare of death but also make it appeare precious in their eyes as it is in the sight of God and moue them Psal 116. 15. Phil. 1. 21 23. August in 1. Epist Ioan. with the Apostle to desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ seeing that is best of all and as one saith not to die patiently but to liue with patience and to die with ioy For who reioyceth not when after a wearisome pilgrimage hee approcheth neere vnto his owne Country when after a dangerous passage wherein hee hath beene tossed and turmoiled with aduerse windes and tempestuous stormes hee is ready to arriue safely in the long expected hauen when after his dayes labour hee commeth to receiue liberall wages and when after a dangerous and doubtful fight hauing conquered all his enemies hee is to be presented by the holy Angels before his Soueraigne King that hee may receiue the Crowne of victory And howsoeuer death hath many terrours which doe accompany it yet to those that haue serued God in the duties of a godly life they need not seeme terrible seeing against euery blow they haue their ward against euery poyson their soueraigne antidote They must leaue the world but they must goe to heauen forgoe their riches but for them enioy heauenly treasures bee depriued of momentanie delights but that they may attaine vnto euerlasting ioyes lose the comfort of all their friends but in lieu of it shall haue the sweete society of the Saints and Angels yea the fruition of God himselfe and his Christ and holy Spirit whom to enioy is to bee perfectly happy Yea but it is a grieuous sight to behold our friends mourning for our departure but this is recompenced with the hope of our happie meeting and the present ioyes of our heauenly entertaynement by the rest of our friends that are gone before vs. Yea but death is a straight and paynefull passage but it bringeth vs to a spacious and glorious Palace In our bodies wee are afflicted with many griefes of sicknesse but these are eased with the inward peace of conscience and comfort of the Spirit Wee are in euery part of our bodies racked with paine but they are onely the throwes that goe before our heauenly birth whereby we are borne to euerlasting and immortall glory Our bodies must be buried and corrupt in the earth but being sowne in corruption they shall arise incorruptible and our mortall shall 1. Cor. 15. 42 43 put on immortality our weaknesse strength and our basenesse glory Finally if liuing in Gods feare wee dye in his fauour wee may bee strongly armed against all the terrours of death and expect it at all times with a ioyfull countenance §. Sect. 6 That by leading of a godly life we are assured to be freed from iudgement condemnation Lastly by leading of a godly life wee may be assured that wee shall bee freed from Iudgement and condemnation in the world to come For if we liue here in the feare of God our sinnes shall not come into Iudgement because they are already iudged in Christ who hath satisfied Gods Iustice for them and payed our debt to the vttermost farthing If wee haue beene carefull here to play the good Stewards and dayly keeping our reckonings straight receiue our acquittance and discharge before wee sleepe sealed with the blood of Christ applied vnto vs by a liuely and renewed faith wee shall haue nothing to account for
not be condemned in the life to come yet it is not as they are innocents for thē they should neuer come into iudgment but as offenders who by their sinnes and negligence in his seruice haue deserued these and farre greater punishments Though he chastizeth euery Heb. 12. 6 7. sonne whom he receiueth yet not being faultlesse but when by their sins they haue displeased him that he may bring them to repentance and amendment And therefore he prescribeth this repentance as a meanes to preuent his corrections seeing by reason of naturall frailty and corruption we cannot be wholly innocent As many as I loue I rebuke and chastize Apoc. 3. 19. be zealous therefore and amend Though he make afflictions to serue for soueraigne salues to his Children yet he would not apply them to the whole skinne and sound flesh but because they haue sores which need to be cured being so festered that the balme of his benefits will not heale them Finally when by afflictions he weaneth them from the loue of the world it presupposeth that they dote too much vpon it and argueth that if as they ought they did lothe and contemne it in comparison of spirituall graces and heauenly glory they should not haue it imbittered vnto them For what mother would rub her teat with mustard or wormewood to weane her child if he had wit and will to leaue it in due time So that if we would carefully flee sinne and please our heauenly Father by doing our duty we should not need to feare stripes but should be continually cherished and incouraged with rewards If we would not surfet of sinne and wound our consciences we should not be troubled with the bitter medicine and sharpe and searching salue But we might with comfort and assurance apply Gods promises of preseruation both from outward and inward afflictions euen when they are most rife in the world and seaze vpon others round about vs according to that of Eliphaz to Iob He shall deliuer thee in sixe troubles yea in seuen there shall no euill touch Iob 5. 19. Psal 32. 10. and 91. 3 4. Pro. 3. 21 22 23 24. thee And that of the Psalmist Many sorrowes shall be to the wicked but he that trusteth in the Lord mercy shall compasse him about Thirdly if by our sinnes we haue brought afflictions vpon vs yet walking before God in our ordinary course after an holy manner we shall haue heereby this priuiledge that those afflictions which are pernicious vnto others both in respect of their soules and bodies shall not be able to doe them any harme Or though like the Serpent they bite them by the heele and cause some temporary smart yet being armed with the brest-plate of righteousnesse they shall not hurt their vitall parts nor any whit hinder them of euerlasting happinesse Yea contrariwise through the good blessing of God and assistance of his holy Spirit sanctifying them to their vse they with all other things shall worke together for their good by drawing them neerer vnto Rom. 8. 28. God through vnfained repentance by mortifying their sinnes weaning them from the world strengthening them in all grace and by being vnto them infallible signes of Gods loue and their adoption In all which and innumerable other respects they may conclude not from the sense and smart of their afflictions which as the Apostle speaketh seeme not Heb. 12. 11. ioyous but grieuous but from the fruits of righteousnesse which spring from them that it is good for them that they haue been afflicted that they might Psal 119. 71. Lam. 3. 27. learne Gods Statutes and that it is good for a man that he beare the yoke from his youth yea that they are blessed whom the Lord chasteneth and teacheth Psal them out of his Law Finally by leading of a godly life wee haue this priuiledge in respect of our afflictions that we shall haue seasonable deliuerance out of them when as it shall be most fitting both for Gods glory and our owne spirituall and euerlasting good For as the Wise man saith The righteousnesse of the vpright shall deliuer him but transgressors shall Pro. 11. 8. be taken in their naughtinesse So the Psalmist saith that many are the troubles Psal 34 17 19. of the righteous but the Lord deliuereth them out of all For When the righteous cry the Lord heareth and deliuereth them out of all their troubles according to his gracious promise Call vpon me in the day of trouble I will Psal 50. 15. deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me And therefore this also should effectually mooue vs vnto the duties of a godly life feeing heereby all estates are sanctifyed vnto vs and euen afflictions themselues are turned to our good which in their owne nature are the punishments of sinne For seeing through our intemperate lusts we oftentimes surfet of the pleasures of sinne and thereby cast our selues in to many afflictions as it were dangerous diseases who would not esteeme much of such a cordiall as will keepe the poyson of the disease from the vitall parts yea which will cause the sicknesse it selfe to become a meanes of increasing and confirming our spirituall health But such a cordiall is true godlinesse which conuerteth afflictions which in their owne nature are the diseases of our soules and states caused by surfetting vpon sin into notable helpes and meanes for the bettering of our spirituall estates by making vs to flee sinne more carefully whereupon we haue surfetted and by confirming and increasing all Gods graces in vs. §. Sect. 6 That God inwardly guideth the godly by his grace and holy Spirit The fourth priuiledge which the Lord bestoweth vpon the godly is that as he outwardly gouerneth defendeth and preserueth them by his 1 Cor. ● 16. and 6. 19. wise and powerfull prouidence so hee giueth vnto them an inward guide to direct and rule them to excite vphold and strengthen them in all good courses to purge them from all their corruptions and to inable them vnto euery good worke euen his owne holy Spirit and that not to visit them sometimes by fits but to dwell in them as in his temples and to keepe in their soules and bodies continuall residence that hee may be alwayes ready to direct and guide them in all their wayes to strengthen their weaknesse and to comfort their feeble hearts that they may not faint in their Christian course And this the Lord promiseth to the faithfull I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my Statutes and Ye shall keepe my Iudgements and doe them Neither doth this Spirit come alone but richly and royally attended with a choyce troope and traine of all sanctifying and sauing graces as faith hope charity patience humility and a good conscience with the rest which are of incomparable more value then the whole world as bringing with them for the present the greatest comfort and contentment and being for the time
