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A51412 The spirit of man, or, Some meditations (by way of essay) on the sense of that scripture, 1 Thes. 1:23 ... by Charles Morton ... Morton, Charles, 1627-1698.; Mather, Cotton, 1663-1728.; Mather, Increase, 1639-1723. 1692 (1692) Wing M2825; ESTC R31044 42,571 116

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Text it seems to Referr to a Duty peace with men v. 13. be at peace among your selves And a priviledge peace with God and in your Consciences To both which Sanctification doth contribute in the per●formance of the afore mentioned Dut●●● Sanctifie you HAGIAS Al make you holy or separate and consecrate you to himself this is the Notation of the word The Definition of the Thing Sanctification is A Renewal of the whole man whereby we are enabled daily more and more to Die unto Sin and Live unt● Righteousness according to Gods Foreordaination Wholly HOLOTELE●S wholly-perfectly as is before noted is To Extend this work of Grace to all the parts of Grace and all the parts of Man The parts of Grace both Habits and Acts and in both the perfection of Degrees and persistance of Duration In the parts of Man that which follows And I pray God your whole Spirit HOLOCLERON TO PNEUMA The word HOLOCLERON signifies properly Haeres ex asse a compleat Heir from whom nothing is given away or one that has the whole Inheritance It therefore I think does here signify all that Appertains to Man expressed by the word Spirit HUMON TO PNEUMA All the Spirit that is in you or all that may be called your Spirit Your not the Spirit of God in you for He is not capable of Sanctification being already and always in himself perfectly Holy TO PNEUMA The Spirit What it is is the chief matter of our present Enquiry and therefore of it more fully after only we shall here Note That it seems to be a more General and comprehensive word in which the two that follow are Included And Soul and Body KI HE PSUCHE KI TO SOMA The Latin Et Anima Corpus I should not scruple to Translate Both the Soul and the Body and if et et in Latin signifie Both And why KI KI in Greek does not as properly the same I see no Reason And then the Text would run thus I pray that your whole compleat Spirit as a General Both Soul and Body two special Ingredients thereof or contributers thereunto may be prese●ved c. Preserved TERETHEIE may be carefully watched as those that keep Guard in a Gar●ison for this Spirit of a man is most liable to Assaults by Temptation And because men are apt to be Defective in this Spiritual Watch I pray that God would take the charge of you watch over you and keep you safe Blameless AMEMPTOS so as Momus the Carper shall find no fault in you so is the wo●d Rendred ●hil 2. 15. and 3. 6. 'T is supposed you are or will be wholly Sanctified according to the first Pra●er in the Text but this notwithstanding your peculiar Spirit is apt to run out and so be blameable unless you are especially protected guided and preserved To the coming of our Lord. that is to the end Till you come thro● Grace to Glory This needs no farther Explica●ion as to the present Enquiry The words thus Explained we come now to view the parts of the Text wherein we have 1. Two Acts. Sanctification and Preservation 2. The Author of them God to whom the Prayer is Directed 3. The Modification of them wholly throughout continually 4. The Subject the whole man expressed by the Whole Spirit both Soul and Body And this Last it is with which at present we are mostly concerned The Whole Man is sometimes expressed by only two words Soul and Body or Spirit and Body which are the two physical or constituent parts of Man SO 1 Cor. 6. 20. Ye are Bought with a price therefore Glorifie God in your Body and in your Spirits which are Gods Also in 2 Cor. 7. 1. Having these promises Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the Flesh and Spirit In both which places Spirit is the same with Soul and Flesh in the latter is the same with Body in the former But w●y here the whole man for 't was the same to be preserved that was to be Sanctified why I say he should be here express●d by three particulars is a matter wherein Expositors do differ and I find these several Interpretations of the place 1. Some will have Spirit and Soul to be put Exegetically as if both signi●ied but one and the same thing one being added only as Explication of the other so Austin But indeed methinks this here seems a little harsh because needless for Soul and Body or Spirit and Body as it is in the two fore-cited Scriptures were Intelligible enough to express the two physical constituents of a man Besides the particle Kl. And or rather Both seems to connect Spi●it And Soul as two things that have some Distinction between them 2. Others will have Spirit to signifie the Mind and Understanding and Soul the Will and Affections Calvin Marlorate and divers other from whom I would not willingly Dissent and therefore shall not slight their Judgment yet I must humbly profess however clear the Notion was to them it is not so to me for that which they call Soul is as truly Spirit as the Leading Faculty the Intellect Yea I find the Expressions quite Transverse As if Soul signified the Intellectual Faculty and Spirit the Volitive in Mary's Song Luk. 1. 46 47. My Soul doth Magnify the Lord and my Spirit hath Rejoyced in God ●y Saviour As if she had said My Soul that is my Mind and Understanding Doth Magnify i. e. Has high Thoughts of God great Estimation of him which are Acts of the Intellect and the only Internal Magnification of him And my Spirit i. e. my Will and Affections hath Rejoyced which is their proper Act. This to me seems more currant if in this place there be a Distinction between Soul and Spirit But I will not Assert it I rather think there is none here only her Inward Joy of heart being great her Outward Expressions thereof in words are Enlarged Soul and Spirit in a Pleonasm signifying only her Inner Man But if Spirit here do present us with any Distinct Notion I should take it to be a Chearfu● Frame of Spirit in which she then was 〈◊〉 then it will fully fall in with our present Conceptions of the word Spirit in our Text as shall be shewn anon 3. Some will have Spirit in our Text to signifie the Higher Faculties both Understanding and Will the Rational part in man and Soul the Inferiour Facul●ies common to man with Bruits and Plants Sensative Vigetative c. This indeed i● a common Interpretation But methinks it is harsh to Denominate Mans Soul from the Infe●iour Powers contrary to that Logical Rule Denomination is from the better part Nor do I find in Scripture to my Remembrance the word Soul any where else to have this signification Nor Lastly are these Lower Faculties capable of other Sanctification then that of the Body which is to be but Instrumental to the Soul in Holiness and therefore thus to separate Soul from Spirit is
of them And thus much of the Souls Faculties or Acts for which sometimes the word Spirit is ●aken 4. Spirit is Lastly taken for some Qualifications or Inclinations of the mind as United to the Body and Conformed much thereunto This is the product of Nature Acquisition and Circumstances of Life all which concur to form the GENIUS Temper or Disposition of man Each man hath something peculiar to himself in this Respect as he has in the Features of his Countenance Stature Shape Meen or Carriage of his Body whereby he is Distinguished from any other So if we ask What Spirit is he of we mean of what Temper Inclination or Genius How Disposed How Qua●ified And the true Answers will be as various as men of whom one man is by Nature Acquisition or both of a sober grave Spirit Another of a Quick Active Chearful Spirit Another of a weak timorous Careful Some are Gentiel Generous Courteous Open Hearted Others Churlish Clownish Surly Rough Close and Reserved c. All these Spirit are viciated by Corrupt Nature and may by the Spirit of Grace be so Sanctified as to Render men Serviceable tho' in a different way and of good acceptance both with God and man Now This I take to be the most proper meaning of the word Spirit Here in the Text And then the sense of it is I Pray God you may be wholly Sanctifyed in every Part and Faculty every Power Natural Acquired and being Sanctifyed may be wholy also preserved In General your whole Spirit All that gives any of you a Distinguishing Character from other men more Particularly your Soul the forma hominis the Inner part and your Body the Materia hominis or Outer part Both which are Included in the Spirit which Results from both The Faculties of the Soul with their Hab●●uations or Improvements and the Temperament of the Body attended with Outward Circumstances contributing thereunto This I think is the Apos●les meaning i● I rightly understand him Having thus l●id down the Notion in General we shall Endeavour to make it plain by opening some particulars As 1. There is in Scripture such a Distinction between the Soul and Spirit which we shall first shew by one place in the General and after by more particularly in their proper places The place in General is that of Hebr. 4. 