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A13554 The progresse of saints to full holinesse described in sundry apostolicall aphorismes, or short precepts tending to sanctification, with a sweete and divine prayer to attaine the practise of those holy precepts / by Thomas Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1630 (1630) STC 23850; ESTC S1019 235,792 462

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lost Secondly other graces serve to the well-being or comfort of a Christian as sense of Gods favour peace of conscience joy in the holy Ghost alacrity in good duties sense and feeling of comfort in that estate these and the like may be quite lost David himselfe may pray Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation Psal. 51.12 Againe for the kindes of graces wee are to know that some are true saving graces as faith love zeale c. which are given to such as are effectually called fruites of the Spirit proper to the elect springing only in their gardens these cannot be wholly quenched although where these be the Spirit may be sore grieved as by Sampson David Peter Other graces are excellent but common not saving not sanctifying tending more to others good than their salvation that have them such as are historicall faith justice chastity temperance these and many the like may be quite quenched and never remembred As wee see in Saul 1 Sam. 16.14 The Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul namely which had beene present with him in many common graces and the evill spirit came upon him and in Iudas who had many excellent gifts yet it is said of him that the Divell entred into him who never comes but hee makes waste of all grace II. For the degrees of grace they are foure 1. Election 2. Iustification 3. Sanctification 4. Vocation Of these two are wholly laid out of our selves two are within our selves In the two former Election and Iustification a man cannot increase nor yet decay being two simple acts of God once wrought in him by himselfe immediatly and rooted in Christ who being the roote dies not and no more can the living branches in him The two latter because they are wrought mediatly by such outward meanes as are not alwayes alike may receive both increase and decrease A man may fall wholly from his vocation for Many are called but few chosen Matth. 22.14 and from a great measure of sanctification and from the whole comfort of true sanctification seeing nothing in his soule but the presence of corruption yea from many degrees of the soundest graces attending justification and eternall life Yet here some care is preserved in the heart of the elect by the Lord so as all sound grace is not quenched Here the case is as heretofore in the Romans warre if onely the top of the standart were stricken off the standart-bearer holding still the trunchion in his hand lost neither office nor honour but if hee lost the trunchion and suffered that to be beaten out of his hand he lost both So in our Christian warre if all care in the heart be expelled the honour and place of Christianity is lost and then men fall not away from their election but they that were never elected fall away Thus we see the meaning of this precept directed to beleevers who have received the Spirit for fire cannot be quenched but where it is that they should not quench the Spirit that it is not to be meant of an utter extinguishing of saving graces which cannot be but not to suffer any grace to be quenched in the brightnesse measure or degree of it this fire must be so farre from being quite put out that it must not be slackened or lessened it must be so farre from totall quenching as they must not let it decay in part or in any degree of it We come now to the points of instruction that this exposition affoords us The first is this All the godly have the Spirit of God else could he not be quenched this fire cannot be quenched but where it is Rom. 8.9 Ye are in the Spirit because the Spirit of God dwelleth in you and If a man have not the Spirit of God the same is not his Hence the godly are called the temples of the holy Ghost in whom he dwelleth as in his temples 2 Cor. 13.5 Prove your selves know yee not that the Spirit of God is in you unlesse you be reprobates 1 Ioh. 2.20 Yee have the anoynting which abideth in you Object The Spirit being infinite he is also in the wicked Answ. 1. He is one way in the wicked as in all other things by the infinitenesse of his essence another way in the godly by the presence of his grace and blessed effects 2. Hee is graciously present both with the wicked and godly but the former in common and generall graces the latter in speciall and saving graces In the former hee dwells as in the world for the good of the world and societies of men In the latter hee dwells as in his temples for the perfecting of the blessed communion of Saints both in grace and glory In the one by grace restraining in the other by renewing grace Reasons of the point are these 1. Members must needes have the same Spirit with the head as a branch hath the same sappe with the roote and as every member liveth by the same soule that the head doth This is the Apostles reason Rom. 8.11 The same Spirit that raised up Iesus from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies because his Spirit dwelleth in you 2. Christs promise is that his Spirit should supply his bodily absence Ioh. 16.7 It is meete I goe away else the Comforter shall not come but if I depart I will send him unto you for greater is our comfort in Christs bodily absence then wee could have in his bodily presence wee must not now gaze upon his holy flesh but the blessed merit of it If wee should alwayes corporally see wee could not spiritually beleeve saith Augustine Now Christ hath carried our flesh to heaven and opened the way by his flesh to our flesh in our flesh makes requests and prepareth places for us and supplies that comfort in the meane while by sending out his Spirit to glad our hearts 3. This commeth to passe by Christs effectuall and powerfull prayer Ioh. 14.16 I will pray the Father and he shall send you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever Now he was heard in all things Ioh. 11.42 But for whom prayeth he Answ. First for the Apostles and then for those that keepe the word and beleeve Ioh. 17.20 He prayeth not for the world verse 9. And for what prayeth he Answ. For a Spirit whom the world knoweth not neither can receive but the elect know him For ye know him for he dwelleth in you and shall be with you all Ioh. 14.17 4. The manifest accomplishment both of the promise and prayer proveth that the regenerate have the spirit of Christ in them Gal. 4.6 And because ye are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts which cryeth Abba Father Christs intercession is not a forcelesse prayer but according to his promise he sends out the Spirit which sending forth is not by change of place but by manifesting his operation in the gifts
in thy estimation doe now seeme lesse and lesse dangerous if sometimes thou couldest not be comforted in the sence of sinne and the same sinne now move thee nothing at all thou couldst not abide cursed speaking in others now thou fallest to it thy selfe thou couldst not away with idle and gracelesse companions now thou canst now hast thou quenched the spirit 2. If thou be apt to rush into sinne once conquered thy strength is abated 3. If thou be unwilling to heare any of thy sinnes reproved the spirit is quenced because he rebuketh sinne 4. If the word and rodde preserve thee not from sinne the spirit is not present in thee 5. If after sinne committed thou doest not more hate it and sorrow for it than before thou lovedst it and rejoycedst in it if thou hast not a more constant care to avoid sinne than before yea if thou hast not a greater zeale in doing good know for a certaine that some sinne in thee or other is as water cast upon the spirit Fifthly and lastly examine thy selfe concerning the worke of Gods Spirit on thy affections thus If thy love of heavenly things be abated or be more to earth than to heaven if thy joy be troubled if thy conscience be perplexed with accusations if there be in thee an excessive feare of death or the like certainly the spirit is now quenched looke well unto it Object Alas I have found my affections more fiery than now they be I have had a great measure of zeale for God much indignation against sinne fervent affection in Gods service joy in God comfort in my selfe and in good duties but now it is not so with me I could never attaine the like affections as at first what may I thinke of my selfe