to serue and please God in those holy duties which he requireth but presently it opposeth vs discourageth vs in all good courses hangeth as it were about our neckes as an heauie Heb. 12. 1. burthen and tyreth vs in our iourney hampereth and fettereth vs that we can but slowly and not without much paines and difficulty proceed in any Christian duties and laboureth might and maine to shake off the yoke of new obedience that it may regaine wonted liberty and glut it selfe in the pleasures of sinne with sensuall delight Neither in truth would it be an hard thing for vs to ouercome all those difficulties and remoue those impediments which the diuell and the world cast in our way if our corrupt flesh did not betray our Christian resolution and willingly admit these discouragements and if it were not as ready to stumble at these blockes that it may take occasion thereby to stand still or turne out of the way as our other enemies to cast them before vs. So that aboue all impediments which hinder vs in the course of Christianity we carry those which are most dangerous in our owne bosomes euen the rebellious reluctations and oppositions of our owne sinfull flesh which hinder vs wholly from all holy duties or so interrupt vs in them that we performe them at the best with much weaknesse and manifold wants and imperfections And thus the flesh hindreth vs either by its frailty and weaknesse whereby it disableth vs to performe the duties of Gods seruice as we see in the example of the Apostles who through naturall drowzinesse could not watch and pray as their Lord inioyned them according to that of our Sauiour The spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weake or else Math. 26. 41. by its maliciousnesse which maketh it wilfully to oppose and hinder the spirituall part in all good duties according to that of the Apostle The Gal. 5. 17. flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so as we cannot doe that good we would Of which impediments caused by the flesh the Apostle pitifully complaineth To will is Rom. 7. 18 22 23 24. present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not For the good that I would I doe not but the euill that I would not that I doe I delight in the Law of God after the inner man but I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captiuity to the law of sinne which is in my members O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the body of this death Which impediments if we would remooue we must daily make warre against our sinfull flesh and corruption of nature from whence they arise and strike at the root if wee would kill the branches which spring from it We must labour with God by prayer for the assistance of his holy Spirit that thereby we may be inabled to mortifie and subdue the flesh and all its sinfull lusts which fight against our 1. Pet. 2. 11. soules and quickened in the inner man vnto new obedience and holinesse of life And hauing gotten the mastery ouer this enemy we must not content our selues with our first victories but we must still keepe it vnder like a slaue and by daily buffetting and beating of it hold it in subiection 1. Cor. 9. 27. that it may not rebell against the spirituall part nor hinder it from performing the duties of a godly and Christian life But this I will thus briefly passe ouer because I haue already intreated of it at large in the fourth part of my Christian Warfare §. Sect. 2 That ignorance is a great impediment to a godly life The speciall impediments which the flesh vseth to hinder vs in the duties of a godly life arise either from the corruptions of nature or from those manifold obiections whereby it discourageth vs from entring into or proceeding in it The impediments of the former kind are internall in the soule or externall in our workes and actions Concerning the first the soule is so generally corrupted in all the powers and faculties of it that it wholly disableth vs vnto all the duties of a godly life The which corruptions are either in the mind and vnderstanding or in the heart and affections The mind and vnderstanding doe hinder vs in the practice of all Christan duties both by ignorance which hindreth and disableth vs from knowing those things which are necessary to saluation and to the practice of all holy duties and by curiosity which maketh vs to affect the knowledge of such things as are needlesse and vnprofitable For first we are hindred in the duties of a godly life by our naturall ignorance of God who is to be worshipped and serued by them especially when wee doe not vnderstand and know his sauing attributes as that hee is omniscient to take notice of all our thoughts words and actions and omnipotent to reward them if they be good or to punish them if they bee euill that he is iust and will call all we doe to account and mercifull to pardon our infirmities and imperfections if wee labour and indeuour to doe vnto him the best seruice we are able that he is all-sufficient and infinite in all goodnesse most bountifull and gracious and a rich rewarder of all those who seeke and serue him All which being singular motiues and incouragements vnto all Christian duties the ignorance of them must needs be a notable impediment to hinder vs in them For who can with cheerfulnesse serue such a master as he knoweth not or be faithfull and diligent in his duty when as he cannot vpon any well-grounded knowledge be assured that his seruice is accepted or shall be rewarded Who can performe duties agreeable to Gods nature when he vnderstandeth not what it is or performe any spirituall seruice if he know not that he is spirituall vnto whom it is performed Thus also wee are hindred in the duties of a godly life by being ignorant of Gods reuealed will for seeing no seruice is acceptable which is not agreeable vnto it all deuotion not guided by it meere superstition and all will-worship inuented by our owne braine though with neuer so good intention odious and abominable who seeth not that he who is ignorant of Gods will is no more able to walke in the way of his Commandements then hee who wanteth his bodily eyes to goe in a strange and difficult way without a guide Yea suppose that we were set in this way and led as it were by the hand by the directions of others yet if we doe not see with our owne eyes and be not able of our selues to discerne the right way by the light of Gods Word shining vnto vs how easily if our guides doe but a little leaue vs shall we through the malice of the diuell and our owne corruption erre
before him all the dayes of our liues He hath bought vs with a price that we should glorifie God in our bodies and in our spirits because they are his He hath giuen himselfe for 1. Cor. 6. 20. vs not onely that hee might iustifie vs in the remission of our sinnes but also sanctifie and clense vs with the washing of the water by the Word that he Eph. 5. 25 26. might present vs vnto himselfe as a glorious Spouse and Church not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that we should be holy and without blame Finally he hath redeemed vs not onely from the guilt of sinne but also from our vaine conuersation by shedding his most precious Blood as the 1. Pet. 1. 18. Apostle Peter speaketh And therefore if wee doe not finde and feele the vertue of Christs death and merits as effectuall for our sanctification as for our iustification and to free vs from the corruption of sinne as well as from the guilt and punishment wee haue little cause to presume of their efficacy for our saluation seeing these are alwayes inseparably linked and conioyned Lastly let vs consider that as our Sauiour Christ came Mat. 9. 13. to saue sinners so withall to call them to repentance And that the Redeemer Esa 59. 20. came only to Sion and to them who turne from transgression in Iacob and therefore let vs not foolishly presume that we shall be his redeemed if wee continue in our sinnes without repentance Let vs not post off God to another time when he offereth vnto vs mercy and forgiuenesse But let Esa 55. 6 7. vs seeke the Lord while hee may bee found and call vpon him while hee is neere Let the wicked forsake his wayes and the vnrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne vnto the Lord and then hee will haue mercy vpon him and abundantly pardon as hee hath promised Let vs not presume on Gods mercy whilest we continue in our sinnes yea rather after that wee haue vnfainedly repented of our sinnes let vs feare alwayes considering our Pro. 28. 14. owne frailty and infirmity which maketh vs apt to relapse into them and so to prouoke Gods wrath against vs. Let vs worke out our saluation with feare and trembling and whilest we presume of standing take heed of falling Phil. 2. 13. 1. Cor. 10. 12. And if we call God Father who without respect of persons iudgeth according to euery mans workes let vs passe the time of our soiourning heere in feare as the 1. Pet. 1. 17. Apostle Peter exhorteth vs. §. Sect. 4 Of presumption in neglecting the meanes of holinesse And thus wee see how carnall presumption generally hindereth vs from entring into or proceeding in a godly life and how we may remoue this impediment More especially we are hindred thereby when as wee presume that we may performe all duties required vnto it notwithstanding that wee neglect all meanes of sanctification and holinesse which God hath ordained for the working his graces in vs as hearing the Word receiuing the Sacrament Prayer and the rest by the extraordinary operation of his holy Spirit in vs. For the remoouing of which impediment wee are to know that howsoeuer God sometimes to shew the infinitenesse of his mercy goodnesse and power which are free and not tyed vnto any meanes doeth when wee least thinke of it and when wee haue not so much as a desire and indeuour to serue and please him regenerate and conuert vs according to that of the Apostle I was found of them that sought me not I was made manifest vnto them Rom. 10. 20. that asked not after me As we see in the example of those who comming to heare the Word onely for forme and fashion sake without any desire Act. 2. 13 37. to profit by it are notwithstanding effectually called and truely conuerted by the mighty operation of Gods Spirit working with his owne holy ordinance And though also when greater meanes are wanting as in the time of persecution the Lord giueth an extraordinary blessing to such as are meane and small causing his seruants like Moses and Elias to goe on constantly for many dayes in the waies of godlinesse in the strength of one meale to the end it may appeare that the worke of conuersion and sanctification is not effected by any vertue inherent in the meanes but that it is a gift of his grace and conuayed vnto vs by the powerfull working of his holy Spirit yet this is not Gods common course and ordinary manner of working his graces in vs but ordinarily hee will haue vs to vse the meanes and sanctify them as his owne holy ordinances that they may bee effectuall to the ends for which we vse them which if wee neglect we doe in a presumptuous maner tempt the Lord and can haue hereby no more hope that God will worke his graces in vs or enable vs vnto the duties of a godly life then if we rest vpon his immediate prouidence and in the meane time neglect our meate which hee hath ordayned to nourish vs or our clothes which hee hath appointed vs to vse for the keeping of vs warme CAP. XII Of the third sort of carnall affections which are impediments to a godly life as superstitious scrupulosity deiection of minde feare and desperation §. Sect. 1 That scrupulosity is a great impediment to a godly life THe third sort of carnall affections which are impediments to a godly life are such as are in the quite contrary extreme to the former as anxious and superstitious scrupulosity heauinesse and too much deiection of minde feare and desperation Superstitious scrupulosity is when through naturall blindnesse and want of sound knowledge we doubt of all our actions whether they be lawfull or vnlawfull and call euery thing into question being ready to yeeld vnto euery tentation which abridgeth vs of our Christian liberty when some fearefull iudgement is suggested and threatned by the deuil and our owne corruption if we forbeare not the vse of things lawfull or doe not such things as are vnlawfull The which we mistaking for our owne thoughts and concluding that wee haue giuen our full consent vnto them though in truth they are the meere suggestions and tentations of our spirituall enemies doe yeeld our selues ouer vnto them as though wee were bound vpon some fearefull penalty to obey them though they haue no ground or warrant out of Gods Word yea in truth are expresly contrary vnto it The which is a notable impediment to a godly life First because it maketh vs to spend our thoughts and time about toyes and trifles as the vsing or not vsing such creatures the doing or not doing of such actions as are in their owne nature indifferent and of small importance whilst in the meane while wee neglect the maine duties of Gods seruice and of a godly life Secondly because these scrupulous and superstitious feares apprehending vpon euery vaine