12 13. The Word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any Two Edged Sword piercing even to the Dividing asunder of Soul and Spirit and of the Ioynts and Marrow and is a Discerner of the Thoughts and Intents of the Heart neither is there any Creature that is not manifest in his sight c. This Dividing asunder of S●ul and Spirit Is it a Philosophical Distinction of the Powers and Facul●ies into Superiour and Inferi●ur as some would have it I pray to what purpos● Is it to shew the S●periour as clear and untainted by the Fall but that the Inferiour and Bruital or sensual part is ●iciated and corrupt as some of the Heathen Philosophers have con●usedly suggested They say indeed that NO●S the mind is Divin● aurae particula a Sacred and Divine Thing ' not inclined to any thing Disallowed by Right Reason till it come to be Incarcerated in the Body and then clogg'd by a Dull Material Flesh and yoked with a couple of other silly Souls the Sensitive of Brutes and the Vegetative of Plants It bec●me obstru●ted in all vertuous aspiring and born down to Sensual and Inferiour Acts and Objects Thus they Dreamt and does the Scripture give any Countenance to such Fancies I think not I rather take it thus The Apostle ●aving Exhorted them to study and use Diligence or Labour as we read it to Enter into the Rest before mentioned Tacitly implies that this work should be done with all Sincerity for that they had to do herein with a Heart-searching God This is manifest by the Energie of his Word which openeth to a man the Secrets of his Soul for the word is ●iving or Quick c. As if he had said God who made man knows him altogether and better understands what is in man than man does what is in himself Man has but Dark Apprehensions of himself and therein oft times grosly does mistake B●t God by his Word Searcheth intimately and Discovereth fully to him what he else would not take notice of His Soul and Spirit lye close together as do his Ioynts and Marrow But as the Anatomists Knife lays open the one Difference so the piercing Two Edged Sword of the Word does the other That word shews him How his Soul came pure out of the Hand of God but he hath added thereto a vicious Spirit by the perverting of what God did make upright Let not man therefore charge God foolishly and say as Adam did concerning Eve From the Soul which thou gavest me all my faults do arise No It is from that Evil Spirit which man hath to himself Acquired His Soul indeed has the powers but 't is his Spirit that gives the Inclinations which in a natural corrupt State are wholly bent unto Evil. Thus the Malady is opened and searched by the word and the Cure is also by the same word prescribed As here in the Text Namely Sanctification And thus much for the first particular That there is in Scripture such a Distinction betwixt the Soul and Spirit 2. That the Constitution of this Spirit or Genius is an Aggregate or Resultant from the Connexion of divers things in Man As his Souls Faculties his Bodies Temperament His Acquired Habits by Instructions Examples or Customes And Lastly The Outward Adjacents or Circumstances of his present Life A little of each of these 1. The Faculties of the Soul as Understanding Will Sensitive Appetite or Passions are all Ingredients as the Substrate Matter of this Spirit in Man But the Modification of them is from the other Causes Souls in themselves are all Equal but the Spirits are vastly Different one from another And this is from the particulars that follow and in a chief manner from 2. The Temperament of the Body which is more or less Different in every Individual Man As there are scarce Two Pebbles on the Sea Beach or Two Chips hewen from the same wood exactly figured alike Nay As there are hardly Two Faces Gestures or Meenes of Men which are the outward Indices of their Inward Constitutions But doe in some things Differ tho' some are more alike than others Even so it is with their Temperaments which are a chief Ingredient into their Spirits whereof we now speak That saying of Philosophers Manners of the Mind follow the Temperament of the Body is true if rightly understood with a due Temper or as we say with a Grain of Salt By Manners we must understand not the Vertues or Vices themselves But the Genius and Inclination which leads and Disposes to them And that 's the same with this our Spirit Otherwise skil●ul Physicians who may perhaps
have the worst Manners might be accounted the best M●rallists they could easily mend all the world who cannot mend themselves Nor must we understand by this our Substrate Matter the Faculties above-mentioned as if The Body has an Operative Influence upon the Soul to Induce as it were a new form upon it for the Soul is the Active part in Man and the Body nothing so But the thing stands thus The Soul which is a True Spirit in a Nobler Sense than that whereof we are now treating being by its Information of the Body most Intimately conjoyned thereunto while it is in the State of Conjunction and Union in Man Uses the Parts Humours and Members as its Instruments or Organs in all its Operations Now as a Workman Receiveth nothing of his strength or skill from his Tools wherewith with he works yet in the Exercise of his Abilities he will find himself much furthered or hindred in his business according as his Tool is either Apt or Unapt for his Work So is it in this Case The Soul Receives no power from the Body But in Exerting its own proper powers is helped or hindred by the Bodys good or ill Temperament Thus an 〈◊〉 Tempered Brain makes that Soul Act like a Fool or Ideot which had it a Brain Well● Tempered would be both prudent and sagacious And so also the Temperament of the Heart Blood and Natural Spirits gives Help or Impediment to the ●ill and Affections even as The Organs of Sense do to their proper Senses Hence that saying Anima Ga●bae male habitat The Brave Soul of Galba had but an Ill Lodging He being a brave Spirited Man but very sickly 3. Acquired Habits do much Alter the Genius or Spirit from what it would be if men were left to their Pure Naturals These Habits arise partly 1 From Instruction Rules so Intellectual Moral Habits whether good or evil are formed much according to the Information men meet with especially in their younger dayes Thus as to Advantage every part of Philosophy contributes its share Logick and Metaphysicks sharpness of Judgment Mathematicks Solidness and Sagacity Physicks good conjecture at the Reasons of things Moral Philosophy and History Prudence Rhetorick Fairness and Confidence of Address Poetry quickness of fancy and Imagination Any of these as they are better studied do accordingly Enable and Incline the mind of Man Didicisse fideliter Artes c. And so on the Contrary as to Disadvantage All vicious and erroneous Principles foolish and vain traditions and such like evil Rudiments being Instilled into Youth do Taint and Darken the Judgment Debauch the Will Affections and Debase the whole Spirit and Genius of the Man 2. From Pattern Example and Converse with People make deeper imp●ession then Rules and have a very great influence in forming the Genius especially of Youth when they are stepping from Boy to Man and are taking upon them to chuse their own way then if ever Multum Refert quocum vixeris it concerns you to think where you dwell The force of Example is set forth in that Prov. 22. 24. 25. Make no friendship with an angry man and with a furious man thou shalt not go Lest thou learn his way and get a snare to thy soul. T is called a Snare tho' the ill-favoured humour be no plausible bait to allure yet for that all Custom has a secret and fascinating Insinuation whereby at least the Aversation and Abhorrence of Ill things to which we are enured is very much abated So as not only the Vices themselves under some false name such as Gallantry of Spirit Greatness of Soul Scorning to take an injury c. put fair for an approbation and are contagious But even the Inclinations to them preparation of Spirit for them do commonly spread themselves from one person to another And so also in some measure tho' not casually may we expect in things of a better Character Prov. 13. 20. He that walketh with the wise shall be wise c. Which place I think does not only intimate Gods usual Blessing upon fit means but also discovers those proper means which in their own Nature are apt to operate in a Moral way upon the minds of men not indeed to give the Truth of Grace for then all in Godly Families would be Religious Leave no ground for that complaint In the Land of uprightness will he deal unjustly Isa. 26. 10. And the contrary too often do we find by sad experience Nor are those ●air Dispositions which Conversation may work such Preparations for Grace as doth oblige God ex congruo to give the Truth thereof but only the whole is this If God please to give his Supernatural Grace to one that has fair Natural Disp●sit●●ns Those Graces will the more ●llu●●riously appear to Render a Man the more Eminen●●y Servi●●all A●d to 〈◊〉 our daily Experience and common ob●●●vati●n that men are much what the Cus●om and usual practice of the place is where they live He that is bred or● much conversant in the country gets there a simple plain heartedness or perhaps a Rough Rusticity He that is much in the City has more of Civility Sagacity and Cunning. One who lives where News is frequently Talked Gets somewhat of a Publick Spirit Amongst good natured People a Candid Spirit Amongst Souldiers a Bold and Boysterous one And so of all other Affections which may be considered in an Indifferency Neither morally Good nor Bad in themselves but only as Sanctification or Corruption makes the Difference 4. Outward Circumstances do also Exceedingly vary mens spirits and that in a shorter space of time then Habits use to do Thus Prosperity Wealth Honour Health friends c. do commonly enlarge the mind of a m●n and make him bold and brisk Whereas the contrary Poverty Disgrace Sickness c. do usually Contract and Emasculate the Spirit If these are of a long continued Series they do very much towards the forming of a setled and fixed Genius But if only Occasionally or at certain times they occur then they vary and Contemperate the Setled Spirit for a season and perhaps become a means to Reduce it to a better Mediocrity Thus one of a Light and Airy Spirit and for the most part in all good Circumstances may at such times be unmanageable by Advice until perhaps a particular sore A●●iction hath somewhat abated of his Gallantry and opened hi● Ear to Instruction whereby his Spirit may be better Regulated for the futu●e And thus much for the Aggregation or Resultance of this our Spirit from the concurrence of divers things both within and without the Man 3. The next particular in order to the Explaining of our General Notion shall be the taking Notice That all these do some way concurr to Constitute and Represent the Man Abstracted from Grace and Sin yet the Internals and Essentials of Soul and Body have the principal stroak herein And then that the other matters that are