Answ. We must wisely distinguish of the diffusing of grace from the decaying of it In earthly marriage love will be more vehement at first because lesse diffused but afterward is rather more extended than languishing so it is in the heate of grace But how may I know it thus 1. If thou be displeased that thou canst not get thy heart to the highest pitch of delight in grace 2. If thou still hungrest after grace and a further measure as one that hath tasted hony desireth more so having tasted of the spirit doest earnestly desire a greater measure of it 3. Stickest thou to the meanes in publicke and in private and wilt not be driven off still lying at the Poole where the spirit mooveth then discourage not thy selfe but goe on comfortably this small affection toward the Lord and his grace be it but as a graine of mustard seed it shall outgrow all choke weedes and master and kill whatsoever affections would overtop it So much for the second use Thirdly seeing negative precepts include the affirmative every Christian must hence be stirred up to stirre up the gift of God that is in him and not suffer it to decay 2 Tim. 1.6 A fit lesson even for Timothy himselfe For first the Spirit is ever working something in Gods children worthy the stirring up he is no where idle but still beautifying perfecting his own dwelling 2. Every Christian hath some graces to stirre up else were there no difference betweene him and a naturall man who wants the Spirit 3. No Christian hath any grace so perfect but it needes stirring up where growth is there is no perfection 4. Without stirring the fire dies so the Spirit for which cause the Apostle useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blow up Quest. What meanes may wee use to blow up the Spirit Answ. 1. The word of God in the publicke and private use of it First the preaching of the word as it begets so it nourisheth grace The Ministry is instituted and gifts given to men not onely to lay to foundation of our happinesse but to build us up till we meet together in a perfect body Ephes. 4.11 12 13. Naturall food strengthens the body by the daily use of it spiritual food strengthens the soule by the continuall use of it Those that say they know as much as they neede or as much as the Preacher can tell thē never truly saw their great weaknesse for let any good conscience say if it neede not the word continually David a man of singular grace yet lay fouly in his sinnes till Nathan came and stirred him saying Thou art the man Despise Prophecy and quench the Spirit where vision faileth grace perisheth Secondly the word must be privately read and conversed in for such is the excellency and power of it that it transformes the minde conversant in it unto it selfe and to be affected as the pen-men were holily and graciously Besides it begets and furthers found judgement whereas others erre not knowing the Scriptures and it stirres up good affections and gracious desires Againe the word must be meditated on in private without which hearing and reading are to little purpose Psal. 1.1 Blessed is the man that meditates in the law of the Lord continually And here is mutuall helpe for hearing and reading doe feede meditation and meditation doth fasten them Why else hath God given man a reasonable soule but to meditate upon his word and workes Or why else hath he set apart a whole day in seaven especially for meditation if it were not a notable meanes to excite grace Or why else did our Lord take all occasions from the workes of God to teach and instruct us but for our example that we should tread in his holy steppes We see the first meanes 2. The Sacraments were instituted to strengthen our faith which in it selfe is weake and to keepe in continuall memory the covenant betweene God and us with the meanes thereof yea the very preparation to them includeth a speciall meanes of stirring up our graces of repentance of renewing our faith of obedience thankfulnesse and all the meanes of growth in the covenant And much more strength doth a good heart finde in the celebration of them Therefore to forbeare them of contempt argues no member of Christ and of negligence to forbeare is to cast ones selfe into the judgement of God 3. Prayer sets all graces on worke as faith in Gods promises charity toward our brethren hope which lookes for the performance of that we pray for humility in confession of sinnes and sense of wants thankfulnesse for supplies and leave to pray and by exercise in prayer wee get the spirit of prayer Luke 11.13 Our Father will not deny his Spirit to them that aske him 4. Company or commerce with the godly doth exceedingly sharpen our graces One candle lights another and one sticke of fire kindles another A lesser sticke may kindle a billet so the strongest Christian may receive furtherance from the weakest Paul himselfe might be comforted by the Romanes chap. 1.12 And when Silas came Paul burned in the Spirit But how can one coale alone by it selfe keepe it selfe glowing Yea evill men
are never pluckt away therefore never cease to be sheepe 2. To these sheepe are promised eternall life therefore so long shall they be sheepe even for all eternity 3. The Fathers power is above all temptations therefore suffers nothing to make them of sheepe no sheepe for then they might be plucked away 4. Though themselves would fling out of the fold being foolish and straying yet have a good shepheard and by him are preserved in grace to salvation 5. Even this prayer in the Text is a prayer of faith and therefore the Thessalonians must persevere A prayer of faith argues both the presence of the Spirit whose voice the Lord cannot but heare and the voice of a childe whom the father will not repell Quest. But if the Thessalonians shall persevere till the comming of Christ why doth the Apostle pray so earnestly it seemes very needlesse nay rather such earnest petitions seeme to make their case very hazardous and imply they may fall away Answ. Prayers for perseverance imply not any possibility of falling away but plainely shew which the Apostle aimes at here that assurance of perseverance makes no godly man secure or profane but implieth a condition of unblameable walking and preserving himselfe unspotted of the world 2. They teach us to depend on God for the last grace as well as the first and give him the praise as well of our perseverance as our entrance into grace for he gives his Spirit into our hearts that we should not depart from him Contrary to the doctrine of the Church of Rome which teacheth that God gives us the first grace by which wee become good but wee merit a second grace by which of good we become better 3. All such prayers as this teach us to joyne the end and the meanes together as God doth It is not in vaine to pray not to fall away though the elect cannot fall away First because it is an obedience to Gods commandement Secondly a testimony that we depend on his strength and promise for perseverance Thirdly that wee looke to attaine the gift in in Gods owne meanes of conveying them of which prayer is one of the chiefe Would wee not want grace wee must not be wanting in prayer They are farre wide that conceive prayer and perseverance repugnant for they are subordinate and assistant one to another Object We finde the Saints praying that the Lord would not take his holy Spirit from them that he would create a new Spirit in them Sol. Not because the Spirit is either quite taken away or quite gone But First because he is taken from them not in respect of his existence but of his operation for he is not so powerfully working Secondly not in respect of the saving gift but of the measure degree and comfort of it Thirdly the Spirit where once he is is not quite gone in respect of himselfe but in their sense and apprehension Now this is no good argument They feele him not therefore hee is not there no more than a man in a swoone can be concluded dead because he discernes not his life Fourthly and lastly by prayer wee retaine the Spirit and the renewing grace of the Spirit both in respect of sense and existence prayer being Gods meanes to keepe the Spirit from departing from us 4. This and all such prayers for perseverance being prayers of faith are therefore so much more earnest because wee know that God will grant us the grace prayed for Hee will never pray that beleeves not that God will grant his prayer But the Saints therefore pray because they beleeve to speede Eliah 1 King 18.42 knew it would raine and tolde Ahab so yet hee goes and prayes for it Christ knew his Father would glorifie him yet he prayes he would so doe hee well knew none of his Disciples should perish but Iudas yet he prayeth to that purpose And this is not in vaine but a performance of worship to God a possessing of grace in a right title and tenure and a sweetning of the mercy which wee have gotten by prayer and prevailing with God The Apostle implies in Christs comming that Christ is now absent from us that is in respect of his body hee is not present in earth neither circumscriptive nor diffinitive nor repletive for then he could not come to us if hee were with us already True it is that Christ is spiritually present with his Church to the end of the world according to his promise of his spirit and grace Christ is also sacramentally present 1. Ratione signi hee is represented in the signe 2. Ratione objecti for he is the present object of our faith whereby wee behold and partake him being present in the word of promise But corporally he is not present neither in the Supper nor any place where the Supper is celebrated nor in the bread 1. Because Christ professed when hee was to ascend that hee was to leave the world and goe to the Father Ioh. 16. but the bread is in the world therefore Christ now ascended is not in it 2. Hee expresly denies that hee should be with us on earth after his ascension Matth. 