are so bitter and vnpleasant to the flesh that they make vs immoderately sorrowfull and to breake out into some impatiency as though they were signes of Gods wrath and displeasure and not of his fatherly loue correcting vs for our amendment Seuenthly and lastly this sorrow ariseth in the hearts of weake Christians when as they compare themselues with others that haue made a better and greater progresse in the graces of Gods Spirit and in the duties of a godly life being hereby moued to think that the graces which they see in others are wholly wanting in themselues because their lesser light is obscured by a greater and seemeth nothing because it is not of equall brightnesse Or if they haue any at all yet that it is false and hypocriticall because it is but of slender growth and much inferiour to those which we obserue in many others whom notwithstanding we haue as much exceeded in meanes as they vs in the fruits of them By which sorrowes and heauinesse arising from these and such like causes the poore Christian doth more more weaken the operation of Gods graces in him in the duties of a godly life because he doth too much already apprehend their weaknesse and more disableth himselfe because he seeth his inability For hauing with immoderate griefe weakened his body and spent his spirits oppressed his heart and terrified his conscience he is made lumpish and dull vncheerfull and vncomfortable in all the duties of Gods seruice For the remouing of which impediment we must carefully take heed that we doe not disioyne faith from our repentance but as wee haue one eye vpon our sinnes that wee may sorrow for them so the other eye vpon our Sauiour Christ who hath fully satisfied for them Secondly we must not dreame vpon any perfection of sanctification in this life though we labour after it and then we shal not be too much deiected and mourne immoderately for our imperfection whereas if we fancy vnto our selues a farre greater measure of grace and holinesse then it is possible for vs to attaine it will be a cause of excessiue sorrow when we finde how farre we come short of our hopes Thirdly we must looke vpon Gods graces and the fruits of them in holy obedience as testimonies of Gods loue and euidences of our sanctification and not as being any meritorious causes of his fauour and our saluation For then we need not to stand so much vpon the quantity and degree of them as vpon their sincerity and truth which when we finde we may reioyce in the assurance of Gods free grace and loue through Iesus Christ Whereas if we looke vpon them in their worth and worthinesse the sight of their imperfections will bereaue our hearts of all sound comfort Fourthly we must consider that the first and least degrees of true grace are accepted of God and will make vs also acceptable vnto him For hee will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flax He respecteth Math. 12. 20. and tendreth his young lings and weaklings as well as those who haue attained to greater strength and he hath pronounced them blessed who Math. 5. 6. hunger and thirst after righteousnesse as well as those which are perfectly righteous Finally as we must take notice of that wee haue not that wee may labour after it so also we must not neglect what wee haue that wee may be truly thankfull vnto God from whose free grace we haue receiued it among which we may number spirituall life whereby onely we can be sensible of our wounds and weaknesse the sight and sense of our sinnes by which we are moued to deny our selues and to fly vnto Christ hungring desires of grace and holinesse seeing wee haue Gods promise that they shall be satisfied And so we shall ioyne faith with our repentance ioy with our mourning loue and thankfulnesse with our meeknesse and humility §. Sect. 5 Of desperation and that it is a great impediment to godlinesse Finally these scrupulous feares and carnall sorrow if they bee not remoued or moderated will bring vs by degrees into that fearfull gulph of deepe despaire whereby we shall cast off all hope of Gods mercy and reiect the all-sufficient merits and satisfaction of Iesus Christ through our incredulity as though the multitude and hainousnesse of our sinnes did farre exceed them And this is the very cut-throat of all piety and the diuels strongest and most horrid chaine to inslaue men in his seruice and to hinder them from entertaining so much as a thought or desire of seruing God in the duties of a godly life For it wholly discourageth a man from proceeding in such a way as offreth no hope of bringing him to his iourneys end It maketh a seruant wholly to neglect his duty when as hee is quite cut off from all expectation of reward It causeth men to giue themselues to all sensuality voluptuousnesse and prophanesse when they haue no other hopes but what this present life offereth vnto them and the rather that they may hereby put off for a little while their terrours of conscience and griefes of minde as it were by drinking of cold water in the fit of a feauer And wanting faith by which wee are vnited vnto Christ in whom a lone we can bring forth fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse how can we otherwise chuse but be vtterly barren in all true obedience and like wild Oliue trees bring forth onely fruits of impiety and wickednesse Which impediment if we would remoue we must remember that the Lord is infinite in grace and mercy as he describeth himselfe Exod. 34. 7. in his Word so that though our sinnes be many and grieuous yet they are infinitely exceeded by them for his mercies are aboue all his workes Micah 7. 18. That he taketh delight in shewing mercy toward repentant sinners seeing hereby he exerciseth his nature and magnifieth his holy name in the manifestation of his grace and goodnesse That he loued vs when we were his enemies yea so loued vs that he sent his onely begotten and dearely Ioh. 3. 16. beloued Sonne to dye for vs and therefore will not now reiect vs when as through Christ we sue and seeke to be reconciled vnto him That he hath made his free couenant of grace with vs wherein hee hath promised the remission of all our sinnes vpon the alone condition of faith bringing forth the fruits thereof in vnfained repentance and that his promises are indefinite without exception of any sinners and therefore shall assuredly belong vnto vs if we doe not reiect them through vnbeliefe That the merits and satisfaction of Christ are of infinite value and an all-sufficient satisfaction for the sinnes of the whole world if they were applyed by faith and that he hath giuen vnto vs his couenant in writing and ratified it by his Sacraments which he hath annexed as seales to the great Charter of our peace that there might no place be
place of paines labour and reserueth his Sabbath of rest for the world to come after wee haue finished our worke Heere we must worke in his Vineyard and the night of death must come before wee shall bee called to receiue our wages Heere wee must keepe our markes and there inioy the riches which wee haue gotten by our spirituall trading Heere wee must fight the Lords battels being couered with sweat and blood and there wee shall obtaine the Crowne of victory Finally heere wee must trauaile like poore Pilgrims and then take our ease when we haue finished our iourney and are come safe to our heauenly home Fourthly let vs call to minde the labours of the Saints which haue gone in this way before vs and especially of our Sauiour Christ himselfe who trauailed for our sakes not onely vnto wearinesse and sweat but euen vnto blood and not foolishly imagine that wee may take our ease and yet come timely and safely to the end of our hopes seeing our Sauiour hath told vs that the Kingdome of heauen suffereth violence Mat. 11. 21. and the violent take it by force and that wee must striue to enter into the Luk. 13. 24. straight gate with all earnestnesse and constancie because many shall seeke to enter and shall not bee able Lastly let vs consider the punishments denounced against those who idly sit still and refuse to trauell in the wayes of godlinesse For it casteth them into a deepe sleepe whereby all the operations of Gods graces are hindred yea it emptieth the sluggard of them all like him who wanting meate is famished with hunger According to that of Salomon Sloathfulnesse casteth into a deepe sleepe and Pro. 19. 15. the idle soule shall suffer hunger And as it depriueth him of all grace in this life so also of glory and happinesse in the life to come for hee onely must haue the wages who hath laboured in Christs Vineyard And contrariwise plungeth him into euerlasting death and destruction For the sloathfull and vnprofitable seruant must bee cast into outer Mat. 25. 26 30. darkenesse where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth And therefore if nothing else will mooue vs yet at least let vs take some paines in Gods seruice which being small and momentany shall bee euerlastingly rewarded that wee may escape the endlesse paines of hell For if wee cannot for a little while indure the kindly heate of the Sunne how shall wee bee able to suffer the skorching and tormenting flames of hell fire If wee are impatient of a little sweate and labour in the duties of Christianity and of our callings let vs thinke with our selues how much more intolerable the endlesse torments of the damned will bee vnto vs. §. Sect. 8 Of wearinesse in well doing and how it hindreth vs in all Christian duties And first that which proceedeth from an ill disposition of the body The last impediment which hindreth vs in the duties of a godly life is wearinesse in well-doing which proceedeth from a twofold cause The first outward which is the ill disposition of the body to the performance of Christian duties proceeding either from externall causes as hunger thirst heate cold excessiue labour in worldly imployments and such like or from inward infirmities and diseases which make the body faint and feeble weake and vnable to take any paines in the duties of a godly life For seeing the soule vseth the body as its organ and instrument for the performing of all outward actions and seeing there is such sympathie and familiarity betweene them that they mourne and reioyce together hereof it must needs follow that when the body is indisposed to the duties of Gods seruice the soule is thereby vnfitted for them when the body is feeble and faint the faculties of the soule cannot be strong and vigorous in their actions and operations When the body is weary and full of paine it must needs affect the mind and much distract it in all good duties And finally when the toole and instrument is blunt and dull vnfit and vntoward the most cunning Artificer must needs be hindred and much faile in his curious workemanship For the remoouing of which impediment wee must vse our best indeuour that wee may haue a sound minde in a sound body and to vse all good meanes of diet and Physicke for the preseruing or recouering of our health and to auoid intemperance insobriety and excessiue labour about worldly imployments Yea wee must auoyd immoderation and excesse euen in the exercises of mortification as fasting watching and the rest For as luxuriousnesse delicacie and sloth doe weaken the body for want of exercise and intemperance and insobriety doe make it feeble and vnfit for any imployment so likewise the contrary extremes and ouer-rough and rigorous handling of it doe exhaust and consume the spirits and make it so weake and faint that it is ready to sinke vnder euery burthen And therefore wee must carefully obserue the meane and auoyd both extremes especially that vnto which our corrupt nature inclineth and carryeth vs whether it bee to sensuality which pampereth the body with excesse or will-worship Col. 2. 