THE SPIRIT OF MAN OR Some Meditations by way of Essay on the Sense of that Scripture 1 Thes. 5. 23. And the very God of Peace Sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole Spirit and Soul and Body be Preserved Blameless unto the Coming of our Lord Iesus Christ. By Charles Morton Minister of the Gospel at Charlstown in New-England Mal. 3. 16. Take heed to your Spirit Luke 19. 55. Ye know not what manner of Spirit you are of Boston Printed by B. Harris for Duncan Campbell at the Dock-Head over-against the Conduit 1692. ERRATA PAge 23. line 19. for Casual r. Equally p. 26. l. 2. after That r. Tho' p. 50. l. 30. for To. read in p. 77. l. 29. for The r. They p. 78. l. 24. for Clears r. cleaves p. 85. l. 21. for whence r. where AS we have all manner of Demonstrations to assure us of what E●●hu asserted when he said There is a Spirit in man so we have the Eternal Spirit of God Himself by the Pen of His Inspired Solomon Recommending this Blessed Oracle of Wisdom unto us A man of Understanding is of an Excellent Spirit Indeed we have no Understanding till believing that we have within us a Spirit Excellent for the first Author and Nature of it we Endeavour above all things to make that Spirit become yet more Excellent by the Alterations of a New Birth upon it The Woful and Rueful Degeneracy which has be●allen the Spirit of Man by his Fall into Sin is a matter of the most bleeding Lamentations unto every Spirit that in the least measure begins to Awaken out of that Lamentable Fall Yea The whole Creation Groans over the vitiated Spirit of man and sighs How art thou Fallen O thou Child of the Morning Accordingly when once the Symptoms of a Recovery from The madness in our Hearts whil● we L●ve do dawn in the Reflections of our Spirit upon its own unhappy Depravations our chief Question and Study then is What we shall do for the Salvation of that Spirit from the Distempers ●f it and we become wonderfully Thankful unto our God for His accommodating of Us with such means of Grace as He never bestow'd upon the Apostate Spirits whom He hath Reserved in Darkness under Everlasting Chains If we duely consider the Natural Faculties of that Spirit which the Father of Spirit●s hath Breathed into us or the provision which God has made For it in the Spiritual World we shall indeed reckon that our Spirit is too Excellent a Thing to be neglected yea that there is no Folly like that of the man who Despiseth his own Soul But if we again consider the Moral Pollutions which have disordered our Spirit we may be soon convinced That we are in Danger of Dying without Wisdom whereby the Excellency that is in us then will go away And that there had need be some Essayes towards a Revival of the Primi●ive Excellency in our Nobler and Better Part in order to our Meetness for the Inheritance of the Saints in Light Now as the whole work of Sanctification upon the Spirit is necessary to make it Excellent so there is a notable stroke of that work performed in the Sanctification of the Humour which is to be seen in the Temper and Biass of that Spirit There is ● certain Air of our Complexion which Results from some Circumstances of the Uni●● between our Souls and our Bodies and ●his Disposition we ordinarily call The Spirit of the man Let This be Sanctify'd and the Man will become one of The Ex●cellent in the Earth It would be a marvellous Renewal o● the Divine Image in our Spirits and it would render us extraordinarily as well Serviceable to others as Comfortable to our selves if that Inclination which our Spirits have as they are United and therefore very much Conform'd unto our Bodies were Preserved Blameless and were this remarkable Article of Sanctification more considered we should see perhaps ●ar more Excellent Spirits than are now too frequently beheld in those that wear the Name that began at Antioch To promote this Holiness and Happiness the Reader is here blessed with the Worthy Labours of a Learned Pious and now Aged Servant of the Lord Jesus Christ in the Ministry of the Gospel He is a person too considerable in his Generation to want any of our Commendation and as for this his Judicious Treatise 't will by its own Pertinency and Usefulness abundantly Commend it self unto every sensible person that shall peruse it with a just Attention All that belongs unto Us is to follow it with our Prayers That He who Forms the Spirit of man within him would by this Book assist the Readers in Reforming whatever they may find in their own Spirits calling for that Reformation and in Glorifying of God with the Spirits which He has Made and Bought for His own Immortal Glory Increase Mather Iames Allen Samuel Willard Iohn Baily Cotton Mather The CONTENTS TExt Opened PAGE 1 VVhole man-what ● Expositors Differ 6 The most proper Interpretation thought by the Author 9 Spirit out of Man 9 In Man 10 Peculiar Genius in Text. 14. Scripture Distinctions of Soul Spirit 16 Constitution of our Spirit 18 Spirits Hot. 27 Chearfulness 28 Activity 31 Courage 34 Anger in zeal 41 ●n Iealousie 51 Spirits Cold 54 ●orrowful 55 ●ull 63 Timorous 65 Meek 69 Spirits Moderate 73 ●●ference no strained Notion 88 THE SPIRIT of MAN OR Some Meditations by way of Essay on the sense of that Scripture 1 Thes. 5. 23. And the very God of Peace Sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole SPIRIT and SOUL and BODY be preserved blameless unto the Coming of our Lord Iesus Christ. THe Apostle having given the Thessalonians divers Exhortations in the preceding Verses closes all with a profession of Prayer for them as well knowing That all Counsels or Charges by men tho● sent from God himself would be of no effect unle●s God by his Sanctifying 〈◊〉 do give men Grace to Improve 〈◊〉 He prayes not only that they may be Sanctified but that they may be wholly so And that the ●ulness of the Expression HOLOTELEIS wholly perfectly may the better appear He Descends to all the particulars that are in Man he mentions the chief Heads of them which are either all that is in Man or To which All that belongs to Meer Man may be Referred Your whole Spirit and Soul and Body that they may be Sanctified or filled with Grace and not only so but also preserved blameless therein to the Coming of our Lord Jesus Christ that is preserved to the End We shall a little Explain the words The very God of peace Autos de O● Theos or the God of Peace himself 't was a frequent Option Benediction Salutation or Valediction Peace be to you In the word Peace all good was comprehended So to these same persons 2 Thes. 3. 16. Now the Lord of Peace himself give you peace always by all means Here in the
but to confound it with Body in the business of Sanctification and Preservation here spoken of These three forementioned Interpretations I ●ill not Absolutely deny nor Contend with their Authors about them Because they all agree well enough in the General Scope of the place which is be sure that all that is In Man be sancti●yed to God However any one part be Distingui●hed from the other Yet I am apt to think that a more Proper Interpretation may be found which will give a more F●ll and 〈◊〉 sense to the place then is ●ually a●●ribed to it For the Enquiry after this we shall consider to what things the Name of Spirit i● given in Scripture besides those before men●ioned And this I finde to be to some things Out of Man and some things In Man 1 Out of Man the Word Spirit is ascribed bo●h to God and Creatures 1. To God both Essential and Personal 1. Essential as in Iob. 4. 24 God is a Spirit and they that worship him c. Not that Spirit is an Univocal Genus of God and any of his Creatures for then there would be a Common Nature but there is Infinite Distance between them Only because Spirit i● the Name of the most Noble Created Nature we Ascribe it also to God by Anal●gie for that we have no better Name to give him 2. Perso●al the Third in the Blessed Trinity under the Tide of the H●ly Ghost or Spirit the Spirit of the Lord of Iesus c. But ●his is not OUR Spirit nor is he to be Sanctified ●r Preserved and so cannot be here meant 2. To Angels both Good and Bad but Bad Angels cannot be Sanctified and Good need no Prayers in this Respect Nor can they be called OUR Spirits unless by Assignation of particular Guardia● Angels to particular men which whatever were the Opinion of some Jews and Gentiles of old I know no ground to Believe This of the Spirit Out of Man 2. In Man the Spirit is that wh●ch belongs to a man in a proper and natural sense and of this kind there seem to be four distinct Significations of the word Such as 1. When taken for the Soul the forma hominis Resigned up to God in Death So I understand David Psa. 31. 