26. The poore yee have alwayes with you but mee not alwayes If they fly to their old shift of invisible conversation or quoad statum humilitatis that is in respect of his humility Christ spake without any such limitation Mee yee shall not have alwayes 3. Our high Priest is gone with his body into the heavenly Sanctuary and if hee be not there hee ceaseth to be our high Priest Heb. 8.4 If they say he is on earth but not visibly what should an invisible high Priest do in earth where all Priests were ever visible 4. Even the bread in which they say he is present corporally is a signe and argument of his corporall absence because it must be received in memory of him Now memory is of a thing absent and therein we declare the Lords death till this his comming 1 Cor. 11. And here we may note also that Christ will come againe according to his body Acts 1.11 and Hebr. 9.28 He shall come the second time to the salvation of them that waite for him hee comes but twice corporally once to merit salvation and againe to perfect it 1. Then let us waite for this comming as a loving spouse longs for her husbands returne out of a farre Countrey 2. Love this comming of Christ when the glory of Christ shall breake out as the Sunne in his strength which is now clouded and vailed First by his bodily absence Secondly by the affliction and poverty of his Church Thirdly by the insolency and pride of his enemies But then his glory shall appeare and shall be glorious in himselfe and all the Saints 2. Because the innocency of the Saints shall then be cleared to the faces of the wicked and their labours shall be recompenced with invisible reward 3. Prepare
distressed consciences 107 Sound doctrine must be strongly held for 3 reasons 127 Doctrine of faith all grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 343 E. Eare to be shut 5 rules 288 Hearing eare knowne by 3 notes 291 Elias sinned not in calling for fire from heaven but the Disciples did two differences 116 Eye must be watched in 5 things 282 Why we must carefully order our eyes 4 reasons 287 Examples of Scripture warrant not our marriage with IIdolaters 3 reas 162 Examples to uphold our perseverance 4. 330 F. No fall so wofull as to fall from grace 16 False rules of triall of things 6. 73 Ancient Fathers avoided all conformity with heretickes in their externall ceremonies Instances 160 Fantasticall and forreigne fashions of apparell condemned 5 Arguments 122 Faithfull is God 4 wayes 334 Faithfulnesse in the Creator and creature differ in 4 things Ibid. Faithfulnesse required in our promises 339 In our callings 340. In our friendship 341. In communicating our talents 342 Faithfulnesse of God preserveth to salvation all that are effectually called 4 reasons 385 Fearfull is the condition of that man that repines at a powerfull and faithfull Ministry 3 reasons 406 Fire of the Spirit how quenched 3 Fire of grace violently smothered how 22 Folly of those that neglect the assurance of their owne salvation 4 reasons 365 Forefathers way no sure rule of tryall 5 reasons 77 Foure excellent fruits in avoiding petty evills 152 Sweet fruits of well guiding our affections 6. 270 G. Gifts of the Spirit to be observed in our selves for 4 reasons 26 Gifts of God which and how without repentance 390 Godly by the inhabitation of the Spirit both honoured and comforted 9 Godly must be carefull not to quench the Spirit 5 reasons 14 God called the God of peace 3 reas 175 Godlinesse makes no man unpeaceable or turbulent 188 Godly company a meanes of growth in holinesse 3 wayes 213 God to be glorified in our bodies how 273 God must be glorified in our bodies 3 reasons 274 God is most faithfull 4 reasons 336 Glory of Christ now vailed 3 wayes 310 True goodnesse groweth from good to better and so is best at last 227 No good must be held but after tryall 132 Good things must be carefully held and kept for 5 reasons 125 Good actions spoyled in undue circumstances 113 Graces of the Spirit compared to fire in 5 things 3 Grace quenched in what degrees 5 Graces of some kindes not wholly extinct 4 Grace as fire suffered to die of it selfe 3 wayes 20 Grace in others must be excited 3 reasons 37 Grieve the Spirit 4 wayes 25 Growth in holinesse rare 4 proofes 220 Grounds on which the prayers of people for their Ministers must be raised 3. 401 H. Hand to be ordered 5 rules 292 The heart must be kept pure for the pure Spirit of God 10 For keeping the heart 5 generall rules 247 The heart how bounded within Gods limits 3 directions 252 We must hate where the Lord hateth 4 instances 261 Hatred of evill knowne by the practise of the contrary vertue 165 Helpes of perseverance 5. 327 Wee must hold onely that which is good and all that is good 132 Humility in lowest degree pretended by seducers 64 I. Iesuiticall confusion of phrases hath beene the confusion of the world 95 No Iewells to be so carefully kept as our soul●s and spirits 2 reas 232 and 4 reasons more 235 Image of God must be gotten not onely into our nature but into our conversation 277 Implicit popish faith refu●ed 69 No imperfection hinders Gods faithfulnesse 4 Instances 337 Illumination is not sanctification 4 reas 205 In all indifferent things 〈◊〉 are to avoid all appearance of evill and scandall with 4 limitations 149 Indifferent things to be forborne for edification with 4 cautions 117 The inside to be washed first for 5 reasons 236 Invocation of Saints departed derogateth from the glory of God 97 L. Lawes humane imperfect rules of life for 4 reasons 81 Lots of perseverance to be removed 5. 324 Losse of worldly things no losse to losse of spirituall graces 143 Love our neighbor as our selves with what conditions 116 We must love most where God most loveth 4 instances 260 M. Man by nature more prone to any evill than to the least good 3 reasons 67 Manifold mischiefes which overtake the despisers of Prophecy 5 instances 45 Man of God 1 Kings 13.6 praying in an Idolatrous Temple no warrant for us 4 reasons 157 Marriage with Idolaters unlawfull 4 reasons 161 Marks of effectuall calling reduced to 3 generall heads 370 Meanes of quenching the Spirit 3. 20 Meanes to blow up the Spirit 7. 33 Meanes to embrace Prophecy 5. 48 Meanes of holding that which is good 4. 137 Meanes of maintaining sound peace of conscience 5. 185 Meanes of attaining a full measure of holinesse 209 Meanes to keepe the tongue blamelesse 4. 298 Meanes of perseverance in generall 3. 322 Meanes by which God keepeth his owne 4. 394 Meditations helping the increase of holinesse 1. Concerning God 3 2. Concerning our selves 4 3. Concerning holines it self 209 Meditations to stablish us against persecutions 326 Members must be weapons of righteousnesse how and why 275 Memory how to be kept unblameable in 2 things 245 Men of greatest grace neede the prayers of weaker Christians 3 reasons 398 Merits humane against analogy of faith 91 Merit an ambitious word in reference to man not found in Scripture 100 Ministers must not onely preach but pray for their people 3 reasons 172 Ministery powerfull must be conscionably embraced for 3 reasons 42 Mischiefe of disordered affections 266 Motions of the Spirit much different in the godly and wicked 4 instances 18 Motions of the Spirit to be observed 36 Motives to stirre up the Spirit 4. 33 Motives to carefull use of meanes of quickening the Spirit 3. 38 Motives to full sanctification 6. 221 Motives to perseverance 5. 329 Motives to finde in our selves the sure signes of effectuall calling 4. 383 Monasticall life refuted by 6 reasons 93 Multitude of voices not to be numbred but weighed 56 N. Naamans practise no warrant for us to be present at Idolatrous service for three reasons 158 Name of a Christian hath in it many motives to grow up to full holinesse 226 Necessary duties must be done though all the world be offended 148 Necessity of increasing in holinesse 4 reas 203 Necessity of carefull keeping our selves drawne from our selves in 4 things 233 Necessity of well guiding our thoughts 4 reasons 245 Necessity of well ordering our affections 2 reas 268 O. Obedience of faith all grounded upon Gods faithfulnesse 344 Right objects of our affections in which they must be most vehement and intense 258 Choyse objects for the eye 5. 284 Objections against perseverance answered 304 Objections from infirmities of our prayers answered 400 Outward man must be kept blamelesse 3 reasons 300 P. All peace must be from the God of peace 3 reas 179 No peace to be affected but