23. and superstition in not sparing of it which is not much lesse dangerous then the other although it bee nothing so common and ordinary For as if we would make speedy iourneys our Horse must neither be pampered nor starued seeing by the one he is made either resty or out of breath and by the other so enfeebled that hee will not be able to beare vs so is it with our bodies which carry our soules and therfore they must be vsed with like prudence and prouidence §. Sect. 9 Of wearinesse in well-doing arising from the auersenesse of our wils vnto good duties The second cause is internall which is the ill disposition of the minde and will being auerse vnto all good duties and vertuous actions and prone vnto all euill delighting in worldly vanities and pleasures of sinne and dis-affecting and lothing spirituall exercises as being wearisome and tedious difficult and troublesome to our corrupted nature The which is a notable impediment to our well proceeding in the wayes of godlinesse for either this vnwillingnesse causeth such wearinesse that it will make vs either not to enter into the Christian course or soone desist and returne againe into our former wayes of wickednes sensual delights or else it will make vs vnsettled and vnconstant in all good duties doing them onely by fits and flashes when the good mood of deuotion commeth vpon vs and neglecting them when other things which better please vs come in the way or finally it quencheth our zeale and feruour of loue vnto the duties of Gods seruice so that wee performe them weakely and wearily coldly and formally with much dulnesse and spirituall deadnesse The which impediments if wee would auoyd wee must labour and striue against this wearinesse and faintnesse in well-doing and indeuour all wee may to take
only inchoate and begun And therefore as they are delighted with the Law of God in the inner man so they finde another law in their members Rom. 7. 23 24. warring against the Law of their mindes and leading them captiue to the law of sinne The which spirituall bondage affecteth them with such griefe and sorrow that it forceth them to cry out with the Apostle O wretched Gal. 5. 17. man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death We are not wholy and perfectly sanctifyed but remayne partly flesh and partly spirit like a city which is at ciuill warres within it selfe And these doe continually lust the one against the other So that no sooner doe we set our selues to performe any Christian duties of a godly life in the spirituall part but presently the flesh opposeth and interrupteth vs in it No sooner doe wee resolue to goe forward in the waies of godlinesse but forthwith the corruption of our nature like an heauy burthen incompasseth vs and as it were clingeth about our neckes so as wee cannot proceede without much labour and wearinesse All which and many other the like impediments as they doe much disturbe and distract all in the duties of a godly life so especially yong beginners at their first entrance into it For then the Heb. 12. 1. flesh is strongest to oppose and the Spirit weakest to make resistance Then the world and worldly wicked men doe vse most indeuour to regaine vs into their wonted society in the works of darkenesse when wee haue newly left their company and the pleasures of sinne and the baytes of worldly profits alluring vs to continue in our wonted courses are freshest in our memories when as wee haue lately renounced and forsaken them so as they are still scarce out of our sight Then the deuill bendeth all his might and malice his stratagems and engins of battry against vs as Sennacherib against Hezechiah when wee doe disclaime his seruice and refuse to pay him tribute Then wee meete with gteatest difficulties and haue least strength to ouercome them Then wee goe in the waies of Christianity like little children when they first learne to goe alone who at euery step are ready to stagger and fall through weakenesse and want of practice whereas when wee haue accustomed our selues to these courses for some moneths or yeeres wee goe both more steadily and with much greater safety and delight Finally then wee are like vnto sluggards who leaue their down-beds with much irkesomnes discontent but when they they haue once risen and shaken off their sloth they are sorry that they haue slept so long and goe cheerefully about their businesse Neyther did euer man repent of his repentance though at the first entrance it seemed vnpleasant difficult but rather feeleth such ioy and comfort in it that he much grieueth in his soule that he was no sooner grieued for his sins Now this difficulty is much increased vnto yong beginners by diuers meanes Frst because they are apt to trust too much vnto their owne strength which most faileth those that most rest vpon it and doe not walke in the life and strength of faith relying themselues wholly vpon Gods power and promises For so naturally are we through pride and selfe-loue addicted to our selues that we will not easily seeke for helpe abroad so long as any hope remaineth that we shal finde it at home Secondly because in our first beginnings we are more fickle vnconstant and vnsettled in our Christian courses For how can he make any good proceedings in his way who sometimes goeth forward and sometimes backward how can he dispatch his businesse who vndoeth one day that which he did in another or how should a man preserue his health and strength who one day carefully vseth good dyet or physicke and the next day neglecteth both and impayreth and hindreth them by the quite contrary courses Finally because we looke more vnto our selues then vnto God and so seeing the difficultie of the worke and comparing it with our owne weakenesse wee beginne to despaire of euer atchieuing it but in the meane time seldome or neuer looke vnto God who is all-sufficient to strengthen vs and to make vs perfect vnto euery good worke We apprehend our weakenesse to goe alone and are thereby discouraged because we consider not that wee are led and supported by the hand of our heauenly Father We see our wounds and weaknesses but not the salues and remedies We behold with Elias seruant who are against vs but through our spirituall blindnesse cannot discerne the more numerous and potent aydes that are on our side And finally we are ready with the Apostle to take notice of the Law of our members warring against the law of our Rom. 7. 24 25. mindes and leading vs captiue to the law of sinne but not with him to acknowledge with thankfulnesse our deliuerance by Iesus Christ And to be discouraged with the sight and sense of our infirmities but not to 2. Cor. 12. 9. consider that Gods grace is sufficient for vs. §. Sect. 4 That the difculty of a godlife must not discourage vs from it In all which respects it cannot be denyed but that there is some difficulty in leading of a godly life and much paines and labour required for the right performance of the duties which belong vnto it Notwithstanding this must bee no impediment to hinder vs from entring into and proceeding in the course of Christianity Yea rather because this aboue all things is most excellent profitable and necessary as concerning vs no lesse then the euerlasting saluation or condemnation both of our bodies and soules the difficulties which we finde in this way should bee so farre from discouraging and making vs sit still or turne backe againe to inioy our sinfull pleasures that they should rather inflame our disires whet and confirme our resolutions and make vs much more painefull and diligent in our indeuours that wee may attaine vnto it seeing though the difficulty were much greater yet the excellency profit and necessity of leading such a life doe farre exceede it And this vse our Sauiour Christ maketh of it For from the consideration of the small number which shall be saued and the difficultie of attayning vnto heauenly happinesse hee enforceth this exhortation Striue to enter in at the straight gate for many I say vnto you Luke 13. 24. Matth. 7. 13 14 will seeke to enter in and shall not bee able Because straight is the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth vnto life and few there bee that finde it So he telleth vs else-where that the Kingdome of God suffereth violence and the Matth. 11. 12. violent take it by force And the Apostle Peter hauing said that the righteous shall scarcely be saued that is not without much difficulty and laborious 1. Pet. 4. 18 19. diligence taketh thereupon occasion to perswade all both to patient suffering
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
thy seruice and thy fatherly corrections more fearefull to displease thee Remooue all impediments of thy glory and aduance the meanes whereby it is aduanced Aduance thy Kingdome vniuersally ouer all rule ouer thine enemies and subiect all things vnto thy gouernment that nothing may resist thy power Rule ouer thine owne seruants and Church after a speciall maner in protecting and preseruing them and let them like dutifull subiects yeeld obedience vnto thee their Soueraigne in all things Make vs in this life true members of the Kingdome of grace that afterwards we may be triumphant members of the Kingdome of glory Rule in our hearts effectually by thy Word and Spirit worke in vs thine owne good worke of grace make vs Citizens of the Saints and meete to be partakers of thy Kingdome of glory Pull vs more and more out of the kingdome of Satan in which we naturally are subiects and let him no longer raigne and rule in our hearts and minds to our perdition Let vs no longer be ruled by the lawlesse law of sinne neither let it raigne in our mortall bodies by making our members the instruments of it but be thou our King and rule in our hearts by thy Word and Spirit Erect the Kingdome of grace where it is not yet begun continue and increase it amongst vs where it is established blesse the meanes wherby it is furthered and remoue the impediments which hinder it Free vs from the remnants of the kingdome of darkenesse from our sinnes and corruptions lusts and concupiscences Let vs not yeeld to the tentations of Satan the world and our owne flesh but giue vs victory ouer them Let vs first seeke thy Kingdome and righteousnesse and let vs indeuour to be members of the Kingdome of grace that afterwards we may be members of the Kingdome of glory Let thy Kingdome of glory also come hasten the comming of Christ to Iudgement to this end accomplish the number of thine Elect and subdue thine enemies vnder thy feet Let vs so liue alwayes as if we were ready to meete Iesus Christ and let vs labour to