5. Unto thee O Lord I commit my Spirit however men deal with my Body And this the rather because Christ at his Death using the same words must needs be so understood Luk. 23. 46. Agreeable to Eccles. 12. 7. The Spirit returns to God who gave it And in the same sense also Ch. 11. 5. Thou knowest not the way of the Spirit nor how the Bones grow in the womb That is as I take it Thou understandest not how the Soul doth form the Body as an Habitation for it self 'T is the Inward part of man so the Exegesis seems very plain in that Isa. 26. 9. With my Sou● have I desired thee in the night yea with my Spirit within me will I seek thee early i. e. with my inward man I have and will apply my self to thee from whence arises a Tropical sense of Spirit namely to signifie Sincerity God is my witness whom I Serve in my Spirit in the Gospel Rom. 1. 9. 2 Spirit is taken for the Life or Union of Soul and Body or Souls being in the State of Union So I understand Iob. 10. 12. thou hast granted me Life and thy visitation hath preserved my Spirit namely to continue in and with my Body And ch 34. 14. 15 If God gather to himself mans spirit and his breath all flesh shall perish to gether and man shall turn again unto Dust. Thus t is said of the Damsel whom our Saviour Raysed to Life Her Spirit came again and she arose Luk 8. 55. came again ie to be again United to her Body We Read Ecl. 3. 21. of the Spirit of a man that goes upwards and the Spirit of a beast that goeth Downwards If the Spirit in both parts be understood in the same sense as most likely it is then either Brutes have proper Spirits which many are loath to admit or the Spirit of man must signifie but the Life which is all if not more then some will allow to Beasts Again Chap. 8. 8. No man hath power over the Spirit to Retain the Spirit in the Day of Death i. e. No man is M●ster of his own Life to prolong it To the same purpose is that Expression in Hezekiahs Prayer Isa. 38. 16. O Lord by these things men Live and in all these things is the Life of my Spirit so wilt thou Recover me and make me to Live He me●ns not by the Life of his Spirit the continued Duration of his Ever-living Soul but the continuance of its Union with the Body whereby the Li●e of his person should be prolonged The Spirit in this sense taken may indeed be Sanctified The Life may be Devoted unto God according to that of the Apostle Rom 14. 8. Whether we Live we Live unto the Lord or Wh●ther we Dye c. But this I think is not the direct meaning of the Spirit in our Text. 3. Spirit is taken for some special Faculties or particular Acts of the mind such as 1. Understanding Prov. 20. 27. The Spirit of a man is the Candle of the Lord searching all the Inward Parts of the Belly not in an Anatomical but Moral Sense The Understanding is set up by God in man as a Candle to search and find out by its Exercise all those Inward Acts and Inclinations which would othe●wise lie hidden and undiscovered So that Isa. 29. 24 They that Erred in Spirit shall come to Understanding and they that Murmured shall Learn Doctrine That is they that had misapprehensions of Me and my Ways shall come to Understanding not the Faculty but the Rectitude thereof and they that Murmured whose Wills were averse to embrace Truth shall be graciously Inclined to Learn that which is Right 2. The Fancy or Imagination is sometimes to be understood by Spirit Ezek. 13. 3. Wo unto the Foolish Prophets that follow their own Spirit and have seen nothing or that walk after the things which they have not seen as in orig which God hath not Revealed to them but they have fabricated to themselves out of their Evil Hearts and Foolish Fancies or Imaginations 3. The Spirit is also taken for the Thoughts upon or Remembring of some person or thing Thus the Apostle Expresses his Thinking of the Corinthians I Cor. 5. 3. I verily as absent in Body but present in Spirit have judged already as tho' I were present concerning him that hath done this Deed. He thought of them and their Affairs tho' at a distance from them So of the Colossians Chap. 2. 5. Tho' I he absent in the Flesh yet am I with you in the Spirit Ioying and Beholding your order and the stedfastness of your Faith in Christ. He Rejoyced to behold their Graces by the eye of his mind his Cogitations
External to the Essence of man the Accidental Inherents and Adjacents do but somewhat Modify and Affect the former constitution which will still appear in some Degree or other Naturam Expellas furca licet ipsa recurret Drive Nature out with Pitch forks t will Return And act its part as sure as fire will Burn. And because the Soules Primitive facultyes are supposed to be all Equal in every man t is the Bodyes Temperament that especially gives the great Diversity in Mens Spirits we shall therefore speak of these more Distinctly And that not Exactly according to the common four First Qualityes Hot and Dry Cold and Moyst which are said by their Mixture to give the four Complexions Sanguine Cholerick Melancholy and Phlegmatick of which Physicians do so often speak But I shall Treat of them according to the Actives Hot and Cold with a Mean Temper between them Taking notice of the other By the way only as occasion is offered For it is not Physical composition or Medical Di●posi●ion of spi●its which we have now to do with But Spirits as they R●late to Humane and Moral Actions into w●ich these three Hot Cold and Mean h●ve the greatest In●luence Besides a●l men will admit of a Hotter and a ●ooler Temperament even t●ose who Rej●ct Elementary Mixtures and have no great Regard to the four Comp●●xions I● any like better to have it express●d by Matter more or less moveable or move● They may please themselves There is no Di●ference in the Thing however ●●pressions vary I say therefore some mens Spi●its are Hot and they do commonly Act war●● Others are Cold and they usually Act Cooly Others have a Spirit of a fine Mean between these two Extreams and their Actions are participant of both qualifications viciously if Unsanctified and under natural Corruption vertuously if Sanctified and mens Spirits be●guided and act●d by the Spirit of God All commonly according to their several Capacities But if at any time a man be acted contrary to his peculiar Genius 't is by a special hand of the Good or Evil Spirit upon him some special Instigation and Assistance upon a particular occasion And according to this Method we shall Treat of the several Spirits first Describing themselves and then their States both of Unregeneracy and Sanctification 1. The more Hot Spirit Discovers it self in Chearfulness Activity Courage and Angry Zeal or Jealousy 1. Chearfulness Heat joyned with a convenient Moisture answerable to the Sanguine Complexion Renders a man Chearful Vivid Sprightly and upon occasion with apt Circumstances Joyous Refreshed Merry and Comfortable It makes him look Ruddy and of a Beautiful Countenance like David in the flower of his Youth and pleasant like the face of all things in the Spring David we may suppose was of a Natural Chearful Spi●it His Musical Inclination whereby his skill was great seems to speak so much for this and his prudence in matters so we Read in the Text but in the Margin prudent of Speech 1 Sam. 16. 18. for these things I say He was sent for by Saul that so his Musick and his prudent Mirth might Drive away Sauls Evil Melancholly Spi●it This Chearful Spirit as it was in Young David Natural so it was in Old Iacob upon occasion when he heard good News of Ioseph and saw the Waggons that were sent for him Gen. 45. 27. 't is said The Spirit of Iacob their Father Revived Such also were the Refreshed Spirits mentioned 1 Cor 16. 17 18. I am glad of the coming of Fortunatus for they have Refreshed my Spirit and Yours And that of Titus his Joy 2 Cor. 7. 13. Because his Spirit was Refreshed by you all The meaning of all is Their Spirits were Chearful and Vivid upon these Comfortable occasions The Spirit also signifyes Health and strength as in the Hunger●starved Egyptian 1. Sam 30 who being left sick v 13 having now Eaten and Drank after the three Days fasting t is said v 12. His spirit came again to him that is He had now some life in him and could do something like himself who before was as one Dead with sadness and Desperation But now Doubtless was glad that he was alive This Chearful Spirit If Unsanctifyed and Corrupt is grosly abused to Levity froth vanity and foolish Jesting which is not convenient To Lasciviousness in them who make Provision for the ●lesh to fulfil the Lusts thereof To Pride Haughtiness self●conceit and glorying i● their own strength and Beauty to forgetfulness of God feeding themselves without fear yea to wax fat and Kick against their Maker and Rejoyce in their Beastings But all such Rejoycings are evil Iames 4. 16. ●ut If Sancti●yed The Ioy of their Spirit becomes Spiritual ●oy I● like Marys Luke 1 46. 