Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n custom_n good_a great_a 175 3 2.1563 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A62616 Sermons, and discourses some of which never before printed / by John Tillotson ... ; the third volume.; Sermons. Selections Tillotson, John, 1630-1694. 1687 (1687) Wing T1253; ESTC R18219 203,250 508

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

difficulty ariseth partly from the general nature of habits indisserently considered whether they be good or bad or indifferent partly from the particular nature of evil and vitious habits and partly from the natural and judicial consequences of a great progress and long continuance in an evil course By the consideration of these three particulars the extreme difficulty of this change together with the true causes and reasons of it will fully appear 1. If we consider the nature of all Habits whether good or bad or indifferent The custom and frequent practice of any thing begets in us a facility and easiness in doing it It bends the powers of our Soul and turns the stream and current of our animal Spirits such a way and gives all our faculties a tendency and pliableness to such a sort of actions And when we have long stood bent one way we grow settled and confirmed in it and cannot without great force and violence be restored to our former state and condition For the perfection of any habit whether good or bad induceth a kind of necessity of acting accordingly A rooted habit becomes a governing Principle and bears almost an equal sway in us with that which is natural It is a kind of a new nature superinduced and even as hard to be expelled as some things which are Primitively and Originally natural When we bend a thing at first it will endeavour to restore it self but it may be held bent so long till it will continue so of it self and grow crooked and then it may require more force and violence to reduce it to its former streightness than we used to make it crooked at first This is the nature of all habits the farther we proceed the more we are confirmed in them and that which at first we did voluntarily by degrees becomes so natural and necessary that it is almost impossible for us to do otherwise This is plainly seen in the experience of every day in things good and bad both in lesser and greater matters 2. This difficulty ariseth more especially from the particular nature of evil and vitious habits These because they are suitable to our corrupt nature and conspire with the inclinations of it are likely to be of a much quicker growth and improvement and in a shorter space and with less care and endeavour to arrive at maturity and strength than the habits of grace and goodness Considering the propension of our depraved nature the progress of vertue and goodness is up the hill in which we not onely move hardly and heavily but are easily roll'd back but by wickedness and vice we move downwards which as it is much quicker and easier so is it harder for us to stop in that course and infinitely more difficult to return from it Not but that at first a sinner hath some considerable checks and restraints upon him and meets with several rubs and difficulties in his way the shame and unreasonableness of his vices and the trouble and disquiet which they create to him But he breaks loose from these restraints and gets over these difficulties by degrees and the faster and farther he advanceth in an evil course the less trouble still they give him till at last they almost quite lose their force and give him little or no disturbance Shame also is a great restraint upon sinners at first but that soon falls off and when men have once lost their innocence their modesty is not like to be long troublesome to them For impudence comes on with vice and grows up with it Lesservices do not banish all shame and modesty but great and abominable crimes harden mens foreheads and make them shameless Were they ashamed saith the Prophet when they committed abomination nay they were not ashamed neither could they blush When men have the heart to do a very bad thing they seldom want the face to bear it out And as for the unreasonableness of vice though nothing in the World be more evident to a free and impartial judgment and the sinner himself discerns it clearly enough at his first setting out in a wicked course Video meliora probóque Deteriora sequor He offends against the light of his own mind and does wickedly when he knows better yet after he hath continued for some time in this course and is heartily engaged in it his foolish heart is darken'd and the notions of good and evil are obscured and confounded and things appear to him in a false and imperfect light His lusts do at once blind and byass his understanding and his judgment by degrees goes over to his inclinations and he cannot think that there should be so much reason against those things for which he hath so strong an affection He is now engaged in a Party and factiously concerned to maintain it and to make the best of it and to that end he bends all his wits to advance such principles as are fittest to justifie his wicked practices and in all debates plainly savours that side of the Question which will give the greatest countenance and encouragement to them When men are corrupt and do abominable works they say in their hearts there is no God that is they would fain think so And every thing serves for an Argument to a willing mind and every little objection appears strong and considerable which makes against that which men are loath should be true Not that any man ever satisfied himself in the Principles of Infidelity or was able to arrive to a steady and unshaken persuasion of the truth of them so as not vehemently to doubt and fear the contrary However by this means many men though they cannot fully