be euer such as we desire to appeare before his Iudgement seate that so when he commeth we may not depart from him ashamed Let it appeare O Lord that thou raignest in our hearts by our humble subiection and submission in all things vnto thy most holy will let vs see and bewaile our imperfect obedience and daily labour after more perfection Giue vs grace to deny our selues and our owne wills and affections which are opposite to thy will and let vs labour to performe absolute obedience vnto thee in all things Arme vs with patience in all our afflictions that we may say with Christ Not my will O Father but thine be done Let vs seriously desire that thy will may bee done concerning vs and let vs not grieue when we see it done because it crosseth our wills Let vs not content our selues with a bare outward obedience but let vs doe thy will after a spirituall manner as the Angels doe it in heauen with sincerity and vprightnesse of heart with alacrity and cheerfulnesse with readinesse and speed without delay Let vs doe thy will fully and not by halues constantly and not by fits faithfully and humbly not assuming any glory to our selues but yeelding it wholly vnto thee Let all our suites which concerne our selues bee referred to thy glory as their maine end Giue vs temporall benefits so farre foorth as they serue for thy glory and our spirituall good Teach vs to moderate our desires and not to couet after superfluities seeing thou hast taught vs to aske for bread and not for dainties Let vs be contented with our allowance if we haue but necessaries as food and raiment yea bread to sustaine our liues and if thou giuest vs more make vs thankfull vnto thee for it Let vs haue a true desire and care to get our goods by good and lawfull meanes that wee may be assured that we eate our owne bread and that it is giuen vs of thee Let vs walke diligently in our lawfull callings that wee may eate the labours of our own hands and working with quietnesse that which is good let vs eate our owne bread Let vs not set our hearts and desires vpon the things of this life nor couet other mens goods but be contented with our owne portion which in thy wise prouidence thou hast allotted vnto vs. Let vs haue a moderate care to prouide that which is conuenient that we may not be burthensome but rather helpefull vnto others and let vs neither be carelesse and negligent nor turmoile our selues with carking care to hoord vp for many yeeres Let vs depend vpon thy blessing in the vse of good meanes for the obtaining of our desires and expect it vpon the things themselues when we haue obtained them and let vs sanctifie all thy blessings to our vse by the Word Prayer and Thankesgiuing Let vs not trust in our owne prouision but in thee and casting all our care vpon thee let vs in all our wants flie vnto thee for supply Giue vs things necessarie not onely for our nature but also for our states and callings places and persons Giue vs with thy blessings their right vse and giue them vertue and strength to sustaine and nourish vs. Let vs when wee want these blessings begge them from thee and when wee haue receiued them returne thee thankes Inflame our hearts with loue towards our brethren and let vs not through couetousnesse and selfe-loue seeke onely our owne good but let vs seeke the common good of our brethren and pray for it as well as for our owne Let vs know and acknowledge our frailty and mortality who neede to be dayly sustained by thee and let this make vs like children to resort dayly vnto thee our heauenly Father crauing from thee all things needfull Let vs not be distrustfully carefull for the time to come but euer depend vpon thy Fatherly prouidence being assured that thou who hast prouided for vs to day wilt prouide for vs to morrow Let vs lay vp goods to good ends not onely that we may haue to supply our wants and to prouide for our families but also to releeue the necessities of others Let vs not be so addicted to the commodities of this life but that withall wee doe most principally labour for Spirituall graces and things pertayning to a better life Let vs as much desire to be freed from the corruption of sinne as the guilt and punishment and as wee craue the forgiuenesse of our sinnes so let vs earnestly labour to forsake them Remit and pardon all our sinnes and to this end giue vs a liuely Faith to apply Christ for our iustification Let vs pray for remission not onely with feruencie but also with Faith stedfastly beleeuing that thou wilt pardon them and seale this assurance in our hearts by thy good Spirit Let vs see our sinnes and heartily bewayle them and be truely
desire thine is the power might whereby thou art able to grant our requests and thine also is the glory both of giuing all good things and also of all good things giuen and therefore thou wilt be willing to heare our suits seeing they tend to the aduancement of thy glory And so Lord we ascribe vnto thee vniuersall Kingdom whereby thou rulest and gouernest all things and acknowledge thy wisdome power and prouidence to thy prayse in disposing of them at thy pleasure we acknowledge and ascribe vnto thee the glorie of being our King who preseruest and defendest vs rulest and gouernest vs with the Scepter of thy Word holy Spirit We ascribe vnto thee all power wherby thou art able to doe whatsoeuer thou wilt and magnifie thy Name for keeping ruling vs with this power vnto saluation We render vnto thee all glorie and the deserued praise of all thy goodnesse magnifying thee according to the multitude of thy mercies and the excellencie of thy gifts wherewith thou hast inriched vs desiring that wee may ascribe all the good wee haue done or can doe to thy glorie as being the supreme end of all things And this thy Kingdome Power and Glory wee doe not limit with the longest time but ascribe them vnto thee from euerlasting to euerlasting euen as thou thy selfe art without beginning or ending And thus holy and heauenly Father we testify our faith and the truth of our desires by saying Amen and giue the assent of our hearts to the words of our mouthes in all our petitions beleeuing that thou in thy good time wilt grant all our suites which we haue made according to thy will as shall best stand with thy Glory and our saluation in which perswasion we conclude our prayers and attend thy leisure through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen A priuate Prayer for the Morning O Lord our God most glorious in maiesty and omnipotent in power who fillest heauen and earth with thy presence and yet in a more speciall manner vouchsafest to dwell with those who are of a broken heart and contrite spirit to heare and helpe them in all their necessities I thy poore humble seruant in the mediation of Iesus Christ doe make bold to approch into thy glorious and dreadfull presence that I may lay open before thee my wretched estate and condition by reason of my manifold and grieuous sinnes and those fearefull punishments both temporall and eternall vnto which by their guilt they haue most iustly obliged mee For though thou diddest create me holy and righteous according vnto thine owne Image yet I haue falne from that state of innocency and blessednesse in the loynes of my first father Adam and by beeing guilty of his sinne am become also liable to his punishment And as I am partaker of his sinne by imputation as being one of his taynted posterity so also of the corruption of his nature by propagation the which like a fretting leprosie or running canker hath wholy ouerspred all the powers and parts of my soule and body vtterly disabling them vnto all duties of thy seruice and making them the ready instruments of sinne and Satan And whereas in their creation they were fit habitations for thine owne Maiesty to dwell in by thy Spirit through this naturall corruption they became cages of vncleane birds yea noysome sinkes exhaling and breathing out the lothsome sent and poysonous vapours of carnall concupiscence and filthy lusts Mine vnderstanding is so darkened with ignorance that it is naturally vnacquainted with thy will and waies and though it bee wise to euill yet vnto that which is good I haue no knowledge my carnall reason and wisedome is enmity against thee and vnderstandeth not the things of thy Spirit but so foolish it is that it iudgeth them foolishnesse My iudgement is so corrupted that it hath no spirituall discerning being ready to mistake euill for good falshood for truth and wrong for right My conscience is either seared or superstitious either senselesse of sinne or scared with shadowes my minde and imaginations are onely and continually euill rouing wholy after earthly things and neuer minding spirituall and heauenly My memory is become a storehouse of iniquity with which it is so fully fraughted that there is no roome for good instructions and the rich treasures of thy sauing Truth My will is so corrupted that it standeth in flat opposition to thine holy will approuing and chusing that which thou dislikest and condemnest and refusing and abhorring that which thou likest and commandest My heart is wholy turned from thee and cleaueth to world and earthly vanities and is full of infidelity security and impenitency hardned in sinne and vnflexible to all good Mine affections are wholy corrupted and disordred louing fearing and trusting in the creature more then in the Creator and all the members and parts of my body are sluggish and slothfull vnto all duties of thy seruice but the apt and ready instruments of my sinfull soule for the acting of all manner of wickednesse From which cursed fountaine of originall corruption haue plentifully flowed those poisonous streams of actuall transgressions whereby I haue violated broken thy whole Law in thought word and deede For in stead of doing thy Law I haue wholy transgressed it in stead of obseruing the duties commanded I haue committed the vices forbidden in stead of continuing in obedience I haue continually disobeyed it from my tender infancy to this present day A great part of my time I haue lien starke dead in trespasses and sinnes not being able to thinke a good thought or entertayne a good desire because both my minde and will were enslaued vnto Satan in the chaynes of sin And all this while my eares were deafe mine eyes blinded and my heart without vnderstanding so as I could neyther heare see nor discerne the things which concerned thy glory and mine owne saluation but vtterly neglected thy many and gracious calls inuiting me to thy seruice Yea Lord since the time that thou hast through thy mighty power and of thy mere grace quickned and raysed me from this death of sinne how haue I like Lazarus come out of the graue bound hand and foote and still so fettred and hampred with the relikes of my corruptions that I walke slowly and lamely in the wayes of thy Commandements oftentimes neglecting vpon euery slight occasion the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse and oftentimes performing them with such weakenesse and imperfection as it is hard to say whether they were not better vndon then so done O how often doe I forget euen the mayne end for which I liue namely that by glorifying thee I may liue eternally and as though I were a citizen of the earth how haue I my conuersation here spending my thoughts and strength about worldly vanities which profit not and not so much as minding spirituall and heauenly things How slowly alas do I come to the duties of thy seruice who art so infinitely bountifull in thy