47. My Soul doth Magnify the Lord And my Spirit hath Rejoyced in God my Saviour It Lisposeth them to Thankfulness and adapts for Praysing and Glorifying of God It fits men for Chearful Service to him which much commends Religion to the World who are apt to be frighted from it by Conceits of nothing but Mortification and Self Denial therein Chearful Christianity adds a Lustre to Profession and convinces men That they may be merry and wise Now tho' this doth chiefly arise from the Tes●imony of a Good Conscience and the Sealings of the Comforting Spirit of Adoption yet Subservient thereunto is this our Natural Spirit which Renders men more apt outwardly to express it David was as is b●fore noted of this Sanguine and Cheerful temper and he did Eminently Glorify God by his Musick and Psalmody agreeable to the Apostles Rule James 5. 13. Is any among you merry Let him sing Psa●ms This of Cheerfulness 2. Activity is another effect of the Hotter Spirit it shews it self in a willingness and readiness to be employed as also sometimes in strong inclinations and vigorous motions in a great inquisitiveness and earnest search after things that are out of common view This Temper is very natural to Youth which is usually fitter for Execution then Deliberation and because of this Spirit t is called the Sprightliest time of mens Lives This Active Spirit while Unsanctifyed is like as in a brisk Monkey a very unlucky thing It renders men Idle Busy-Bodys Medlers with other Mens Matters Grievously Troublesome both to the Church and World Restless in themselves and suffering none to be quiet by them this fruitful Soyl uncultivated brings forth a multitude of Weeds if set upon mischeif one such will do more then many others like the active Element of Fire where it is not employed in profitable Service it works Destruction and Desolation The Inquisitiveness that attends such unsanctified Spi●its does often make men Seekers in Religion never satisfi●d with setled Truths but Scepticks Rambling and Uncomposed Sect arys tossed about with every wind of Doctrine or if they hap to be Sect-Masters they 'l compass Sea and Land to make a Proselyte In a word They are the nimblest Servants of the Devil
also Learn who can Reform and being Reformed preserve the Spirit of man even he and only he that Formed it That Stretcheth out the Heavens and Layeth the Foundation of the Eart● and F●rmeth the Spirit of man within hi● Zech. 12. 1. This may indeed be u●derstood of the Soul as one of the En●●nent Works of God and so is here Rec●●oned among them The like may 〈◊〉 said of that Father of Spirits Heb. 1● 9. And that in Isa. 57. 16. The Spi●●● should fail before me and the Souls which● have made Spirit and Souls may be take● as put Exeg●tically yet if you conside● what follow in that Zach. 12. 2. I 〈◊〉 make Ierusalem a Cup of Trembling to 〈◊〉 the People round about when they shall be 〈◊〉 the Fire v. 3. A Burthensome Stone 〈◊〉 all the people gathered together against 〈◊〉 And v. 4. Smite every Horse with Ast●nishment and his Rider with madness 〈◊〉 I say considered seems more to favo●●our Sense As it the Prophet had sai●● The Malignant Spirit of Wicked Men 〈◊〉 set against Gods People But the For●●er of Spirits can quickly confound the● can dash and break them be they as 〈◊〉 as the Horse Rushing into the Battle 〈◊〉 can soon fill them with Astonishme●● and promises so to do Now if he can thus Over-rule the Sp●●rits of the Wicked He can as well Reg●●late the Spirits of his Elect Casting 〈◊〉 Imaginations and every high thing that Exalteth it self against the Knowledg of God and bringing into Cap●ivity every Thought to the Obedience of Christ. 2 Cor. 10 5. Thus the High Spirits who are like Hills are pulled down And the mean Low Spirits like to Valleys are lifted up yea the Crooked and Rough Spirits shall become as a straight and plain place to prepare the way of the Lord and make his paths straight Isa. 40. 4. This Sense is agreeable to the Covena●● made with Christ for his People Isa. 42 5 where Gods Titles are much like those in Zechary Who Created the Heavens and Spread forth the Earth H● that giveth Breath unto the People upon it There 's their Natural Life And Spirit to them that walk therein This I take to be their Moral Life or Conversation among men to which the Spirit we now speak of does very much conduce He gives the Spirit Temper or Inclination not only as a Gift of Nature but as an Eminent Gift of Sanctifying Grace whereby they walk Uprightly in the Earth INFERENCE 4. Hence also will naturally follow 〈◊〉 Exhortation of the Apostle Eph. 4. 23. Be ye Renewed in the Spirit of your min●s This means not that you should hav● New Powers or Faculties Natural wh●ther Superiour or Inferiour But new Inclinations new Dispositions The Spirit of the mind cannot be here new Intellec●s or new Wills which some would ha●● to be the Spirit of Man But new Lig●● in the Understanding new Bent in th● Will This is to have new Spirits of the mind by Sanctification In the Old man they were Corru●● according to Lusts v. 22 But in th● New Man v. 24. after or according to God they are Created anew 〈◊〉 Righteousness and True Holiness This ●●ho●tation Be ye Renewed Does no● Suppose in man a power of Self-Renov●tion or Require of man that which must be done by God if ever done But it Requires that man should do what in him Lyes to Regulate and O●der his Spirit or Inclination It Require● our Endeavour to the best of our A●●lities or Means to Reform our Spirits where they are apt to be Exuberant and bring our Reasons to Act in Subordaination to God in the Renovation of them And after all because our Endeavours in themselves in this matter of Governing our peculiar Spirits we see by daily sad Experience they Do and will miserably fall short of Effect Therefore to Invocate Divine Assistance and Influence That the work may be Accomplished as we shall again touch in the End Of these Endeavours in Subordaination to Gods Working a Chief one is 1. To Discover and Know our own Spirits GNOTHI SEAUSON Know thy Self was I think in This Respect meant by the Ancient Morallist In This Respect also as to the General was that Caution of the Prophet Mal. 2. 16. Take heed to your Spirit Tho' it was there Applied to a particular Case And our Saviours Rebuke to his Disciples Ye know not what manner of Spirit you are of Luk. 9. 55. Referrs to the same matter namely That men should be well acquainted with their own Spirits and Inclinations so will they be better Enabled To Resist Sin and Address to Duty in which two consist● That Renovation of their Spirits to whic● they are Exhorted 1. To Resist Sin That you may kee● your s●lves like David from your Ini●quity Psal. 18. 23. Know and Beway● your Infirmity That particular Breach i● your Spirit Prov. 15. 4. wher● th● Devil can most easily make his Assaults and Entrance In the Spiritual Warfare of the So●l Corruption in General is a Treacherou● Party within the Garrison But the mos● Active and Dangero●s Traytors of that Party are as it were by Name Particularly Discovered and brought forth by a due study of our Own Spirits The Blameless in the Text Notes where the Blameable is usually to be found 2. To Address to Duty That we may be more Eminently Serviceable to God and Men in our Generation Then are men most Servic●able when their Spirits are suited to their business and therefore a fit Choice of Callings in General may much Depend on the Knowledge of our Spirits When Other men make a Choice for an Affayr if they act prudently they view 〈◊〉 Spirits of their Candidates So the Apostle ordered the Primitive Christians 〈◊〉 ●o Acts 6. 3. Look you out among 〈◊〉 seven men of honest Report full of the Holy Ghost and Wisdom whom we may Appoint over this Business Every Believer was not qualified for the Service Every Godly Minister was not so fit to be sent to the Phillippians as Timotheus 〈◊〉 whom 't is said I have no man like minded who will naturally care for your 〈◊〉 Phil. 2. 20. Now as the Electors do Regularly ●ind mens Spirits so much more should 〈◊〉 Elected in their Acceptance of Employments to which they are Chosen The 〈◊〉 of this Care makes many to vent●●● on Depths beyond their Stature Burdens beyond their Strength Like the Ridiculous Aspiring of the Bramble in ●●thams Parable Iudg. 9. 15. to be King of the whole Forrest Come says the silly Shrub and put your Trust in my Shaddow Some are Imposed upon by Others Hypocritical Flattery And they again Impose upon themselves by their carel●●s Self-conceit Some are over-valued by th● Esteem that the partial Love of their Friends do put upon them Passions are violent and commonly Over-lash Love thinks all Excellent and Hate thinks nothing good A mans Own Prudence should rather guide him than Others Mistaking Affections And truly in those things wherein others may be greatly Deceived A man who is well Acquainted with his Own Spirit may rightly and easily Inform himself This is not said that men should only Contemplate their Own Infirmities for then no Humble Honest Man would ever be Employed All such would be ready to Answer with Moses upon a Great and Illustrious Call I am not Eloquent I am slow of Speech I pray thee send by the hand of him whom thou wilt or marg shouldst send Exod. 4. 10 Or with Holy Humble Ieremiah ch 1. 