comfort yet they make a shift to cheat themselves to still their Consciences and lay them asleep for a time so as not to receive any great and frequent disturbance in their course from the checks and rebukes of their own minds And when these restraints are removed the work of iniquity goes on amain being favoured both by wind and tide 3. The difficulty of this change ariseth likewise from the natural and judicial consequences of a great progress and long continuance in an evil course My meaning is that inveterate evil habits do partly from their own nature and partly from the just judgment and permission of God put men under several disadvantages of moving effectually towards their own recovery By a long custome of sinning mens Consciences grow brawny and seared as it were with a hot iron and by being often trampled upon they become hard as the beaten road So that unless it be upon some extraordinary occasion they are seldom awakened to a sense of their guilt And when mens hearts are thus hard the best counsels make but little impression upon them For they are steel'd against reproof and impenetrable to good advice which is therefore seldom offered to them even by those that wish them well because they know it to be both unacceptable and unlikely to prevail It
seeing them in this heat notwithstanding all the reasons they pretended for their passion and for all they sheltered themselves under the great Example of Elias doth very calmly but severely reprove this temper of theirs Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of for the Son of Man is not come to destroy mens lives but to save them Grotius observes that these two excellent Sentences are lest out in a Manuscript that is in England I cannot tell what Manuscript he refers to but if it were a Copy written out in the height of Popery no wonder if some zealous Transcriber offended at this passage struck it out of the Gospel being confident our Saviour would not say any thing that was so directly contrary to the current Doctrine and practice of those times But thanks be to God this admirable Saying is still preserv'd and can never be made use of upon a fitter occasion Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of That is Ye own your selves to be my Disciples but do you consider what spirit now acts and governs you Not that surely which my Doctrine designs to mould and fashion you into which is not a furious and persecuting and destructive spirit but mild and gentle and saving tender of the lives and interests of men even of those who are our greatest Enemies You ought to consider That you are not now under the rough and sowr Dispensation of the Law but the calm and peaceable Institution of the Gospel to which the spirit of Elias though he was a very good man in his time would be altogether unsuitable God p rmitted it then under that imperfect way of Religion but now under the Gospel it would be intolerable For that designs universal love and peace and good-will and now no difference of Religion no pretence of zeal for God and Christ can warrant and justifie this passionate and fierce this vindictive and exterminating spirit For the Son of Man is not come to destroy mens lives but to save them He says indeed elsewhere that he was not come to send Peace but a Sword which we are not to understand of the natural tendency of his Religion but of the accidental event and effect of it through the malice and perverseness of men But here he speaks of the proper intention and design of his coming He came not to kill and destroy but for the healing of the Nations for the salvation and redemption of Mankind not onely from the wrath to come but from a great part of the evils and miseries of this life He came to discountenance all fierceness and rage and cruelty in men one towards another to restrain and subdue that furious and unpeaceable Spirit which is so troublesome to the world and the cause of so many mischiefs and disorders in it And to introduce a Religion which consults not only the eternal Salvation of mens souls but their temporal peace and security their comfort and happiness in this world The words thus explained contain this Observation That a revengeful and cruel and destructive Spirit is directly contrary to the design and temper of the Gospel and not to be excused upon any pretence of zeal for God and Religion In the prosecution of this Argument I shall confine my Discourse to these Three heads First To shew the opposition of this spirit to the true Spirit and design of the Christian Religion Secondly The unjustifiableness of it upon any pretence of zeal for God and Religion Thirdly to apply this Discourse to the occasion of this Day First I shall shew the opposition of this spirit to the true Spirit and design of the Christian Religion That it is directly opposite to the main and fundamental Precepts of the Gospel and to the great Paterns and Examples of our Religion our Blessed Saviour and the Primitive Christians 1. This spirit which our Saviour here reproves in his Disciples is directly opposite to the main and fundamental Precepts of the Gospel which command us to love one another and to love all men even our very enemies and are so far from permitting us to persecute those who hate us that they forbid us to hate those who persecute us They require us to be merciful as our Father which is in Heaven is merciful to be kind and tender-hearted forbearing one another and forgiving one another if any man have a quarrel against any even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven us And to put on as the elect of God bowels of mercy meekness and long-suffering and to follow peace with all men and to shew all meekness to all men And particulary the Pastors and Governors of the Church are especially charged to be of this temper The servant of the