our selues liable to the fearefull curse thereof and to all the plagues punishments of this life and the life to come Neither is there any power in vs to helpe our selues out of this misery being as vnable to renew our nature as the Blackamore to change his skin or the Leopard his spots Yea when by thy Spirit wee are regenerate and haue some desires and indeuours to serue and please thee wee are vtterly vnable to satisfie thy Iustice for the least of our sinnes past seeing if thou lookest vpon vs with thy pure eyes our best righteousnesse will appeare like a polluted cloth so mingled with our imperfections and stayned with our corruptions that it cannot challenge any other reward as its due but thy displeasure and euerlasting death O Lord wee humbly beseech thee let vs not securely rest and please our selues in this our wofull condition but hauing a liuely sense and feeling of our sinne and misery let vs labour aboue all things to be freed from it And seeing there is no name in heauen or earth whereby wee may bee saued but by Iesus Christ alone thine onely Sonne and blessed Redeemer whom thou hast purposely sent into the world to saue sinners O Lord let vs renounce our selues and all creatures in heauen and earth as being vtterly vnsufficient to satisfie thy Iustice and saue our soules and let vs rest vpon him alone hungring and thirsting after his righteousnesse and desiring aboue all things that wee may bee found in him And for his sake we humbly beseech thee to magnifie thy mercies in the free forgiuenesse of all our sinnes and as they in their waight and number doe exceedingly abound so let thy grace abound much more in their forgiuenesse Enter not into iudgement with thy seruants for in thy sight shall no man liuing bee iustified Wee are not able to answere vnto thy Iustice one of a thousand but Christ our surety hath payed our debt and now as our Aduocate pleadeth for vs that by him thou hast thy due and that thy Iustice shall sustaine no losse in setting vs free seeing hee hath made full satisfaction for vs. Heare him then deare God thus pleading for vs Heare vs holy Father in his mediation pleading for our selues forgiue vs all our debts and cancell the hand-writing by which wee were obliged that it may neuer bee produced in iudgement against vs. Contrariwise wee beseech thee write the new couenant of grace not in tables of stone but in the fleshy tables of our hearts and not onely enrole the great Charter of our peace in the volume of the Booke containing in it the glad tidings of the Gospel but ingrosse and ingraue it in the booke of our consciences by the finger of thy Spirit that wee may with inestimable ioy dayly peruse it when wee haue it in our owne custody And not only worke in vs this peace in our assured freedome from the guilt of all our sinnes but also inward and outward purity in our soules and bodies by bathing and washing them in the blood of Christ from all sinfull corruption And sanctifie vs throughout that our whole spirit and soule and body may bee preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ make vs in him more then conquerours ouer all the enemies of our saluation and spirituall Kings raigning especially ouer our corruptions that they may not by their might and malice disturbe our peace Reuiue vs more and more with the Spirit of Grace and power that we may walke with cheerefulnes in the waies of thy commandements performing throughout the whole course of our liues all Christian duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety Indue vs plentifully with all sanctifying and sauing graces and let vs bring forth the fruits of them all in our new obedience with all sincerity vprightnes of heart Open our blind eyes that we may see the wonderful things of thy law increase our faith that the gates of hel may not preuail against it preserue vs from carnall security and hardnesse of heart and as wee daily renew our sinnes so let vs daily renew our repentance and sorrow for them Confirme our affiance in the assurance of thy power and loue strengthen our hope worke our hearts to thy feare inflame them with thy loue and with feruent zeale of thy glory giue vs humility patience and spirituall reioycing in the assurance of thy fauour euen in our afflictions and tribulations Make vs zealous of good workes that wee may approoue our faith by the fruits of it and let vs neuer bee weary of well-doing Arme vs against all the assaults of our spirituall enemies against the feare of death and iudgement to which end let vs keepe alwayes our accounts euen that we may not be loth to be called to a reckoning Prepare vs for the dayes of affliction and persecution that wee may be ready with wisedome constancy and courage not only to doe but also suffer all things for thy sake Accept with these our suits and prayers our praises and thankesgiuing for thy manifold blessings and benefits both corporall spirituall and eternall for thy inestimable loue and that singular pledge thereof thy deare and onely Sonne whom thou hast giuen vnto vs to worke that great worke of our Redemption for our being and well-being all thy graces in this life and assured hope of glory and happinesse in the life to come For our continuall preseruation in the whole course of our liues this night past and this day hitherto for our quiet rest and all other comforts of this life For all which and all other thy mercies thy blessed name bee praised and magnified Wee beseech thee good Lord continue thy mercy and loue towards vs in the whole course of our liues and namely in the residue of this day watch ouer vs with thy gracious prouidence and thereby preserue vs from all sinne and danger and so rule all our thoughts words and deeds that being holy and righteous they may be acceptable in thy sight Let vs so spend this day in thy feare as though it were the last day of our liues and let vs with all care and watchfulnesse so arme our selues against all the tentations of our spirituall enemies as that they may not preuaile against vs to make vs slothfull in thy seruice Finally giue vnto vs all things necessary for our soules and bodies and so sanctifie all thy blessings to our vse that they may be helps and furtherances vnto vs in seeking thy glory and our own saluation Vouchsafe these and all other blessings not onely vnto vs but also to thy whole Church and euery member thereof as if particularly wee had named them and so ioyne vs in the holy communion of grace as that we may for euer inioy the communion and fellowship of thy blessed Saints and Angels in the Kingdome of glory Heare vs and helpe vs O God of our saluation in all these our suits for thy Sonne and our Sauiour
comfort your sinnes are forgiuen you Strengthen our weake faith in the assurance of thy loue and the remission of our sinnes and let vs labour earnestly in the vse of all good meanes whereby it may bee more and more increased and confirmed that so without wauering and doubting we may apply Christ vnto vs with all his benefits and thy gracious promises made in him Let vs not weaken and wound it with sinnes committed against our knowledge and consciences but nourish it by bringing foorth the fruits of obedience in a godly life Assure vs that wee are thy children by adoption and grace and heires of that heauenly inheritance reserued for thy Saints and let vs approoue our selues to bee so by demeaning our selues in all things as it beseemeth thy Sonnes Let vs loue reuerence and obey thee our heauenly Father and thinke all too little which wee can doe or suffer for thy sake that thereby we may expresse our loue towards thee Let vs aboue all things be zealous of thy glory reioycing when it is magnified and grieuing when it is neglected either by our selues or others Let vs not hazzard our heauenly inheritance by wilfull sinning for the gayning of the whole world but let vs labour to make our calling and election sure and worke out our saluation with feare and trembling Giue vnto vs peace of a good conscience and replenish our hearts with spirituall ioy in the assurance of thy fauour Let vs vndoubtedly expect the performance of al thy gracious promises made in Christ euen when thou seemest to delay them especially that mayne promise of euerlasting life and happinesse and hauing this hope let vs daily purge our selues as hee also is pure But especially giue vs grace that wee may bring foorth the fruits of our faith in true hearty and vnfained repentance bewayling our sinnes past hating our present corruptions which still hang vpon vs and both purposing and seriously indeuouring to leaue and forsake our sinnes and to serue thee in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues Let vs not deferre our repentance from day to day but seeing the necessity thereof vnto saluation let vs lay hold of the acceptable time and whilest it is called to day let vs not harden our hearts but turne vnto thee with all our soules Let vs as we daily renew our sinnes renew also our faith and repentance and haue an earnest and serious study of pleasing thee in all things Let vs not content our selues with a small measure of repentance seeing our sinnes are many and grieuous but let vs aspire to the highest perfection hating sinne with a perfect hatred and bewayling it with bitter griefe Finally let vs constantly perseuere in the practice of repentance and hauing begun in it let vs continue it to the very end of our liues And as wee begge these benefits at thy hands so wee yeeld vnto thee most humble and hearty thankes for all thy mercies and fauours vouchsafed vnto vs especially for all thy spirituall graces concerning eternall life and aboue all for that inestimable pledge of thy loue thy deare and onely Sonne whom thou hast giuen to the death that hee might free vs from all our spirituall enemies and purchase for vs euerlasting happinesse Wee praise thee for that thou hast watched ouer vs with thy gracious prouidence in the whole course of our liues and namely this day past preseruing vs from all dangers and furnishing vs with all necessaries and blessing vs in all our labours and indeuours Wee beseech thee holy Father to continue with our thankfulnesse thy loue towards vs and care ouer vs. Take vs this night into thy gracious protection and watch ouer vs with thy prouidence waking and sleeping and thereby preserue vs from all perils and dangers and from the malice and fury of all our enemies spirituall and temporall especially of that raging and roaring Lyon the deuill who seeketh all aduantages to worke our destruction Let vs not sleepe like others the sleepe of sinne which bringeth death but let vs still keepe the spirituall watch that wee may alwayes bee prepared for the day of death and Iudgement and haue our accounts continually in readinesse that when wee are called to a reckoning wee may with comfort appeare before our Iudge Preserue vs in the darke from the workes of darkenesse and let vs day and night behaue our selues as in thy sight and presence making no lesse conscience of secret sinnes then of those which are open and manifest Let vs whilest our bodies rest haue our mindes exercised with holy and heauenly Meditations and let them bee so seasoned with thy grace and guided by thy good Spirit that they may not in our sleepe giue way to sinfull