time hopest thou to finde for his wages hast thou leisure for every thing but to be saved what time wilt thou attaine the end that hast no time for use of the meanes or art thou all body without an immortall soule or is there is no further use of thy soule but to be as salt a while to keepe thy body sweete Is all thy care for a ruinous house and never mindest the tenant within I marvell not to heare our Lord say that it is a very hard thing for a rich man to enter into heaven but I never heard him say that it is impossible for a man to be rich and religious too Object And I saith the poore man can spare no time as the rich may doe I am oppressed with a great charge and must intend my family c But art thou poore and wantest many necessaries there cannot be a stronger motive to attaine this one thing necessary Art thou poore in earthly blessings and wilt thou not therefore be rich in heavenly and spirituall graces Hast thou no house land nor inheritance to rejoyce in Thou shouldst so much the more make Gods testimonies thine heritage for ever and the joy of thy heart 2. It is true men of meaner estates had need be good husbands of their times and estates but yet they must conceive that piety and seeking of God is an enemy to thrift and good husbandry Mary was no bad houswife in sitting downe at the feete of Christ and it was the blot of Marthaes houswifrie that she did not so too Is godlines great gain fearest thou it wil only bring want poverty Must onely that hinder our thrift and prosperitie that hath the promise of this life as well as of that to come and which onely gets blessing on our labours from him who onely gives power to get substance How farre is this from trusting God on his word who hath assured us that whosoever feare him rich or poore they shall want nothing that is good for them By all which that hath been said we may conclude that it is not the strength of any argument made against this holy care but strength of corruption that removes unsetled and unstable mindes from the practise of it This I have set downe for the use and direction of such as heartily desire to be led in the right way and for the incouragement of such as seeke the Lord constantly in his ordinances on all good occasions hoping that it may somewhat confirme them that no blast or objection of prophane persons may either blow them away or weaken their frequent and reverent use of Gods most sacred ordinances And now Christian Reader I commend thee unto God this booke to thy godly use and my selfe unto thy godly prayers Aldermanbury London Novemb. 17. 1630. Thine in Christ THO TAYLOR THE PROGRESSE OF SAINTS TO FVLL HOLINESSE 1 THESSAL 5.19 Quench not the Spirit THE holy Apostle in this Chapter setting downe and enforceing a number of rules for true sanctification addes this also as a principall part of holinesse Not to quench the Spirit Here wee must inquire and finde out 1. What is the Spirit 2. What it is to quench the Spirit I. By the Spirit in Scripture is meant 1. The blessed Spirit of God promised by Christ to be given us Ioh. 14 16. and dwelling in the elect as his owne temples 1 Cor. 6.19 inspiring them with all good thoughts motions and affections 2. The gifts and graces of the Spirit such as wisedome knowledge counsell the feare of the Lord peace joy long-suffering called the fruites of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 So it is said that Iohn Baptist was filled with the Spirit Luk. 1.15 that is the graces of the Spirit 3. The motions of the Spirit in the minde stirring up good desires and purposes Psal. 51.10 Renew a right Spirit within me This is called the leading of the Spirit Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sonnes of God All are here meant even the presence of the Spirit in us for gifts and operations and motions presuppose the presence of the Spirit II. Quench not This is a Metaphor taken from fire which giving heate and light in great measure is quenched or extinguished In which respect the Spirit and his graces are compared to fire Mat. 3.11 So in other respects also 1. Fire enlighteneth darke places so the Spirit is a shining lampe in the darknesse of this world and therefore called the Spirit of Illumination 1 Ioh. 1.5 6. 2. Fire heateth and warmeth yea reviveth and quickeneth so the Spirit warmeth the Christian heart with love of God and of men inflameth it with zeale and makes it burne within us as the Disciples going to Emaus Luk. 24.32 and he revives us in the wayes of God 3. Fire consumeth straw and stubble so doth the Spirit consume noysome lusts Rom. 8.13 If ye mortifie the deedes of the body by the Spirit ye shall live 4. Fire purifieth mettalls so the Spirit purgeth the heart from the drosse of sinne seperates pure from impure truth from falshood 1 Cor. 6.11 5. Fire ascendeth upward kindles our sacrifices and makes them also to ascend so the Spirit kindles our prayers and makes us ascend toward heaven in holy affections and holy conversation Againe fire is quenched two wayes First by putting it out quite as by casting water upon it violently extinguishing or smothering of it And secondly by slacking or lessening the heate and light of it when yet some fire remaineth So the Spirit of God and his graces are quenched either when grace is wholly lost which formerly seemed clearely to shine and burne or when grace is lost in part and any grace suffered to decay and die in us Quest. Can grace be wholly quenched or decay where it is Answ. Consider here a twofold distinction first distinguish of persons some are hypocrites or wicked and obstinate sinners who may well lose all the grace that ever they have as Saul and Iudas did who had many excellent graces Some are godly who have received true faith true hope c. and these may lose some fruites and effects of the Spirit by security and as it were slake the heate and light and warmth and comfort of the Spirit but they doe never wholly quench the Spirit for the Spirit abideth in them for ever Ioh. 14.16 And the seede of God remaineth in them 1 Ioh. 3.9 else could it not be an immortall seede as 1 Pet. 1.23 Secondly distinguish of graces both for their kindes and for their degrees I. For the kindes of graces wee are to know first that some graces are of absolute necessitie and serve to the being of a Christian without which salvation cannot be as faith hope and love these maine graces are like the fire of the Sanctuary which never went out these can never be lost quite they may be lessened and decay but can neither wholly nor finally be