Lord must not strive but be gentle unto all men apt to teach in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves if peradventure God will give them repentance to the acknowledgment of the truth To all which Precepts and many more that I might reckon up nothing can be more plainly opposite than inhumane Cruelties and Persecutions treacheroos Conspiracies and bloody Massacres a barbarous Inquisition and a holy League to extirpate all that differ from us And instead of instructing in meekness those that oppose themselves to convert men with fire and faggot and to teach them as Gideon did the men of Succoth with briars and thorns and instead of waiting for their repentance and endeavouring to recover them out of the snare of the Devil to put them quick into his hands and to dispatch them to Hell as fast as is possible If the precepts of Christianity can be contradicted surely it cannot be done more grosly and palpably than by such practises 2. This spirit is likewise directly opposite to the great Paterns and Examples of our Religion our Blessed Saviour and the Primitive Christians It was prophesied of our Saviour that he should be the Prince of peace and should make it one of his great businesses upon earth to make peace in heaven and earth to reconcile men to God and to one another to take up all those feuds and to extinguish all those animosities that were in the world to bring to agreement and a peaceable demeanour one towards another those that were most distant in their tempers and interests to make the lamb and the wolf lie down together that there might be no more destroying nor devouring in all Goll's holy mountain that is that that cruel and destructive spirit which prevailed before in the world should then be banished out of all Christian societies And in conformity to these predictions when our Saviour was born into the world the Angels sang that heavenly Anthem Glory to God in the highest peace on earth and good will among men And when he appeared in the world his whole life and carriage was gentle and peaceable full of meekness and charity His great business was to be beneficial to others to seek and to save that which was lost
he went about doing good to the bodies and to the souls of men his miracles were not destructive to mankind but healing and charitable He could if he had pleased by his miraculous power have confounded his enemies and have thundred out death and destruction against the Infidel world as his pretended Vicar hath since done against Hereticks But intending that his Religion should be propagated in human ways and that Men should be drawn to the profession of it by the bands of love and the cords of a man by the gentle and peaceable methods of Reason and perswasion he gave no example of a furious zeal and religious rage against those who despised his Doctrine It was propounded to men for their great advantage and they rejected it at their utmost peril It seemed good to the Author of this institution to compell no man to it by temporal punishments When he went about making proselytes he offered violence to no man only said If any man will be my disciple If any man will come after me And when his disciples were leaving him he does not set up an Inquisition to torture and punish them for their defection from the faith only says Will ye also go away And in imitation of this blessed Patern the Christian Church continued to speak and act for several Ages And this was the language of the holy Fathers Lex nova non se vindicat ultore gladio the Christian Law doth not avenge it self by the sword This was then the style of Councils Nemini ad credendum vim inferre to offer violence to no man to compell him to the Faith I proceed in the Second place to shew the Vnjustifiableness of this spirit upon any pretence whatsoever of zeal for God and Religion No case can be put with Circumstances of greater advantage and more likely to justify this spirit and temper than the case here in the Text. Those against whom the Disciples would have called for fire from heaven were Hereticks and Schismaticks from the true Church they had affronted our Saviour himself in his own person the honour of God and of that Religion which he had set up in the World and of Jerusalem which he had appointed for the place of his worship were all concerned in this case so that if ever it were warrantable to put on this fierce and furious zeal here was a case that seemed to require it But even in these circumstances our Saviour thinks fit to rebuke and discountenance this spirit Ye know not what manner of spirit ye are of And he gives such a reason as ought in all differences of Religion how wide soever they be to deter men from this temper For the Son of man is not come to destroy mens lives but to save them that is this Spirit is utterly inconsistent with the great design of Christian Religion and the end of our Saviour's coming into the world And now what hath the Church of Rome to plead for her cruelty to men for the cause of Religion which the Disciples might not much better have pleaded for themselves in their case what hath she to say against those who are the objects of her cruelty and persecution which would not have held against the Samaritans Does she practice these severities out of a zeal for truth and for the honour of God and Christ and the true Religion Why upon these very accounts it was that the Disciples would have called for fire from Heaven to have destroyed the Samaritans Is the Church of Rome perswaded that those whom she persecutes are Hereticks and Schismaticks and that no punishment can be too great for such offenders So the Disciples were perswaded of the Samaritans and upon much better grounds Only the Disciples had some excuse in their case which the Church of Rome hath not and that was Ignorance And this Apology