thoughts and vaine imaginations Giue vnto vs such quiet and moderate rest that our bodies may thereby bee refreshed and their decayed strength repaired and so blesse and sanctifie our sleepe vnto vs that it may bee a meanes of preseruing our health and of making vs more fit for all duties of thy seruice Heare vs gracious God in all these our suites and vouchsafe these and all other blessings which in thy wisedome thou knowest needfull not onely vnto vs but also to all thy children and seruants and especially such as bee of this Church the Magistrates Ministers and whole people euen for Iesus Christ his sake In whose Name and words wee conclude our prayers as hee himselfe hath taught vs saying Our Father which art in heauen c. Another Prayer for the Family in the Euening O Immortall inuisible and onely true God most wise mighty iust and mercifull holy and infinite in all perfection Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and in him our most gracious and louing Father Thou hast in thy Word inuited sinners to come vnto thee promising that if wee confesse and forsake our sinnes wee shall finde mercy if wee lay them open thou wilt hide them and if wee acknowledge and bewaile them thou wilt shew thy selfe faithfull and righteous in forgiuing them wee thy vnworthy seruants being loaden with sinne and misery doe heere humble our selues before thee and in the mediation of Iesus Christ prostrate our selues before the Throne of grace suing vnto thee for mercy and forgiuenesse We confesse vnto thee holy Father that wee are by nature dead in trespasses and sinnes and the children of wrath as well as others loaded with the guilt both of that corruption in which wee were conceiued and of innumerable actuall transgressions whereby wee haue violated thy whole Law and so made our selues subiect to the curse thereof and euerlasting death of body and soule The which our sinne and misery is much aggrauated in that wee haue long liued without any sense of it or any desire to be freed from it but tooke all our delight in displeasing thy Maiesty and in performing cheerefull seruice vnto sinne and Satan Yea Lord after that thou of thy free grace hast giuen vs a sight of our
misery and hast pulled vs out of this wretched thraldome working in vs some desires resolutions and indeuours to serue and please thee wee confesse that the reliques of sinne doe still remaine in vs in great strength and howsoeuer the old man and body of sinne haue by thy holy Spirit receiued their deadly wound yet haue they in them such life and strength and are so animated and reuiued with the suggestions of our old aduersary the deuill breathing as it were a new life into them that they doe still much vexe and trouble vs making continuall warre against our soules and oftentimes leading them captiue vnto sinne Much blindnesse and vanitie doe still remaine in our mindes so that we haue but a dimme sight of thee and thy will and wayes Our memories are weake and slippery and like riuen vessels let the precious liquor of the Word of life and grace runne out as soone as it is put into them Our consciences are defiled and impure loaded with the guilt of sinne and yet oftentimes senslesse of their burthen Our iudgements are full of errour and ignorance and very weake in spirituall discerning Our wills peruerse and obstinate in euill and very auerse and awke to good things and doe not incline to the doing of thy will with cheerefulnesse and delight Our hearts remaine still hard and full of carnall security vntractable and inflexible and doe not relent and melt either with thy mercies or iudgements Wee are still assaulted with much doubting and infidelity and our faith is often shaken with dangerous tentations Our repentance is weake and full of wants our sorrow for sinne slight and soone ouer and our resolutions and indeuours to amend subiect to much inconstancie and broken off with euery small impediment There is much poyson of corruption still remayning in our affections which draweth vs from thee when we sell our selues to seeke and serue thee vnto the world and earthly things Wee are still full of carnall selfe-loue and loue of the world which quencheth and cooleth in vs the loue of thee and of spirituall and heauenly things our affiance in thee is weake and after much experience of thy power and sufficiencie goodnesse and truth we can hardly trust thee vnlesse wee haue inferiour meanes and helpes as pawnes in our hands and wee are too too prone to relie vpon the creatures and our owne policies and strength our hopes are faint and wauering one while inclining towards presumption and soone after forsaking vs indanger vs to despaire Wee oftentimes feare men and neglect thee and hazzard thy loue to auoyd their displeasure Our zeale is lukewarme in seeking thy glory and our deuotion cold in holy duties There still remaineth in vs much pride hypocrisie impatiencie vniust anger couetousnesse voluptuousnesse and all other sinnefull lusts which continually fight and striue against the good motions of thy holy Spirit and oftentimes ouercome and quench them And notwithstanding that the flesh and the corrupt lusts thereof doe still remaine so strong in vs yet we acknowledge to our shame that we are carelesse and negligent in fighting against them and in vsing those good meanes whereby we might be enabled to subdue them and to purge our hearts from these carnall corruptions whereof it is that residing in vs in great vigour and strength they disable vs in doing the good wee would and make vs to doe the euill we would not oftentimes wholy hinder vs from the duties of thy seruice and oftentimes so disturbe and distract vs in them that we performe them with much weakenes wearinesse with great dulnesse and deadnesse of heart and spirit and whilest wee are delighted in thy Law in the inner man this Law of our members rebelling against the law of our mindes leadeth vs captiue to the law of sinne O wretched men that we are who shall deliuer vs from the body of this death Gracious God we beseech thee giue vs more and more a liuely sense and feeling of these our wants and imperfections frailties and corruption that we may wholy deny and disclaime our selues and our owne righteousnesse in the worke of our iustification and saluation to the end that we may intirely rest vpon thine infinite mercies and the all-sufficient merits and perfect obedience of Iesus Christ For whose sake we most humbly beseech thee to pardon graciously all our wants and weakenesses couering our imperfections with his most perfect righteousnes washing away all our sinfull corruptions in his most precious blood Yea Lord forgiue and forget for his sake not only our errours and infirmities but also those manifold and grieuous sinnes which we haue committed against thee in the whole course of our liues whether in the dayes of our ignorance or since wee attained the knowledge of thy truth wash them all away in the blood of Christ and heale our soules with that soueraigne salue of sinne which is as sufficient to cure deepe and deadly wounds as small sores and slight scratches Yea Lord not onely remit and forgiue vs all our sinnes but let vs also haue comfort and peace in our consciences in the assurance of our pardon through the infallible testimony of thy holy Spirit and thereby sanctifie vs thorowout that wee may deuote and consecrate both our soules and bodies wholy to thy worship and seruice Mortifie our corrupt flesh with the lusts thereof and let them haue no longer dominion in vs. Yea holy Father not onely lop the branches of our corruptions but pull them vp by the very roote and not onely wound and weaken the Old man and body of sinne but kill and crucifie destroy and abolish it in thy good time that no reliques of it may remaine in vs to disturbe our peace and distract vs in thy seruice Quicken vs with the Spirituall life of grace that being made strong and vigorous wee may couragiously ouercome all lets and difficulties which oppose vs in our Christian course and may performe vnto thee all duties of piety righteousnesse and sobriety all the dayes of our liues with all cheerefulnesse and delight Let thy Spirit dwelling in vs replenish our hearts and soules with all sanctifying and sauing graces Inlighten our mindes with a sound sauing and experimentall knowledge of thee and thy Truth and let vs draw whatsoeuer wee know into vse and practice Take away from vs our naturall doubting and infidelity and worke in vs a true liuely and iustifying faith that wee may apply vnto vs all thy gracious promises made in Christ and rest onely vpon his merits and thy mercies for our iustification and saluation Giue vs hearty and vnfained repentance for our sinnes that wee may not onely bewaile them with godly griefe but also leaue and forsake them and serue thee in holinesse and newnesse of life Confirme our affiance in thee and let vs firmely resolue that though thou shouldest kill vs yet we will still trust in thee Let vs confidently expect the performance of all thy gracious promises
vnto vs and effectually apply vnto our selues Iesus Christ and all his benefits seeing thou hast not onely offred them in thy Word and couenant of grace but also sealed and thereby fully assured them vnto vs by thy seales the Sacraments Giue vs grace that we may approue this faith to be true and liuely by bringing forth plentifull fruits of it in repentance and newnesse of life bewayling our sinnes because they haue pearced our Sauiour and fearing to offend thee for the time to come seeing thine exact Iustice would not suffer them to goe vnpunished when thine onely and deare Sonne did beare them vpon his Crosse Let vs not by sinne hazard our soules againe to death for the wages of worldly vanities seeing to redeeme vs from them our Sauiour and surety payd vnto thy Iustice the inestimable price of his precious blood but being freed from sinne let vs become his seruants that hath redeemed vs seruing him in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues And as wee haue professed our selues to be of thy Family by taking vpon vs and wearing thy liuerie so let vs adorne our profession and glorifie thee our Lord and Master by hauing the light of our Christian conuersation shining before all men in all things behauing our selues as it becommeth thy children and seruants Let vs haue our Lords death in remembrance vntill he come not onely that it may stirre vs vp to vnfained thankefulnesse vnto thee for giuing thy Sonne and to him for giuing himselfe vnto vs and for vs but also that it may be as a shield of proofe to arme vs against all our spirituall enemies thy wrath the curse of the law Satan death sinne and condemnation that they may neuer preuaile against vs. Let vs also as wee haue in this holy communion professed our selues members of the same body approue our selues to be indeed so by performing all duties of loue towards one another both in releeuing those that want and forgiuing those who haue offended vs. Finally we beseech thee deare Father to enable vs by thy grace and holy Spirit that we may performe our vowes and promises which we haue made vnto thee especially in the time of preparation before wee came to thy Table and seeing in the sense and feeling of our wants and weakenesses in thy Spirituall graces required to the worthy receiuing of the Sacrament as knowledge faith repentance and charity wee