but walke in it Isa. 30.21 This note the Apostle give us Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sonnes of God Implying that we are as blinde men before conversion and afterward as children both having neede to be led The fourth is Sanctification and new creation 1 Cor. 6.11 Now you are sanctified by the Spirit of our God both enabling you by mortification to hate evill and quickning you to love that which is good which love is made manifest by the fruits of the Spirit Both are put together Gal. 5.13 Walke in the Spirit and yee shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh The fifth is sound Consolation for hee is the Comforter 3 wayes 1. Sealing up our adoption and salvation Rom. 8.15 16. therefore called the Seale or Earnest confirming the whole bargaine 2. Strengthening in temptation and spirituall combate for the spirit of God takes our part in the strife betweene the flesh and the spirit 3. Comforting in affliction by peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost which made the Martyrs invincible The sixth is Supplication for hee is called the Spirit of supplication Zech. 12.10 and makes us cry Abba Father Gal. 4.6 Because 1. hee makes us see our misery 2. he gives us sound knowledge of the excellency of God and his mercies which maketh us fervent in prayer 3. hee lets us see God appeased toward us in his Sonne 4. he propounds the truth of God in his promise who hath said hee will heare us and 5. the merit of Christs intercession to whom the Father denieth nothing By these notes examine thy selfe So much for the first Doctrine we come now to the second which is that Those that have the spirit of God must be carefull not to quench it The Text implies that in the best the Spirit is subject to be quenched where it shines brightest and in the meanest and poorest Christian of the weakest grace much more a small sparke of fire is easily quenched and will decay if it be not blowne up and preserved And the Apostle exhorteth all Heb. 12.15 Let no man fall from the grace of God no man rich nor poore in grace high or low no man not the hypocrite who shall fall from all grace nor the sound Christian who may fall from many degrees and much comfort but is preserved from falling by the feare of falling and a care not to fall for God susteines him inwardly by his preserving grace and outwardly by the word preventing security Therefore Revel 2.25 That thou hast already holde fast till I come And 1 Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinketh hee standeth take heede lest hee fall All which sheweth that the state of grace is lubricus ad lapsum that is slippery and in danger of falling First The Spirit comes not wee say with a wet finger nor without labour and desire he is not powred but upon thirsty grounds nor obtained without much sorrow mortification and cleansing of the heart he will not dwell in a sty nor set up his Temple in the denne of a darke and deceitfull heart Now when a man hath with such difficulty got the Spirit into his soule shall he by quenching him lose his labour suffer so many things in vaine and suddenly cast downe what hee hath beene so long a setting up Shall he be so foolish as to begin in the spirit and end in the flesh Gal. 3.3 Secondly The spirit of God with his graces are the earnest of our salvation 2 Cor. 5.5 The pledge of our inheritance Ephes. 1.14 The chiefe witnesse with our spirits that wee are the children of God Rom. 8.16 By which we call God Abba Father Yea he is that holy Spirit both in his nature being the fountaine of holinesse and in his effect making us holy By whom wee are sealed to the day of our redemption This is a Metaphor taken from Merchants who having bought some choyce commodities doe seale them for their owne to know them againe So the Lord by his spirit sealeth his owne both to distinguish them from others and to set them apart as his owne and also to make their election firme and sure by setting his owne seale and Image upon them Shall we then quench this spirit who alone preserveth our holinesse peace comfort boldnesse with God and assurance of our owne salvation Thirdly To quench the spirit is farre more damnable than to want him altogether for this is Apostasie than which nothing doth more provoke the vengeance of God against men Heb. 10.26 If we sinne willingly after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaines no more sacrifice for sinne but a fearefull expectation of judgement c. And this the godly themselves can justifie what torture they have in their soules when they have in part quenched the spirit As David roared day and night and his bones consumed Psal. 32.3 4. And Peter went out and wept bitterly Matth. 26. ult And such as now let no sorrow come neere them for their relapses shall finde the more behinde Fourthly Of all falls the fall from grace is most wofull 1. In regard of the good things which are lost even the most precious graces of faith love joy hope to which all earthly wealth is not comparable 2. In regard of the losse and ruine of the soule in such as quite fall away from grace received which is the best thing a man hath and what recompence shall hee give for his lost soule For a man to fall with a milstone about his necke into the bottome of the sea were an easier fall saith our Saviour than thus to fall 4. In regard of the wofull and miserable change in the soule of Gods owne childe who but in part quencheth this blessed spirit As appeareth in these instances 1. Change Whereas the spirit of God was the soule and life and joy of the soule now being quenched but in part he withdrawes himselfe and his presence yea the joy and comfort of his presence that a man shall thinke him quite gone and the joy which upheld the heart in all estates shall now be so cleare gone as if it had never bin there David found this change after his sinne Psal. 51.10 Create in mee a cleane heart O God and renew a right Spirit within mee therefore in this sence the spirit was gone Againe Restore mee to the joy of thy salvation therefore that also was gone 2. Change Insteed of the power and efficacy of grace all is in a wane and goeth backward the spirit of prayer ceaseth the first love is fallen from zeale decayes watchfulnesse is remitted conscience is cast asleepe the ayde of the spirit greatly lost which when David discerned hee prayed thus Oh stablish mee with thy free Spirit verse 12. 3. Change Gods children shall finde that the spirit once quenched in stead of the lively practise of piety formerly upheld they
fruite And this is the property of such as are planted in the house of our God to flourish in his courts and be more fruitfull in their age which is cleane against the course of nature Psal. 92.13 Such therefore as seemed to come on but within a while their righteousnesse is as the morning dew or fall backe and wither who are worst at last as evill men must be were never good Were they ever good that are so soone remooved to another Gospell even in dayes of peace to whom Christ was preached of whom professed into whom they were baptized or what hath bewitched them to such apostacy Gal. 3.1 Were they ever good who in stead of reading prayer and sermons formerly frequented are growne to cards dice drinking swearing and a distaste of faithfull Preachers and sermons Were they ever good that hate goodnesse or to heare of fulnesse of holinesse or of their owne idlenesse Alas empty tubbs here was never any thing but a sound no soundnesse at all V. Motive Consider how wee are affected in inferiour things and shame our selves for want of the like affection for the increase of better things than they 1. We never thinke our grounds our orchards our gardens our cattell fruitefull enough If a man have a peece of land that brings forth but a small croppe he will be at paines and cost to make it more fruitfull Alas shall wee have more care of our grounds than of our hearts to make them fruitfull and yeelding to the laud and praise of the great husbandman Or thinke we our hearts lesse barren than the worst conditioned ground Let this provoke us if we have gotten our hearts to bring forth thirty folde to labour them till they bring sixty fold and let them not rest there till they yeeld an hundred fold This Christ commends to us in that good ground Matth. 13.8 This the Apostle calls for 1 Thess. 4.1 to exceede more and more 2. In the matter of money and wealth how doe men bestirre themselves to adde to their gaines to make one pound five and from five to ten and so adde hundreds and rise to thousands sucking profit from every thing insatiably as the horse-leach How thrifty husbands 1. forecast to get and plod to increase their stocke 2. Carefully save that which is gotten avoiding expences much more excesses 3. Having got a good portion yet still desire and seeke more for hee would have none before him in wealth if hee had his minde 4. Lay out part or whole of that he hath for a greater gaine Should not wee be now as thrifty for our soules as for our bodies Is not a stocke of grace better than a stocke of goods Who but a doting worldling would not thinke wisdome better than wealth and a graine of holinesse better than a talent of earthly happinesse Is a graine of grace so precious and is not an eternall weight of it worth our sweate and labour Why doe wee not as thrifty Christians awaken our dull spirits to forecast with the wise Virgins to get such store of this oyle as to carry us through to the wedding chamber Should wee neede to be stirred to save that which wee get so hardly avoiding the expences and sinfull excesses which eate out our stocke and prodigally waste