our Saviour makes for them ye know not what manner of spirit ye are of They had been bred up in the Jewish Religion which gave some indulgence to this kind of temper and they were able to cite a great Example for themselves besides they were then but learners and not throughly instructed in the Christian Doctrine But in the Church of Rome whatever the case of particular persons may be as to the whole Church and the Governing part of it this ignorance is wilful and affected and therefore inexcusable For the Christian Religion which they profess to embrace does as plainly teach the contrary as it does any other matter whatsoever and it is not more evident in the new Testament that Christ died for sinners than that Christians should not kill one another for the misbelief of any Article of revealed Religion much less for the disbelief of such Articles as are invented by men and imposed as the Doctrines of Christ You have heard what kind of Spirit it is which our Saviour here reproves in his Disciples It was a furious and destructive Spirit contrary to Christian charity and goodness But yet this may be said in mitigation of their fault that they themselves offered no violence to their enemies They left it to God and no doubt would have been very glad that he would have manifested his severity upon them by sending down fire from Heaven to have consumed them But there is a much worse Spirit than this in the world which is not only contrary to Christianity but to the common Principles of Natural Religion and even to Humanity it self Which by falshood and perfidiousness by secret plots and conspiracies or by open sedition and rebellion by an Inquisition or Massacre by deposing and killing Kings by fire and sword by the ruine of their Country and betraying it into the hands of Foreigners and in a word by dissolving all the bonds of humane Society and subverting the peace and order of the World that is by all the wicked ways imaginable doth incite men to promote and advance their Religion As if all the world were made for them and there were not only no other Christians but no other Men besides themselves as Babylon of old proudly vaunted I am and there is none besides me And as if the God whom the Christians worship were not the God of order but of confusion as if he whom we call the Father of mercies were delighted with cruelty and could not have a more pleasing sacrifice offered to him than a Massacre nor put a greater honour upon his Priests than to make them Judges of an Inquisition that is the Inventors and decreers of torments for men more righteous and innocent than themselves Thus to misrepresent God and Religion is to devest them of all their Majesty and Glory For if that of Seneca be true that sine bonitate nulla majestas without Goodness there can be no such thing as Majesty then to separate goodness and mercy from God compassion and charity from Religion is to make the two best things in the world God and Religion good for
at once from two of the most dangerous temptations of this world Idleness and Poverty and by degrees reclaim'd them to a vertuous and industrious course of life which enabled them afterwards to live without being beholden to the charity of others And this course so happily devis'd and begun by Mr. Gouge in his own Parish was I think that which gave the first hint to that worthy and usefull Citizen Mr. Thomas Firmin of a much larger design which hath been prosecuted by him for some years with that vigour and good success in this City that many hundeds of poor Children and others who liv'd idle before unprofitable both to themselves and the publick are continually maintain'd at work and taught to earn their own livelihood much in the same way He being by the generous assistance and charity of many worthy and well-dispos'd Persons of all ranks enabled to bear the unavoidable loss and charge of so vast an undertaking and by his own forward inclination to charity and his unwearied diligence and activity extraordinarily fitted to sustain and go through the incredible pains of it But to return to our deceased Friend concerning whom I must content my self to pass over many things worthy to be remembred of him and to speak only of those Vertues of his which were more eminent and remarkable Of his Piety towards God which is the necessary foundation of all other Graces and Vertues I shall only say this That it was great and exemplary but yet very still and quiet without stir and noise and much more in substance and reality Than in shew and ostentation and did not consist in censuring and finding fault with others but in the due care and government of his own life and actions and in exercising himself continually to have a conscience void of offence toward God and toward men in which he was such a proficient that even after a long acquaintance and familiar conversation with him it was not easie to observe any thing that might deserve blame He particularly excell'd in the more peculiar vertues of conversation in modesty humility meekness cheerfulness and in kindness and charity towards all men So great was his modesty that it never appear'd either by word or action that he put any value upon himself This I have often observ'd in him that the Charities which were procur'd chiefly by his application and industry when he had occasion to give an account of them he would rather impute to any one who had but the least hand and part in the obtaining of them than assume any thing of it to himself Another instance of his modesty was that when he had quitted his Living of S. Sepulchres upon some dissatisfaction about the terms of conformity he willingly forbore preaching saying there was no need of him here in London where there were so many worthy Ministers and that he thought he might do as much or more good in another way which