6. Ah Lord I cannot speak for I am a Child But the meaning is every man prudently allowing graynes for Humane Infirmity Does or may by the Study of his Own Spirit know what in some ●●asure he is good for and should ac●●●dingly apply himself to business As 〈◊〉 is true on the one hand what is con●●●●ed in that old Proverbial Rithm ●emo adeo est Tusus quinullos Serviat Usus 〈◊〉 is so good for nothing but may be us'd in something And 't is as true on the other hand 〈◊〉 omnia possum●s omnes We are not all 〈◊〉 for every thing Invita Minerva a 〈◊〉 Genius will never do Noble●● ploits And thus much of Knowing our Spirits ● But when we know them and 〈◊〉 Labour●d to Govern them according 〈◊〉 our best Discretion and Ability 〈◊〉 then finding an Insufficiency in 〈◊〉 selves well to manage those Head●●●ong and Impetuous things we shall 〈◊〉 cause besides our own Endeavours 〈◊〉 our own Spirits Humbly Earnest 〈◊〉 and continually to crave Assistance 〈◊〉 on High That God by his ●●●ctifying Grace would do that for 〈◊〉 which our Natural Powe● will never be able to Compass for our selves Not to Expell our Natures but to Order and Govern our Natural Dispositions and Inclinations as may be most for His Glory and Service and so for our own Comfort and Advantage We should Incessantly Pray for our selves the same which the Apostle here does for the Thessalonians That we may be wholly Sanctified and that our whole Spirit both Soul and Body may be preserve● Blameless to the Coming of our Lord Iesus Christ. I have done and shall conclude this Discourse with that frequent Benediction of the same Apostle As to Timothy 2 Epist. 4. 22. The Lord Iesus Christ be with your Spirit Which is the same in Sense with that to the Galatians ch 6. 18. and Philemon v. 25. Th● Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with your Spirit Amen FINIS Advertisement 〈◊〉 little Treatises formerly Published by this Author ● THe Little Peace-maker Discovering Foolish Pride the Make-bate from 〈◊〉 13. 10. Only by Pride cometh Con●●●ion but with the well-advised is Wis●●● ● The Way of Good Men for Wise 〈◊〉 to walk in from Prov. 2. 20. That 〈◊〉 mayst walk in the way of good men 〈◊〉 keep the paths of the Righteous ● Debts Discharge being some Consi●●●ations on Romans 13. 8. Owe nothing 〈◊〉 man but to Love one another ● The Gaming Humour Considered and ●●proved or The Passion-Pleasure Ex●●sing Mony to Hazard by Play Lot 〈◊〉 Wager Exami●ed There are also two little things in English Meeter The one Meditations on the History Recorded in the First Fourteen Chapters of Exodus The other The Ark its Loss and Recovery being like Meditations on th● beginning of 1 Sam
and notablest Instruments he can find to make use of in the world But if Sanctified Then none so Serviceable to God or Man Such Spirits will make men willing to do Service as Exo. 35. 21. They came every one whose Heart stirred him up and every one whose Spirit made him willing and they brought the Lords Offering to the work of the Tabernacle 'T is not said whom Gods Spirit made willing Tho' that is most true as to the First Cause But whose Spirit made him willing whose heart stirred him up That is his own Spirit being Sanctified by the Spirit of God Here the Second Cause is noted being stirred up by the First And indeed God often Warms and Raises up mens Spirits for any noble Designs in which he intends to use them So in those Ezra 1. 1. The Lord stirred up the Spirit of Cyrus and then Cyrus communicates of his warmth to stir up the Spirit of the poor Dispirited Jews v. 3. Who is there among you of all the People What Have you never a Brave Man among you to undertake this Great Worthy affair Upon this Giving●Fire their Spirits were Enflamed Then rose up the chief of the Fathers the Priests and the Levites with all them whose Spirit God had Raised to go up v. 5. Not All the People but some Chief men men its likely that were of Large Souls active and Gallant Spirits in themselves fitted for Noble designs but alas they were so shrunk and sunk by their long Captivity that neither In nate briskness nor the Encouragement which Cyrus gave them was sufficient to Chi●p them up till God Sanctifyed their Spirits and raised them above themselves to this Pious and Noble undertaking Two of them are mentioned by Name besides others Hag. 1. 14. The Lord stirred up the Spirit of Zerubbabel the Governour Joshua the High Priest and the Spirit of all the Remnant of the People and they came and did work in the house Now was it the Souls of these men Or the men themselves Methinks t is more Genuine The Spirits of those men in the sense we now propose This Active Spirit uses to discover and express it self as is befere noted in a strong Inclination vigorous Motion Elihu speaks of a Spirit in man Iob 32 8. which I suppose is the same to which he hath Reference v. 18. I am full of matter or words and the Spirit within me or of my Belly constraineth me v. 20. I will speak that I may be refreshed Now Elihu was the youngest of Iobs Friends as he himself intimates v. 6 7. and upon that account in part he is more earnest and copious then the rest the Ardour and Activity of his Spirit caused an eager desire in him to express his mind which he calls the Constraining of his Spirit But because there was somewhat of anger in the case besides his Youthful Warmth we shall have occasion to reflect upon this instance again and then shew more of this vigorous Motion and strong Inclination under the Head of Zeal to which we shall referr it 3. This Hotter Spirit is a Spirit of Courage Boldness to address Difficultys and meet with Evil. This shews it self divers ways 1. Sometimes in a wrath for War which God Stirs up or Abates as is agreeable to his own holy purposes Thus to Impoverish take and lead Captive the Idolatrous Israelites 1 Chron. 5. 26. The God of Israel stirred up the Spirit of Pull King of Assyria and Tilgath Pilneser King of Assyria and he carried them away The former took their Goods 2 King 15. 19. Menahem gave Pull a Thousand Talents of Silver that is an Hundred and Eighty Seven Thousand One Hundred pounds And he turned back and staid not in the Land This was a Vast Sum But the other came and swept all both Goods and Persons too On the other hand He Abates also Mens Courage and takes down their Spirits He shall cut off the Spirit of Princes He is terrible to the Kings of the Earth psal 76. 12. Thus Moses Prophecy of the Dukes of Edom and Inhabitants of Canaan Exod. 15. 16. Fear and Dread shall ●all upon them by the greatness of thine Arm they shall be as still as a stone till thy People pass over O Lord. And to the same effect is that Promise Ex. 11 7. But against any of the Children of Israel shall not a Dog move his Tongue The Genius and Spirit of a Dog is you know to Bark at Strangers This is an effect of Heat and Boldness in that Animal where it is but a little afraid but i● it be greatly Terrifyed it will then Run and hide it self in silence So some Men that would in their wicked Inclinations both Bite and Devour may be yet so far over awed by Gods Providence that they dare not so much as Bark at his People 2. Sometimes in a stout Resolvedness of Mind that will take no discouragement this is to have a Heart like that of a Lyon 2. Sam. 17. 10. Now a Lyon when a multitude of Sh●pheards is called forth against him will not be afraid of their voice nor a●ase himself for the noise of them Isay 31. 4 The contrary hereunto is a Spirit failing Isa. 19. 3. The Spirit of Aegypt shall fail or be emptied in the midst thereof t is said in the Precedent v 2 I will set Aegyptians against Aegyptians they shall fight They shall spend their Spirits or Courage among themselves but shall have no Spi●its left to defend their Country So t is said of the Amorites and Canaanites that heard of the drying up of Iordan which they accounted as their Moate and Fence against Israel Their heart melted neither wa● there Spirit in them any more Iosh. 5● 1 So that you see both ways in the Abundance and in the Defect Spirit Signifies Courage and Resolution Now if this Spirit be Unsanctifyed t is a stoutness in evil that will be ready to say with Pharoah Who is the Lord T is Obstinacy and Hardning Sihon King of Heshbon would not let us pass for the Lord had hardned his Spirit and made his Heart Obstinate Deut. ● 30. This may be also the meaning of the perverse Spirit mingled among the Egyptians Isa. 19. 14. that is a quarrelsome and contentious Spirit among themselves whereby their Councils were Divided and their Affairs Unsetled as a Drunken Man staggereth in his Vomit They had Spirit or Animosity enough against one the other but for Publik defence Aegypt shall be like unto Women they shall be afraid and fear v 16 And this Discovers one fault more in this Unsanctifi●● Spirit That it is Unstable Stout and Su●ly were it should be Humble and Meek Mean and Poor where it should be Brave and Resolute Such were the Rebellious Israelites Ps. 78. 8. a stubbor● and rebellious Generation that set not their hearts aright whose Spirit was not Stedfast with God It follows v. 9. that how Sturdy soever