our estate in grace Why stand wee still having found a little veine of golde namely of grace much more precious than golde and not holde on our labour to finde the rich mine which it leadeth unto Why doe not wee with the wise Merchant resolve to lay out our whole estate for this pearle Or should wee hide our talent in a napkin and not lay it out or employ it seeing by use and returne it increaseth It would grieve a man to see so many good husbands for the world to be such starke unthrifts for their soules VI. Motive Consider we the meanes that God hath affoorded us for our growth in sanctification 1. Gods readinesse and care to fit us for the duty so as no want is in him for while hee pleaseth to continue any meanes unto us hee shewes his readinesse though wee faile in using the meanes to bring us to the end seeing hee supplieth meanes of growth he is ready in them to adde more grace This blessed meanes is the sweete liberty of the preaching of the Gospell by which he offereth to make our hearts of evill good of good better he offereth by it not onely to worke faith where it is wanting but to adde to faith that which is wanting to it and so to bring it to certainty and assurance So also the assistance of his Spirit in prayer Spirituall guides and Pastors and the example of the godly as a cloud going before us Why should we frustrate God and our owne soules of the end of so happy meanes 2. Our owne reckoning and account which will bee expected answerable to such meanes Luk. 12.48 To whom more is given of him shall more be required so to whom God affoords more meanes of holinesse hee expects more fruite of holinesse Never any Nation never any Age was before us no nor neare us in the glorious meanes Never had our fathers that light that constant Ministery those encouragements those precepts those many examples which we enjoy they counted the crummes of our table liberall fare To heare the prayers read in English made them weepe for joy To have a peece of Scripture translated was the hazard of their lives We reade of some that did give a whole loade of hay for a few chapters of Saint Iames in English Two or three could not conferre together of any good thing in those tyrannous times but they might have scaped farre better for felony Yet oh the holinesse the honesty the zeale and grace of those godly men whose crowne is that they were as farre afore us in grace as wee are before them in meanes If ever Age could blush ours might be it And as the Land in generall so this place hath beene before other places in constant and glorious meanes what our growth is the world sees very unanswerable to them very unthankfull to God for them Capernaum needed nothing but Christs great workes to condemne her Looke upon her and learne in time to loathe her unthankfulnesse That your spirit soule and body may be kept blamelesse NOw we are by the assistance of God to proceede unto the second petition in this prayer for full holinesse in speciall by enumeration of parts Where for the meaning of the Apostle we have considered already 1. What are these parts 2. How are they said to be blamelesse In that the Apostle prayeth how that they might be kept blamelesse hence we learne That Christians must not onely labour to attaine a full measure of grace but also to keepe it So it is as commendable to keep our selves blamelesse as to make our selves blamelesse 1 Tim. 5.22 the Apostle exhorteth Timothy Keepe thy selfe pure thinke
love another and not pray for him Some say they love their Minister and like preaching but as the worldling boasts of false liberality when didst thou ever pray unto God for him that hee would be pleased to give him strength and ability successe freedome from molestation from unreasonable men and every good encouragement in his place scarce in all thy life Then may I say to thee as D●lilah to Sampson How canst thou say thou lovest mee and doest not this thing for mee How canst thou say thou lovest mee and keepest this thing from me even thy prayers and best wishes 2. The object must be right the things prayed for Many wish well to their Ministers and much love they shew them and pray for them that God would give them good livings two or three and for meanes of further preferments to raise them to the fayre of dignities wish them good Lords and Patrons and countenance of great men Oh the happinesse of Ministers stands not in these things A Turke or Heathen can wish all these to their friends and yet Christians wish no more These are wishes of carnall men But pray thou for liberty spirit courage power faithfulnesse to stand against men and Divels that by force or subtlety would discourage him from the worke grace and faithfull dispensation makes an happy Minister Pray for this and yet I doubt many Ministers themselves pray more for the other than these 3. With prayer thou must bring the other companions of love and thankfulnesse We must not deale by our Ministers as many answer beggers God helpe you but give them nothing you must yeeld us not onely good words and good prayers but audience redence maintenance you must doe that you pray for It is but hypocrisie to pray in a set forme of prayer for all Bishops Curates and all Congregations committed to their charge if thou doest not set thy hand to thy prayer If love set thy mouth on worke to pray for a Ministers prosperity it will set the hand on work to uphold his person his comfort his Ministery his cheerefulnesse in the worke of the Lord all thy pretences leave thee but an hypocrite an enemie of righteousnesse who art hyde-bound and hand-bound who valuest not sundry yeares labours of thy Pastour at so many farthings Heathens and Savages would be loath to reject their Idolatrous Priests so farre but either conscience or shame or feare or company would force some expressions of love to them But Heathenish Christians nothing can worke them FINIS THE TABLE A. ACtions of renovation discerned in three things 198 Actuall sins more violently quenching the fire of the Spirit above other 3 sorts 23 Every action must be done 1. by vertue of a word 2. in Gods presence 3. for Gods glory 110 Action to bee good must proceede from a good agent 115 Admiration of mens persons no good rule for 6 reas 84 Affections crooked no safe rule to follow 3 reas 81 83 Affection to inferiour things must shame us for want of like affection in attaining better 227 Affections must be narrowly watched 256 Affections naturally exceedingly corrupted 5 instances 263 Sound affection to grace discerned by foure signes 218 Afflictions sanctified set forward sanctification 5 wayes 214 Aime of a Christian must be absolute conformity betweene the whole word and the whole man 89 All things to be beleeved or done must first be tryed by the Scriptures 4 reas 61 All things are to be tryed but all things must not be held 125 All the Articles of religion turned into a questionary Divinity among Schoolemen 129 Alteration and change of spirit soule and body a sure signe of growth in holinesse 217 Ancient Christians refused ceremonies used by Heathens 3 instances 160 Appearances of evill must be avoided as well as apparant evills for 5 reasons 147 Apostates their fearfull danger in 4 things 319 Arts wicked with which seducers come armed to deceive 5. 63 Severall Attributes of God to be conceived according to our suites 5 Instances 178 B. Baptisme must not be required of a Popish Priest 5 Reas. 158 C. Calling effectuall and ineffectuall differenced 353 His owne effectuall calling every man ought to know 4 reasons 356 Calling effectuall the worke of God onely 5 reasons 361 From effectuall calling a man may certainly conclude his owne salvation 363 Calling effectuall often hardly discerned 3 reas 367 Calling effectuall heareth Christs voice many wayes vttered 371 Ceremonies ordained of God so as Iewes must differ from Heathens as well in them as in doctrine 4 Instances 159 Wofull changes in the soule of Gods childe who hath quenched the Spirit 5. 17 Change in a man effectually called is wonderfull 1. In respect of sinne 377 2. In respect of the world Ibid. 3. In respect of grace in kinde 379 soundnesse 380 growth 382 Change no shadow of it in Gods nature 386 Nor in his decrees 387 Nor in his will 389 Nor in his affections Ibid. Charity how it beleeveth all things 4 cautions 69 Christians must proceede to full sanctification for five reasons 201 Christians must be as carefull to retaine grace as to attaine it 4 reasons 232 Christ must be magnified in our bodies 5 wayes 280 Christ not corporally present in the Sacrament 4 reasons 309 Christians must not onely labour for full but finall holinesse 4 Reasons 311 Christ raised dieth no more no more doth the Christian. 