could give no offence Only in the later years of his life being better satisfi'd in some things he had doubted of before He had License from some of the Bishops to preach in Wales in his progress which he was the more willing to do because in some places he saw great need of it and he thought he might do it with greater advantage among the poor People who were the more likely to regard his instructions being recommended by his great charity so well known to them and of which they had so long had the experience and benefit But where there was no such need he was very well contented to hear others perswade men to goodness and to practice it himself He was clothed with humility and had in a most eminent degree that ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which S. Peter says is in the sight of God of so great price So that there was not the least appearance either of Pride or Passion in any of his words or actions He was not only free from anger and bitterness but from all affected gravity and moroseness His conversation was affable and pleasant he had a wonderful serenity of mind and evenness of temper visible in his very countenance he was hardly ever merry but never melancholly and sad and for any thing I could descern after a long and intimate acquaintance with him he was upon all occasions and accidents perpetually the same always cheerfull and always kind of a disposition ready to embrace and oblige all men allowing others to differ from him even in opinions that were very dear to him and provided men did but fear God and work righteousness he lov'd them heartily how distant soever from him in judgment about things less necessary In all which he is very worthy to be a pattern to men of all Perswasions whatsoever But that Vertue which of all other shone brightest in him and was his most proper and peculiar character was his cheerful and unwearied diligence in acts of pious Charity In this he left far behind him all that ever I knew and as I said before had a singular sagacity and prudence in devising the most effectual ways of doing good and in managing and disposing his charity to the best purposes and to the greatest extent always if it were possible making it to serve some end of Piety and Religion as the instruction of poor children in the principles of Religion and furnishing grown persons that were ignora n with the Bible and other good Books strictly obliging those to whom he gave them to a diligent reading of them and when he had opportunity exacting of them an account how they had profited by them In his occasional alms to the poor in which he was very free and bountiful the relief he gave them was always mingled with good counsel and as great a tenderness and compassion for their souls as bodies which very often attain'd the good effect it was likely to have the one making way for the other with so much advantage and men being very apt to follow the good advice of those who give them in hand so sensible a pledge and testimony of their good will to them This kind of charity must needs be very expensive to him but he had a plentiful estate settled upon him and left him by his Father and he laid it out as liberally in the most prudent and effectual ways of charity he could think of and upon such persons as all circumstances considered he judg'd to be the fittest and most proper objects of it For about nine or ten years last past he did as is well known to many here present almost wholly apply his charity to Wales because there he judg'd was most occasion for it And because this was a very great work he did not only lay out upon it whatever he could spare out of his own estate but employ'd his whole time and pains to excite and engage the charity of others for his assistance in it And in this he had two
rather desires if it may be to be of the number of those who shall be found alive at the coming of Christ and have this mortal and corruptible body while they are clothed with it changed into a spiritual and incorruptible body without the pain and terrour of dying of which immediate translation into heaven without the painfull divorce of soul and body by death Enoch and Elias were examples in the old Testament It follows ver 5. Now he that hath wrought for us the self same thing is God That is it is he who hath fitted and prepared us for this Glorious change who also hath given us the earnest of the Spirit The Spirit is frequently in Scripture called the witness and seal and earnest of our future happiness and blessed resurrection or change of these vile and earthly bodies into spiritual and heavenly bodies For as the resurrection of Christ from the dead by the power of the holy Ghost is the great proof and evidence of immortality so the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwelling in us is the pledge and earnest of our Resurrection to an immortal life From all which the Apostle concludes in the words of the Text Therefore we are always confident that is we are always of good courage against the fear of death knowing that whilst we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may better be rendred whilst we converse or sojourn in the body than whilst we are at home Because the design of the Apostle is to shew that the body is not our house but our tabernacle and that whilst we are in the body we are not at home but pilgrims and strangers And this notion the Heathens had of our present life and condition in this world Ex vita discedo faith Tully tanquam ex hospitio non tanquam ex domo commorandi enim natura diversorium nobis non habitandi locum dedit We go out of this life as it were from an Inn and not from our home nature having designed it to us as a place to sojourn but not to dwell in We are absent from the Lord that is we are detained from the blessed sight and enjoyment of God and