he was Sick Distempered and his Spirit was out of Order 'T is an Evil both Natural Moral and Iudicial A Natural Prov. 17. 22. A Merry Heart doth Good like a Medicine but a Broken Spirit Dryeth the Bones i. e. Was●eth the Marrow and Impaireth the Health And it Tendeth also to Evil Moral and Iudicial too as you may observe in 2. Its Consequences It Disposeth to Sullen Discontent and peevish Frowardness both which are very Ugly as well as wicked Humours Sullen Discontent we may see in proud Haman who whatever his Natural Spirit was had a very Jolly one upon the Kings Favour Haman went forth that Day Ioyful and with a Glad Heart Esth. 5. 9. That Day It seems it was not always so Aspiring Pride and Sowerness of Spirit are frequently conjoyned because of the many obstructions Real and more apprehended that cross his Ambition But That Day and upon that particular Occasion he was very Merry This in him was Unsanctifyed and therefore Unstable and soon Al●ered to the contrary by a very slight matter for after he had Boasted among his Friends of all his Riches and Glory yet saith he All this availeth me nothing s● long as I see Mordecai the Iew sitting at the Kings Gate v. 13. What Remedy now in the Case His Wife advises him v. 14. Erect a Lo●y Gallows and get Mordecai Hanged thereon and Then go thou in Merrily with the King unto the Banquet No Merriment no Cure of the Sullens till Mordecai be Dispatched He was in a Desperate Case his Bones were all Rotten for that 's the Name of his Disease Prov. 14. 30. Envy is the Rottenness of the Bones and 't is likely he might have Died of Discontent if he had not soon after by the Gibbet Another such an Instance of Sullenness was Covetous Ahab whose Spirit was sad because he was Denyed Naboth's Vineyard 1 King 21. 5. which caused him to Loll on his Bed turn away his face and would not eat Bread like a pou●ing Child vext at heart that he could not have his Will proud Iezebe like Zeresh here 's another Wit of the Wi●e comes in with her Cur●ed Contrivance to Dry up Ahabs Tears by the Shedding of Naboth's Blood One would have thought that these Women because of the Natural Coldness and Moysture of their Sex should have been Authors of milder Counsels But their Unsanctifyed Hearts being filled with Devillish Pride makes them act contrary to that which should be their very Nature so virulent are Feminine Humours when Corruption on occasion turns them into Acids Dismissing these Two as they are you may if you please send in Iobs Wife with her Curse God and Die Job 2. 9. to make up the Number All. Tria sunt omnia Note only by the way That Old Wives Prescriptions are seldome good Remedies for sad and melancholly Husbands And this of Sullen Discontent Of the Froward Peevishness in this Colder and Mournful Spirit we have a Notable Instance in the Israelites who could not hear what was Reasonable and might be Comfortable to them God by Moses had sent them a very good and Gracious Word A Promise of their Deliverance of being their God and taking them to be his People And Moses spake so unto the Children of Israel But they hearkened not unto Moses for Anguish or Shortness or Spirit and for Cruel Bondage which was the occasion thereof Exod. 16. 9. They were in this Like weeping Rachel who Refused and would not be Comforted Mat. 2. 18. From these Instances besides frequent Experience we may Learn That the Consequents of a sad Unsanctifyed Spirit are Deplorable All manner of Evil Natural Moral and Iudicial Natural and Moral seem to be pointed at in that Expression 2 Cor. 7. 10. The sorrow of the world worketh Death This may referr to both 't is both a Sin and a Mischief as appears by the Antitheta in the former part of the verse Godly Sorrow worketh Repentance to Salvation not to be Repented of Therefore by the Rule of contrari●s Worldly Sorrow is Sin unto Destruction and to be Repented of by those who would avoid those Evils But more expresly is it Iudicial when God pronounces it as a Curse Ye shall Cry for sorro● of heart and shall Howl for vexation or Breaking marg of Spirit Isa. 65. 14 This if Unsanctified And yet by Sanctification a Mournful Spirit may become a Blessing it may Adapt and Incite to many Graces and Duties In that 2 Cor. 7. 10. worketh Repentance to Salvation not to be Repented of You 'l have no cause to be sorry for a so●rowful Spirit if your Tears be set to Run in a right Channel See more of the Bl●ssed Effects v. 11. Ye Sorrowed after a godly sort Behold what Carefulness it wrought in you what clearing of your selves yea what Indignation yea what Fear yea what vehement Desire yea what Zeal yea what Revenge Understand Indignation Fear and Revenge to Respect Sin and not men A Mournsul Spirit Sanctified Disposes to Prayer Hanna professes to Eli who had misapprehensions of her I am a Woman of a sorrowful Spirit and have poured out my Soul before the Lord 1 Sam. 1. 15. She wept inwardly as she mentally pra●ed and her Prayers and Tears were secretly mingled and poured out to her God she was in Bitterness of Soul and prayed unto the Lord and wept sore v 18. David often to this purpose Ps. 77. 2. In the Day of my Trouble I sought the Lord. When was that VVhen my Spirit was overwhe●med v. 3. So Ps. 142. 2 ● I poured out my Complaint before him I shewed before him my Tyouble when my Spirit was overwhelmed within me And in the next Ps. 143. 4. His Spirit was again Overwhelmed I stretched forth my hands unto thee v. 6. That Spirit which was wont to be full Fraught with Harmonious Praises is now Overset and another Service is appointed for him He Sayled joyfully in pleasant Gales but Storms find him other work The greatest Instance in meer man of a sorrowful Spirit was that of Iob in the Days of his Tryal His Complaint he Uttereth freely and Justi●yeth his so doing as of a natural Necessity His Case was sad His Spirit was Drunk up ch 6. 4. Drunk up as he expresses it That he had None Left to bear his Troubles The Spirit of a man will bear his Infirmity Pro. 18 14. But alas his Bearing Spirit is gone and nothing but a Broken and Burthened one is Left in him In this case he says I will not Refrain my mouth I will speak in the Anguish of my Spirit I will complain in the Bitterness of my Soul ch 7. 11. But his Cpmpl●i●● i● To God and not Of God As 〈…〉 my Complaint to man And if 〈…〉 why should not my Spirit be 〈…〉 ch 21. 4. And yet we may say of him in all this as was testified of him in the beginning In all this Iob sinned not nor charged God foolishly ch 1. 22.
Altho' Satan expected it from him v. 11. and ch 25. which indeed he would have done had not God Sanctified his sorrowful Spirit and preserved it Blameless VVhen Nebuchadnezzar Dreamed Dreams wherewith his Spirit was Troubled Dan. 2. 1. VVe find this Unsanctified Heathen fret and vex and require unreasonable things The Thing is gone from me I have quite forgot it yet Tell me the Dream and the Interpretation or ye shall be cut in pieces and your Houses made a Dunghil v. 5. So eager was he to be rid of his Troubled Spirit But Daniel thro' Sanctification was of another Temper in the like case ch 7. 15. I Daniel was grieved in my Spirit in the midst of my Body or sheath and the Visions of my Head troubled me He then seeks for satisfaction from God by Drawing near to his Angel v. 16. And though he say My Cogitations Troubled me and my Countenance changed in me v. 28 yet he was not in haste to be Rid of it But I kept the matter in my heart namely to be farther Meditated upon and to wait the Issue And indeed in all Troublesome Cases This is the Guise of a Gracious and Sanctified Spirit But of all other Ins●ances the Great Exemplar the Lord Iesus Christ is most to be Admired and Imitated in his Holy Mournful Spirit His Sorrow in Gethsemane when he approached near his Passion is thus set forth He began to be sore Amazed and to be very Heavy and saith My Soul is exceeding Sorrowful unto Death Mat. 14. 33 34. And what does he but pray That this Bitter Cup as Mathew or this Hour of Temptation as Mark might pass from him and being in an Agony be prayed more earnestly Luk. 22. 44. In this wrestling with God His Sweat was as it were great Drops or Clodders of Blood falling down to the Ground And yet notwithstanding all this Earnestness it was with the greatest Submission Nevertheless not as I will but as thou wilt v. 39. And thus much of the Sorrowful Cold Spirit 2. Is that Hotter Spirit Active and Vigorous This Colder is dull and weak a dull Spirit or Spirit of Heaviness as 't is call'd Isa. 61. 3. The Spirit of a man is the principle of his Activity It Disposes him Diligently to Teach as is before shewn and Diligently to Learn to make Diligent Search as t is expressed Psal. 77. 6. But this Dull Soul in it self is fit for neither The Spirit of man is also the principle of his Vigour and helps to bear his Burdens But this Spirit is in it self a Burden The Spirit of a man will sustain his Infirmity ●ut a Wounded Spirit who can Bear Prov. 18. 14. 'T is a weak and ●ainting Spirit much like that which was in the Queen of Sheba when she saw the Effects of Solomons Wisdom she was even astonished and there was no more Spirit in her 1 Kin. 10. 5. This Unsancti●yed is a pirtiful base and Useless Spirit Incli●ing only to Sottish Sl●th and Idleness It Renders unapt to Do or Receive any good When they should Teach they are Dumb Dogs and when they should Learn they have a Spirit of Sl●mber and of Deep Sleep Isa. 29. 10. and so proportionably in any other worthy Affair But if Sanctified Its slowness makes the surer work takes time for good Deliberation and helps to prevent much Rashness and Precipitance which Nimbler Spirits are more liable unto All Slowness is not Blameable Some are Duties as Slow to Wrath Prov. 14. 29. Slow to speak James I. 19. And where Slowness of Speech is an Infirmity yet this hinders not Gods making use of such in very Eminent Service as he did Moses Exod. 1. 10. And as to the Weakness of this Spirit It Leads to Dependance on Gods All-Sufficiency It is often an Effect of great Sorrow By Sorrow of heart the Spirit is Broken Prov. 15. 