were displeased with our selues and promised that we would indeuour to haue them increased and strengthened for the time to come good Lord we beseech thee giue vs grace to performe what we haue promised and to labour carefully and conscionably in the vse of all good meanes for the inriching of our soules with these and all other sauing graces of thy sanctifying Spirit that so also wee may bring forth the fruits of them in our godly and Christian liues to the glory of thy blessed Name and the comfort and saluation of our bodies and soules through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen A Prayer for the Sicke MOst glorious and mighty God who are righteous in all thy wayes and holy in all thy workes most iust in all thy Iudgements and infinitely gracious and mercifull towards thy children in Iesus Christ euen in thy chastizements and Fatherly corrections who art the Author of health and sicknesse and hast in thy hand the issues of life death For as much as thou hast commanded vs to call vpon thee as at all times so especially in the time of trouble and affliction and hast encouraged vs hereunto by thy most gracious promise that thou wilt heare and helpe vs that being deliuered we may glorifie thee We thy poore humble seruants in obedience vnto this thy Commandement and in confidence of this thy promise doe here in the Name and mediation of Iesus Christ humbly prostrate our selues before thee acknowledging and bewayling our manifold and grieuous sinnes For we were not onely conceiued and borne in sinne and thereby so defiled in all the powers and parts of our soules and bodies that wee haue beene disabled vnto all good duties and made prone to all wickednesse but wee haue also from this bitter roote of originall corruption brought forth continually those cursed fruits of actuall transgressions by breaking all and euery of thy Commandements in thought word and deede from the beginning of our liues vnto this present houre And that not onely in the dayes of our ignorance whilest we continued the vassals of Satan and when as sinne raigned and ruled in vs and wee performed vnto it voluntarie and cheerefull obedience as vnto our King and Soueraigne but euen since thou hast graciously called vs out of the kingdome of darkenesse and hast wrought in our hearts some desires to serue thee we haue often rebelled against thee and for the base hire of worldly trifles haue beene allured to commit many sinnes not onely through frailty and infirmity but euen against our knowledge and consciences contrarie to our generall vow in Baptisme and many speciall promises which wee haue made vnto thee vpon sundry occasions And although thou hast giuen vnto vs our Beeing and preserued vs in it by thy speciall and good prouidence and hast redeemed vs by the death of thy deare Sonne out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies that wee might worship and serue thee in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues yet Lord wee humbly confesse that wee haue beene too too forgetfull of these inestimable mercies neglected the duties of thy seruice and spent the greatest part of our liues in pursuing worldly vanities These these deare Father haue beene for the most part the subiect of our thoughts the obiect of our desires and the chiefe markes at which we haue aymed in our most earnest indeuours And so haue wee in our vnderstandings minded earthly things in our hearts affected them with such longing desires and with all our strength pursued them in all our workes and actions as though we had no better hopes and had forgotten that we are pilgrims on earth and Citizens of heauen As for the duties of thy seruice we haue often through this eager pursuit of worldly vanities forgotten and neglected them and often haue performed them with much coldnesse and formality weaknesse and wearinesse dulnesse and drowzinesse of heart and spirit whilest our minds and affections haue been distracted and carryed away and our deuotion and zeale cooled and quenched by our ouer-much minding and louing of earthly things And though thou hast allured vs to performe vnto thee more sincere and cheerfull seruice by promising to giue vs the rich wages and free reward of heauenly happinesse yea for the present hast incouraged vs hereunto by multiplying vpon vs many temporall blessings as health strength peace plenty food apparell and such like yet wee haue abused these benefits by taking occasion thereby to goe on in our sinnes with greater security and haue been made by
in the Canticles I sleepe but my heart waketh or like Cant. 5. 2. vnto the sleepe or rather disease in sleepe which Physicians call Ephialtes wherein they feele this waight of carnall securitie lying heauy vpon their hearts and striue with all their might to shake it off but are notable till God assist them by his Spirit and throughly awaken them by his Word For the faithfull in this securitie doe carefully and conscionably vse the meanes whereby they may be freed from it as the diligent hearing of the Word Meditation Prayer and such like and are much grieued in themselues that they performe these duties with so much dulnesse and drowsinesse and that they so little profit by them And this was the case of Dauid who being somwhat awakned by Nathan doth flye vnto God by Prayer desiring to bee awakned more throughly and to be more and more quickned by Gods Spirit and to recouer the operations and feelings of it which were so much abated in him Create saith he in me a cleane heart O God and Psal 51. 10. renew a right Spirit within me Cast me not away from thy Presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me Restore vnto me the ioy of thy saluation and vphold me with thy free Spirit And againe My soule cleaueth vnto Psal 119. 25. 88. the dust quicken thou me according to thy Word Quicken mee after thy louing kindnesse so shall I keepe the testimonie of thy mouth So the Church complayneth vnto God of this securitie and hardnesse of heart O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy Wayes and Esa 63. 17. hardned our heart from thy feare Returne for thy seruants sake the Tribes of thine Inheritance §. 6 Of the causes of carnall securitie in the faithfull First prosperitie worldly or spirituall Now the causes of this carnall securitie in the Faithfull are principally these First their abuse of worldly prosperitie and temporall benefits with which God hath blessed them when as being in themselues common gifts which hee bestoweth as often and in as great plentie vpon the wicked as the godly they notwithstanding esteeme them as speciall Testimonies and Pledges of his loue and so out of this false ground conclude that hee will watch ouer them with his Prouidence and keepe them still in this flourishing estate safe and sure from all afflictions and troubles which mooueth the Lord that hee may waken them out of this securitie in which they were more apt to rest vpon his gifts then vpon the Giuer or at least vpon the Giuer for the gifts sake to depriue them of this prosperitie in which they trust and to hide his Face from them in respect of those earthly pledges of his loue As wee see in the example of Dauid I said saith he in my Psal 30. 6. prosperitie I shall neuer be moued thou Lord of thy fauour hast made my Mountayne to stand so strong that is Thou hast so established my Kingdome euen as Mount Sion the seate thereof which cannot be remoued But thou diddest hide thy Face and I was troubled In which securitie 2. San. 24. Dauid was when he numbred the people trusting ouer-much in the arme of Flesh and multitude of his Subiects but was awakened out of this sleepe by the message of the Prophet and that grieuous plague whereby so many of them were destroyed Yea sometime this carnall securitie in them is caused through their spirituall prosperitie and the ioyfull feelings of Gods fauour in the pledges of sauing graces which maketh them to thinke these comforts will alwayes last and that in the strength of them they shall hold out in the profession and practise of true godlinesse vnto the end and so rest more vpon the Springs or Streames of these sanctifying Graces then vpon God himselfe who is the Fountayne of them Which moueth the Lord to stop the course by spirituall desertions as it were at the head of the Riuer and to giue them ouer to their owne strength without any flow of fresh supply whereupon these streames in their sense and feeling are soone wasted with the scorching heate of tentations so as they returne to their naturall drynesse And to this securitie new Conuerts are most subiect who like fresh-water Souldiers thinke that they haue wholly conquered all their spirituall Enemies because they haue gotten the better of them in some light skirmishes and that they are sure and firme for euer falling because they haue such feelings of Gods assistance and the ioy and comfort that doth accompany it whereas in truth God tendring their child-hood and weaknesse doth hold them vp in their wayes because hee would not at their first venturing to goe haue them discouraged by their falls and knowing that like vntryed Souldiers they are faint-hearted and easily discouraged from fighting in the spirituall warfare he giues them victorie in some small skirmishes that they may be heartned to indure constantly and couragiously in sorer conflicts The which they misse-construing and attributing too much vnto their owne strength and valour the Lord to driue them from this ill-grounded securitie doth leaue them to themselues and suffereth them to fall and to bee ouertaken with some danger vpon which they become oftentimes in the sight and sense of their weaknesse as cowardly and fearefull as they were before confident and couragious and vncomfortably complaine as men forlorne and forsaken of all hope And this an ancient Father well obserued Some saith hee thinke the sweetnesse of their imitation Quidam dulcedin●m incheationis putant sublimi●a●em confirmationis ideò cum tentatio s●quitur derelictos se à Deo putant Greg. in Moral lib. 24. cap. 7. the height of their confirmation and therefore when a tentation followeth they iudge that they are vtterly forsaken of God And againe For the most part euery one newly conuerted herein slippeth and fayleth that whilest hee is entertayned with the sweet sense of some gifts of grace for his initiation or entrance into the course of Christianitie hee thinketh that hee hath attayned vnto the confirmation of perfection and esteemeth it the consummation of full measure not knowing that they are but the allurements of inchoation whereof it commeth to passe that whilest he is touched and shaken with the tempest of some tentation he suspecteth himselfe to bee despised of God and in the high way to vtter destruction whereas if hee would not giue too much credit to the comforts of his first entrance he would in his prosperitie prepare his mind to indure aduersitie and would afterwards so much the more firmely resist Vices comming to incounter him by how much hee had more wisely foreseene them §. 7 The second cause is spirituall pride Another cause of carnall securitie in the faithfull much like vnto the former is spirituall Pride whereby they ouer-weene their owne abilities and the measure and strength of their gifts and graces receiued And so leauing their onely sure dependancy
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