kept out of the possession of that happiness which makes Heaven So that the Apostle makes an immediate opposition between our continuance in the body and our blissfull enjoyment of God and lays it down for a certain truth that whilst we remain in the body we are detained from our happiness and that so soon as ever we leave the body we shall be admitted into it knowing that whilst we converse in the body we are absent from the Lord. And ver 8. we are willing rather to be absent from the body and present with the Lord intimating that so soon as we quit these bodies we shall be admitted to the blessed sight and enjoyment of God My design from this Text is to draw some useful Corollaries or Conclusions from this Assertion of the Apostle That whilst we are in these bodies we are detained from our happiness and that so soon as ever we depart out of them we shall be admitted to the possession and enjoyment of it And they are these 1. This Assertion shews us the vanity and falshood of that Opinion or rather dream concerning the sleep of the Soul from the time of death till the general Resurrection This is chiefly grounded upon that frequent Metaphor in Scripture by which death is resembled to sleep and those that are dead are said to be fallen asleep But this Metaphor is no where in Scripture that I know of applied to the soul but to the body resting in the grave in order to its being awakened and raised up at the Resurrection And thus it is frequently used with express reference to the body Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake Matth. 27.52 And the graves were opened and many bodies of saints which slept arose Acts 13.36 David after he had served his own generation by the will of God fell on sleep and was laid to his fathers and saw corruption which surely can no otherwise be understood than of his body 1 Cor. 15.21 Now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that slept that is the resurrection of his body is the earnest and assurance that ours also shall be raised And ver 51. We shall not all sleep but shall all be changed where the Apostle certainly speaks both of the death and change of these corruptible bodies 1 Thessal 4.14 If we believe that Jesus died and rose again even so them also that sleep in Jesus shall God bring with him That is the bodies of those that died in the Lord shall be raised and accompany him at his coming So that it is the body which is said in Scripture to sleep and not the soul For that is utterly inconsistent with the Apostles Assertion here in the Text that while we are in the body we are absent from the Lord and that so soon as we depart out of the body we shall be present with the Lord. For surely to be with the Lord must signifie a state of happiness which sleep is not but only of inactivity Besides that the Apostle's Argument would be very flat and it would be but a cold encouragement against the fear of death that so soon as we are dead we shall fall asleep and become insensible But the Apostle useth it as an Argument why we should be willing to dye as soon as God pleaseth and the sooner the better because so soon as we quit these bodies we shall be present with the Lord that is admitted to the blissful sight and enjoyment of him and while we abide in the body we are detained from our happiness But if our souls shall sleep as well as our bodies till the general Resurrection it is all one whether we continue in the body or not as to any happiness we shall enjoy in the mean time which is directly contrary to the main scope of the Apostle's Argument 2. This Assertion of the Apostle's doth perfectly conclude against the feigned Purgatory of the Church of Rome which supposeth the far greater number of true and faithful Christians of those who dye in the Lord and have obtained eternal redemption by him from hell not to pass immediately into a state of happiness but to be detained in the suburbs of Hell in extremity of torment equal to that of hell for degree though not for duration till their fouls be purged and the guilt of temporal punifhments which they are liable to be some way or other paid off and discharged They suppose indeed some very few holy persons especially those who suffer Martyrdom to be so perfect at their departure out of the body as to pass immediately into Heaven because they need no purgation But most Christians they
off all Religion He that unworthily useth or performs any part of Religion is in an evil and dangerous condition but he that casts off all Religion plungeth himself into a most desperate state and does certainly damn himself to avoid the danger of damnation Because he that casts off all Religion throws off all the means whereby he should be reclaimed and brought into a better state I cannot more fitly illustrate this matter than by this plain Similitude He that eats and drinks intemperately endangers his health and his life but he that to avoid this danger will not eat at all I need not tell you what will certainly become of him in a very short space There are some conscientious persons who abstain from the Sacrament upon an apprehension that the sins which they shall commit afterwards are unpardonable But this is a great mistake our Saviour having so plainly declared that all manner of sin mall be forgiven men except the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost such as was that of the Pharisees who as our Saviour tells us blasphemed the Holy Ghost in ascribing those great miracles which they saw him work and which he really wrought by the Spirit of God to the power of the Devil Indeed to sin deliberately after so solemn an engagement to the contrary is a great aggravation of sin but not such as to make it unpardonable But the neglect of the Sacrament is not the way to prevent these sins but on the contrary the constant receiving