391 Civility is farre from sanctity 6 differences 205 Comfort in affections well guided in 3 things 268 Comforts from Gods faithfulnesse in 4 things 393 Communication in other mens sinnes to be avoided both before and after 165 Conformity with Idolaters must be avoided in 3 things 156 To a good conscience are required 4 things 239 Conscience cleareth his master 4 wayes 240 Consideration of Christs second comming encourageth godlinesse 6 wayes 301 Considerations to move people to pray for their Ministers sundry 403 Contemplation of creatures in their severall rankes call us to progresse in holinesse 222 D. David sinned in numbring the people in 4 things 113 Davids mourning for Absolom blame-worthy for 4 reasons 114 David refused to drinke the water of Bethlem 3 reas ib. Depth of learning pretended by seducers 63 Difference betweene the peace of Christ and the peace of the world in 6 things 180 Difference betweene sound peace and sencelesnesse of conscience in 5 things 185 Dislike of evill if sound discerned in 6 things 219 Disposition to good tryed by five signes 220 Directions concerning sanctification of the spirit 5. 237 Distinction must be made betweene diffusing of grace and decaying of it 32 Doctrines to be sound must all agree with the analogie of faith 3 instances 90 Doctrine of doubting of a mans owne salvation is against the analogy of faith 91 All sound doctrine tyeth the two tables together 6 Instances 92 All true doctrine leades men unto Christ. 100 Sound doctrine is most contrary to corrupt nature 103 The soundest doctrine most soundly comforteth
are given over to their owne corruptions to commit grosse sinnes which even many civill men would not commit What fearefull sinnes did David moyle himselfe in when the spirit withdrew himselfe the sinnes of adultery carnall pollicy and shifting out of one sinne into another and falling from evill to worse How was Peter given up to lying swearing and forswearing for the time that a Iew might have beene ashamed on him notwithstanding all his former holinesse and gracious confession 4. Change Whereas the spirit being cherished there was a continuall feast in the soule and unspeakable glorious joy now being in part quenched hee brings a racke into the conscience of Gods childe and that conscience which before excused and justified now accuseth and terrifieth the burden of which is so heavie as all the mountaines of the world are light in comparison These terrours of conscience were the deepes out of which David even hopelesse and almost swallowed in the pit of despaire cryed to the Lord Psal. 130.1 5. Change Even the child of God quenching his spirit shall feele the smart and shame of his sinne which shall pursue him and vexe him and hee shall know what it is to exasperate the spirit Davids childe shall dye his daughter shall be defloured Ammon shall be slaine his wives ravished by his owne sonne himselfe driven out of his kingdome by Absolom Oh miserable change by quenching the spirit Fifthly Most men have the spirit of God and some motions but great is the difference betweene a godly man and an hypocrite in the one they are quenched quite in the other for the most part they are cherished and at last perfected As for example First hypocrites have knowledge as well as the godly but they quench it and fight against it therefore all good knowledge quite leaves them in the end but the godly carry their knowledge to heaven with them therefore the one is compared to the light of the Sunne which lasteth all day the other is like a flash of lightning suddenly appearing and suddenly vanishing Secondly hypocrites may be grieved for sin but it is onely and chiefly because of punishment not because of offence and they quench this griefe not willing to torment themselves before the time they runne into merry company and turne off sorrow lest they should disquiet themselves too much with such melancholy whereas the godly nourish godly sorrow and never cease sowing in teares till they reape in joy Thirdly hypocrites pretend great love to God but it is for his goodnesse to them not his goodnesse in himselfe for wages not for service but they utterly quench this love by the love of the world or pleasure or sinne and being grounded on earthly things when they faile it failes If Saul love God for his Kingdome when his kingdome failes his love quaileth too If Iudas love Christ for an Apostles place when that place will not holde him with further credit hee will for gaine betray his Master But the godly love him when he crosseth them and if he kill them they will trust in him much water cannot quench their love Fourthly an hypocrite hath many good motions the worst man living is not without some Balaam hath good desires but covetousnesse quencheth them Saul acknowledgeth his sinne and his sonne David to be better than himselfe but it was a blaze in straw suddenly quenched But the godly for the most part goe from motions to resolutions and so to practise many practises grow to habits and so to perseverance Well is it so such as have any assurance that the spirit is in them must have a speciall watch that they quench him not Then let Christians carefully avoid the meanes of quenching the spirit Quest. Which be they Answ. Three especially I. Fire is quenched when it is suffered to die of it selfe so is the fire of grace quenched 1. whē we use not our graces but let them be idle neither by them procuring glory to God nor good to men As iron let it be as bright as christall cast it by in a corner and not use it it will grow rusty and unprofitable even so will grace And the drowsie Christian though indued with good graces if he waxe idle his heart shall be like Salomons field of the sluggard all overgrowne with mosse and weedes which choake the good seede The health of the body is preserved by exercise so is the health of the soule by the exercise of grace the moth frets the finest garment when it is not worne standing water is sooner frozen than the running streame Secondly as fire dieth of it selfe when wee prepare not or adde not fit matter for the fewell and feede of it so suffer wee our graces to decay when wee neglect such meanes as God hath set apart for the strengthening and confirming of grace the case being with the soule as with the body which is in a continuall decay and needes daily repast or else it dies If a man forbeare his ordinary meales the naturall heate will decay and vigour and health and life and all so will the Christian if hee neglect the word the Sacraments meditation prayer watchfulnesse and the like Thirdly as fire must needes die of it selfe when we take away the fewell by which it should be nourished so is it in the matter of grace looke into the places where the word hath beene powerfully preached but is now removed and see if good things begun be not quite overthrowne and if ordinarily and for the general such people be not more profane than any other Many thinke they can walke many dayes without the strength of a Sermon But it was a miracle that Moses fasted forty dayes and forty nights and let Moses be away but a few dayes he shall surely finde a Calfe made Marke them that absent themselves from the assemblies of Gods people whether they doe not wither or no and fall by little and little into flat Atheisme If thou keepe not thy watch in the Temple if thou look not to the holy lights and fire morning and evening how will the Spirit be kept will thy graces in so great security be still lively While Thomas was absent from the company of the Apostles did hee not lose that manifestation of Christ which might have strengthened his weake and tottering faith and not so onely but grew hee not into a peevish infidelity that hee would not beleeve but upon his owne carnall conditions II. Another meanes of quenching the Spirit that is to be avoided is when the fire of grace is violently smothered by the contrary Sinne is as water to quench the grace of God both our owne and those of others For our owne sinnes First our sinnes of nature doe choake grace for our naturall corruption which the Apostle calls flesh doth ever lust against the Spirit and by reason of this there is never a grace of God in us but it conflicteth and is