13. And the Crack'd or Broken Spirit as before noted is very weak but Sanctified it is accompanied with Faith And then it makes Prayerful in Applications to God for help Hear me speedily O Lord my Spirit faileth I have no strength of my own to Bear up against the Floods I will cry unto thee when my heart or Spirit is overwhelmed Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I. Ps. 61. 2. 3. Is That Spirit Bold Resolute and Confident The Colder one is Timorous and humbly yielding 'T is Little in it self and commonly Less in its own Eyes It Designs no great things nor is fit for any Great Undertaking But is apt to shun all things that appear any way Dangerous This if Unsanctifyed is a Base Pusitanimity a mean poor cowardly and creeping Spirit Unfit for Doing and Notable Good or Suffering and Considerable Evil. Such will never be Martyrs for or Confessors of any valuable Truth This Spirit like Issachar stoops under the Burden of every Imposing and Tirannical Humour without the least opposition or Resentment so as it will easily let go Christian or Civil Liberty And even Tempt the proud to Trample on their Neck It gives way not only for a moment a short time in matters that will bear it upon prudent Considerations But gives up for good and all as we use to speak without any consideration at all The former is Good Fencing the latter is Base Cowardise which opens a careless Gap that not only Suffers but Invites Trespassers This Spirit is a Saddled Ass ready to be Rid at pleasure and is most mischievous in a Church where are Diotrephian Spirits and Ruinous to a State where Tyranny would be playing pranks Such are men Born to be Slaves for whose Unreasonable Yielding their Posterity will have cause to Curse them As to the performance of Necessary Duties They always imagine Lions in the way and in the least appearance of a Difficulty they are ready to fancy Insuperables and thereby Inhance Discouragements so that they Tremble tho' it be but at the shaking of a Lea● Lev. 26. 36. I will send a faintness into their hearts and the sound of a shaking Leaf shall Chase them and they shall flee as fleeing from a Sword and they shall fall when none pursueth To Fear where no Fear is is not only a Iudicial Misery but it is also too often a Sin Derived from Unbelief as against frequent Commands Fear not neither be Dismayed Fear not their Fear be not afraid of their Faces c. And a Sin it seems of the worst Character as Ushering in the Bedroul of Abominable Wickedness in that Denunciation Rev. 21. 18. But the Fearful and Unbelieving and the Abominable and Murtherers and Whoremongers and Sorcerers and Idolaters and all Liars shall have their part in the Lake that Burneth This Spirit it self is not a Sin so far as it Depends on Natural Causes 'T is no Evil for a Woman to be Less Couragious then a man or to be more afraid upon apparent Danger But when Fear is Habituated or Acted by Unbelief for ●hen it
whe●●e the word for signifies either as much as or Instead of and then it Imports that a Spirit of Judgment is fit for Judges as Strength and Courage is for Souldiers or else it signifies the same with that ch 1. 26. I will Restore thy Iudges as at first and thy Counsellors as at the beginning that is by Raising up either in Providential Dispensations or special Qualifications men that should b● Repairers of their Breaches and Restorers of paths to dwell in ch 58. 12. from all which it appears that this Moderate Spirit is not only apt to be Governed but also it is fit to Rule and Govern in the World because of the Wisdom and Discretion that is used to accompany it especi●lly when it is Sanctified and Over-ruled by God As to that General Vertue in respect to the Will or Volitive Faculty to which it is Adapted as the Philosophers faelix temperies happy temperament by Sanctification these Moral Vertues become True Graces In Heathens where is no Sanctification yet if God Excites their Spirits they become eminently Serviceable So Cyrus who was of a Generous Noble Temper in himself yet how much did he act above himself when God stirred up his Spirit 2 Cor. 36. 22. The Lord stirred up the Spirit of Cyrus King of Persia upon which he Issues forth a Noble Proclamation v. 23. It was Cyrus his Spirit tho' stirred by God and Inclined to this special Service But where Sanctification Renews the whole man and gives New Principles and Ends in all their Actions The whole Nature of their Laudible Atchievements is also changed so that their Natural Spirit of Candour becomes the Character of a Blessed man in whose Spirit there is no Guile Psal. 32. 2. Their Fidelity comes from that Faithful Spirit which on just occasion Concealeth the matter and is commended for it Prov. 11. 13. Their Moderation of Affections is also from a principle that not only Restrains as Heathen Morals do but Mortifyes the Affections and Lusts. Gal. 5. 24. Col. 3. 5 Their Firmness is farther fortifyed by Might in the Inner-man Eph. 3. 16. whereby they are stedfast unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord. 1 Cor. 15. 18. for if their well-considered Reasons do fix their purposes Much more will their well-grounded Faith establish them In a word it s own Nature is Lovely But Grace super-induced renders it most Exemplary Amiable and Useful in the World And thus we have done with the Diversity of Spirits that are in men The Hot the Cold and the Moderate How they Differ in Themselves and how they are farther Differenced by Natural Corruption or Sanctifying Grace We shall now Reflect upon what has been said and with some few practical Inferences conclude the present Discourse INFERENCE 1. And by considering well the many Scriptures that have been alledged we may fairly see That 't is no strained Notion which is the Design of this present Treatise It must indeed be acknowledged that in many of those Scriptures the word Spirit may be taken in some of the common Senses put upon it As for Instance it may be taken for the Soul in general and in some for the Inward Part as an Expression of Sincerity But to take it for the Higher Faculties of Intellect and Will as the Rational part contradistinct from the Soul or from the Liver This tho' it be the most common and approved Interpretation of this Text I must confess I do not see sufficient Reason to allow it I do not find to my Understanding the word so taken in any other Scripture And therefore I take it to be but a strained Sense and thought of only for this particular place because of some Difficulty that appeared therein 'T is true indeed there is one Scripture usually alledged Heb. 4. 12. wherein Soul and Spirit are Distinguished one from the other of which place Dr. Smith in his Portraiture of Old Age hath Discoursed and Laboured to Evince That Spiri● there signifies the Superiour Faculties of man And Soul the Inferiour This Discourse of the Doctor 's was Considered in a former Draught on this Subject which now because that Ingenious Gen●leman is some Years since gone to his Rest I think fit to omit only he that has Leisure may compare what is there said with what we have said of the same Scripture in the beginning of this Discourse and then judge as he sees meet And as for the many other places quoted wherein Mans Spirit is mentioned on which I now Desire you to Reflect I suppose you will judg with me That they may for the most part be very genuinely understood in our sense and that the Interpretation of those Scriptures will according to our proposed sense be very Currant 2. We may also hence In●err That 't is Unjust and Unchristian to Cen●●re a●d Cond●mn men for their Humane Spirits To blame the Diversity of them is to quarrel Gods Work of Creation or Providence Why hast thou made me or him thus Rom. 9. 20. for Natural Temper and Modification of it by Outward Circumstan●es is more Dependent on his Will then our Industry We should rather observe how all this variety of Spiri●s may be made Eminently Servi●●●ble for that every Spirit has its particular Natural Excellency Tho' all have not that wherein thou perhaps mayst peculinly Excel One Servant of God is Chearful and Sings at his work Another goes sadly and carefully about it for fear of miscarriage yet both may be good and Faithful Servants and neither shall Lose his Reward but Enter into his Masters Joy Surely the Manifold Wisdom of God would not be so well made known by the Church in many Respects as Eph. 3. 10. Nor the Manifold Grace of God 1 Pet. 4. 10. If every man having Diversity of Gifts Did not so Minister even as he hath Received the Gift In the 1 Cor. 12. is a Large Discourse of Diversities of Gifts v. 4. Administrations v. 5. Operations v. 6. All by the same Spirit and all Tending to the same holy Ends Gods Glory and the Churches good The following verses set forth the Church under the Parable of a Humane Body wherein every Member has its peculiar Ability and Use so as the Eye cannot say to the Hands or the Head to the Feet I have no need of you v. 21. But all are Servicea●le in their place and kind This he says he wrote that there should be no Schism But the Members should have the same care or regard one for another v. 25. If this were well considered and a Charitable Estimate made of every mans several Spirit or Genius it would much advance Love Unity and Mutual Honour among Christians Remove that Censorious Offensive and Froward Temper in many that doth so much Disturb Peace and Tranquility both in Church and State and incline every man to think and say if I Excel any man in some things He may Excel me in many more USE 3. We may hence