of it with the best preparation we can is one of the most effectual means to prevent sin for the future and to obtain the assistence of God's grace to that end And if we fall into sin afterwards we may be renewed by repentance for we have an advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous who is the propitiation for our sins and as such is in a very lively and affecting manner exhibited to us in this blessed Sacrament of his body broken and his bloud shed for the remission of our sins Can we think that the primitive Christians who so frequently received this holy Sacrament did never after the receiving of it fall into any deliberate sin undoubtedly many of them did but far be it from us to think that such sins were unpardonable and that so many good men should because of their carefull and conscientious observance of our Lord's Institution unavoidably fall into condemnation To draw to a conclusion of this matter such groundless fears and jealousies as these may be a sign of a good meaning but they are certainly a sign of an injudicious mind For if we stand upon these Scruples no man perhaps was ever so worthily prepared to draw near to God in any duty of Religion but there was still some defect or other in the disposition of his mind and the degree of his preparation But if we prepare our selves as well as we can this is all God expects And for our fears of falling into sin afterwards there is this plain answer to be given to it that the danger of falling into sin is not prevented by neglecting the Sacrament but encrcased because a powerfull and probable means of preserving men from sin is neglected And why should not every sincere Christian by the receiving of this Sacrament and renewing his Covenant with God rather hope to be confirmed in goodness and to receive farther assistences of God's grace and holy Spirit to strengthen him against sin and to enable him to subdue it than trouble himself with fears which are either without ground or if they are not are no sufficient reason to keep any man from the Sacrament We cannot surely entertain so unworthy a thought of God and our blessed Saviour as to imagine that he did institute the Sacrament not for the furtherance of our Salvation but as a snare and an occasion of our ruine and damnation This were to pervert the gracious design of God and to turn the cup of Salvation into a cup of deadly poison to the souls of men All then that can reasonably be inferred from the danger of unworthy receiving is that upon this consideration men should be quickned to come to the Sacrament with a due preparation of mind and so much the more to fortifie their resolutions of living sutably to that holy Covenant which they solemnly renew every time they receive this holy Sacrament This consideration ought to convince us of the absolute necessity of a good life but not to deter us from the use of any means which may contribute to make us good Therefore as a learned Divine says very well this Sacrament can be neglected by none but those that do not understand it but those who are unwilling to be tyed to their duty and are afraid of being engaged to use their best diligence to keep the commandments of Christ And such persons have no reason to fear being in a worse condition since they are already in so bad a state And thus much may suffice for answer to the first Objection concerning the great danger of unworthy receiving this holy Sacrament I proceed to the 2. Second Objection Obj. 2. which was this That so much preparation and worthiness being required to our worthy receiving the more timorus sort of Christians can never think themselves duly enough qualified for so sacred an Action For a full Answer to this Objection I shall endeavour briefly to clear these three things First That every degree of Imperfection in our preparation for this Sacrament is not a sufficient reason for men to refrain from it Secondly That a total want of a due preparation not only in the degree but in the main and substance of it though it render us unfit at present to receive this Sacrament yet it does by no means excuse our neglect of it Thirdly That the proper Inference and conclusion from the total want of a due preparation is not to cast off all thoughts of receiving the Sacrament but immediately to set upon the work of preparation that so we may be fit to receive it And if I can clearly make out these three things I hope this Objection is fully answered 1. That every degree of imperfection in our preparation for this Sacrament is not a sufficient reason for men to abstain from it For then no man should ever receive it For who is every way worthy and in all degrees and respects duly qualified to approach the presence of God in any of the duties of his Worship and Service Who can wash his hands in innocency that so he may be perfectly fit to approach God's Altar There is not man on earth that lives and sins not The Graces of the best men are imperfect and every imperfection in grace and goodness is an imperfection in the disposition and preparation of out minds for this holy Sacrament But if we do heartily repent of our sins and sincerely resolve to obey and perform the terms of the Gospel and of
to have been engaged in an evil course preserve their innocency with great tenderness and care as the greatest Jewel in the World No Man knows what he do's and what a foundation of trouble he lays to himself when he forfeits his innocency and breaks the peace of his own mind when he yields to a Temptation and makes the first step into a bad course He little thinks whither his lusts may hurry him and what a monster they may make of him before they have done with him 2. Those who have been seduced but are not yet deeply engaged in an evil course let them make a speedy retreat lest they put it for ever out of their power to return Perhaps their feet onely are yet ensnared but their hands are at liberty and they have some power left whereby with an ordinary grace of God they may loose and rescue themselves But after a while their hands may be manacled and all their power may be gone and when they are thus bound hand and foot they are just prepared and in danger every moment to be cast into utter darkness 3. As for those who are gone very far and are grown old in vice who can forbear to lament over them for they are a sad spectacle indeed and the truest object of pity in the World And yet their recovery is not utterly to be despaired of for with God it is possible The spirit of God which hath withdrawn himself or rather hath been driven away by them may yet be persuaded to return and to undertake them once more if they would but seriously rosolve upon a change and heartily beg God's assistance to that purpose If we would take up a mighty resolution we might hope that God would afford a miraculous grace to second it and make it effectual to our recovery Even in this perverse and degenerate Age in which we live God hath not been wanting to give some miraculous instances of his grace and mercy to sinners and those perhaps equal to any of those we meet with in Scripture of Manasses or Mary Magdalen or the penitent Thief both for the greatness of the offenders and the miracle of their change To the end that none might despair and for want of the encouragement of an example equal to their own case be disheartned from so noble an enterprize I am loth to put you in mind how bad some have been who yet have been snatched as Firebrands out of the fire and that in so strange a manner that it would even amaze a Man to think of the wonder of their recovery those who have sunk themselves into the very depth of infidelity and wickedness have by a mighty hand and out-stretched arm of God been pluckt out of this horrible Pit And will we still stand it out with God when such great Leaders have given up the cause and have surrendred and yielded up themselves willing Captives to the grace of God that omnipotent grace of God which can easily subdue the stoutest heart of Man by letting in so strong a light upon our minds and pouring such terrible convictions into our consciences that we can find no ease but in turning to God I hope there are none here so bad as to need all the encouragement to repentance which such examples might give them encouragement I say to repentance for surely these examples can encourage no Man to venture any farther in a wicked course they are so very rare and like the instances of those who have been brought back to life after the sentence of death seemed to have been fully executed upon them But perhaps some will not believe that there have been such examples or if there have they impute all this either to a disturbed imagination or to the faint and low spirits of Men under great bodily weakness or to their natural cowardize and fear or to I know not what foolish and fantastical design of completing and finishing a wicked life with an hypocritical death Nothing surely is easier than to put some bad construction upon the best things and so slurr even repentance it self and almost dash it out of countenance by some bold and perhaps witty saying about it But oh that Men were wise oh that Men were wise that they understood and would consider their latter end Come let us neither trifle nor dissemble in this matter I dare say every man's Conscience is convinced that they who have led very ill lives have so much reason for repentance that we may easily believe it to be real However of all things in the world let us not make a mock of repentance that which must be our last sanctuary and refuge and which we must all come to before we die or it had been better for us we had never been born Therefore let my counsel be acceptable unto you break off your sins by repentance and your iniquities by righteousness And that instantly and without delay lest any of you be hardned through the deceitfulness of sin If we have been enslaved but a little to a vitious course we shall find it a task difficult enough to assert our own liberty to break these bonds in sunder and to cast these cords from us But if we have been long under this bondage we have done so much to undoe our selves and to make our case desperate that it is God's infinite mercy to us that there is yet hope Therefore give glory to the Lord your God before he cause darkness and your feet stumble upon the dark mountains and while you look for light he turn it into darkness and the shadow of death I will conclude with that encouraging invitation even to the greatest of sinners to repentance from the mouth of God himself Isa 55. Incline your ear and come unto me hear and your Soul shall live seek the Lord while he may be found and call upon him while he is near Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy and to our God for he will abundantly pardon To him let us apply out selves and humbly beseech him who is mighty to save that he would stretch forth the right hand of his power for our deliverance from this miserable and cruel bondage of our lusts and that as the rain cometh down from Heaven and returneth not thither but watereth the earth and maketh it to bring forth and bud so he would grant that his word may not return void but accomplish his pleasure and prosper in the thing to which he sent it For his mercy sake in Jesus Christ To whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be all honour and glory now and for ever Amen MATTTHEW XXIII 13. Woe unto you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites for ye shut up the Kingdom of Heaven against Men and ye neither go in your selves neither suffer ye them that are entring to go in THE Scribes so often mentioned in the Gospel