they are so freely conferred upon us as David Psal. 116.12 Oh what shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards mee 3. To binde us to the more care in dispensing them for the greater our receit is the greater is our Lords expectation 1 Pet. 4.10 Let every man as he hath received a gift minister the same to others as a good steward of the manifold graces of God 4. To enable us to make up our accounts according to the number and measure of our gifts Matth. 25.24 the master observes the number of talents and the servant that received tenne talents must bring in according to tenne Quest. How shall I know if the Spirit be quenched or no Answ. By the application of this observation thou shalt see whether thou art gone forward or backward whether thou hast quenched or cherished the Spirit This examination shall be reduced to five particular heads in respect of 1. Graces 2. Good motions 3. Good duties 4. Sinne and 5. the Spirits worke on thy affections First examine thy selfe in graces received both for number and measure 1. If the Spirit in respect of the number of graces be quenched try thus If a man make no conscience of some points of doctrine or practise which heretofore he hath made conscience of as swearing usurie lying gaming family-duties and the like now the Spirit is quenched hee is like a man who being in decay for matters of the world doth cast off some of his traine So also when a man is not able to feede his understanding and practise as one ignorant about what he may imploy his head and hands A tree being in decay withers first at toppe because it cannot send sappe so farre from home so is the life of grace knowne to be in decay if it feede not all the parts of the Christian course Or to use our owne Metaphor As an aged man appeares by his head his white haires shew a decay of naturall heate and moysture so a Christians falling from right understanding judgement and practise is as white haires and argues a decay of spirituall heate and vigour For preservatives in this case first consider that God expects the number of talents committed unto us Secondly why should wee be like the brute beast which wants the art of numbering why should wee be as the silly bird that layeth twenty egges yet take away all but two she is as well and as painfull for them as for all and all because she wants numbring How can a Christian be so simple as to please himselfe as much with few graces as with many 2. In regard of the measure of graces try thus If a man waver and stagger in that wherein hee hath beene constant still he hath some faith some zeale some patience diligence and other graces but he wants that measure which sometimes he had now though he have an under measure in all yet hath he quenched the spirit Even as an olde man is knowne to be decayed because though hee have his whole number of parts that ever he had yet he hath them not in that measure of vigour as formerly hee had them For preservatives against this decay first consider that the Church of Ephesus is blamed for falling from her first love that degree of carefulnes which once she had Rev. 2.4 Secondly consider that we are commanded in the Scripture to adde grace to grace as dayes are added to our lives 2 Pet. 1.5 6. yea in respect of the measure and strength of grace 2 Tim. 2.1 Thirdly this is remarkable that those whose hearts have once beene heated with the fire of Gods spirit and afterwards have abated doe grow more frozen in iniquity than any other as water once hot is afterward most colde and freezeth hardest Secondly examine thy selfe in regard of good motions If these be lessened the spirit is quenched As for example when thou hast beene moved to heare the word and hast neglected it for some vaine pleasure or some small profit or sometime thou hast a motion to leave thy swearing cursing lying usurie gaming c. Gods spirit did knocke at the doore of thy heart but thou didst shut the doore against him and keptst out that heate which hee would have put into thee this is to quench the spirit Take heede lest failing thus in so necessary duties thou faile of the meanes whereby thou shouldest rise Repent and doe the first workes or else I will come unto thee quickly saith the Lord and remove thy Candlesticke out of his place Rev. 2.5 And againe Matth. 21.43 I say unto you the Kingdome of God shall be taken from you and given to a nation that will bring forth the fruites thereof Thirdly examine thy selfe in regard of good duties after this manner 1. If in stead of fervency in prayer thou findest thy prayer colde dead remisse formall interrupted with idle and wandering thoughts now the spirit is quenched who makes us cry and stirres up groanes which are unutterable 2. If once comming to the word thou wast wont to finde it sweete and a word of life unto thee but now thou commest with an impenitent heart a slumbering and a sleepy conscience oh certainly the spirit is now quenched who is never so sweete and cheerefull as in the word for he thawes the benummed heart and makes it burne by opening the Scripture A man in a swone if rubbing and Aqua vitae fetch him not againe his soule is gone the same is thy case if the spirit of God do not revive and quicken thee 3. In keeping the Lords Sabboths if sometimes thou couldest account thē thy delight the most comfortable day of the week but now thou formally passest them over not altogether hardened but with colde and heavie motions in confessing sinne in petition in thanksgiving if thou be slow of heart to beleeve heare and meditate in the word by this know that the spirit is quenched in thee who worketh joy and sweetnesse in the heart while it is in the presence of God and societies of the Saints 4. If after the performing of good duties thou hast sometimes found cheerefulnesse strength and good assurance thy selfe refreshed by them and better disposed but now thou findest in thee loathing or discontentment no strength or small comfort know for a certaine that the spirit is quenched some sinne or other is as a cloud hindering the beames of his sweete grace and comfort from thee Psal. 77.2 3. I sought the Lord yet my sore ranne and ceased not my soule refused comfort I did thinke upon God and was troubled I prayed and my Spirit was full of anguish Verse 7. Will hee absent himselfe for ever and will he be favourable no more Consider here what a dead carkasse is without the soule and so is all our service without the spirit Fourthly examine thy selfe in respect of sinne thus 1. If some sinne which was of great burden and weight
great and unspeakable wickednesse were it to despise so great salvation to despise the word of life of grace of light of peace of faith and the end of it which is salvation for it is the ingraffed word able to save soules Iam. 1.21 3. Manifold is the evill that overtakes a despiser of Prophecy 1. He is destitute of the Spirit who hath no being no delight to be there as the connexion of the precepts witnesseth 2. Prophecy being neglected piety is lost and men prove profane persons this was a brand of Esaus profanesse that hee cared more for a meales meate than he did for the blessing Heb. 12.16 3. Despise thou prophecy thy prayer shall be despised and all thy service is abominable Prov. 28.9 and chap. 1.28 Because I have cryed saith the Lord and yee would not heare yee shall cry and not be heard 4. It ties and fastens sinne on men yea and heapes up judgement for first it nourisheth ignorance a maine supporter of Satans kingdome secondly it resisteth faith by refusing the onely and ordinary meanes of it thirdly it barreth out repentance because this is the meanes of our regeneraration and change of heart and life fourthly it makes sinne farre more sinfull because here is a refusall of mercy and grace offered by prophecy Ioh. 15.22 If I had not come and spoken they had not sinned but now they have no cloake for their sinne Fifthly the refusall of prophecy provoketh the Lord to give up men to vile affections to worke all uncleannesse with greedinesse because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved 2 Thess. 2.10 Lastly it tyes on judgement as fast as sinne and wraps the despiser in the curse of God Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect much more despise so great salvation Consider the threatnings Acts 13.41 Beholde ye despisers and wonder and vanish away Beholde I will worke a worke in your dayes which a man would not beleeve for the terrour of it out of Habak 1.5 This serves to reproove 1. Anabaptists and Enthusiasts who pretend the Spirit and despise prophecy they have the Spirit to guide them and therefore neede no preaching 2. Those profane Atheists at home who despising the Spirit of grace and the word of grace live as without God in the world Many who have Iacobs voice professe in word better things yet prize the preaching of Christ as a thing of nought It is better to be casting up some account or reading some history or walking in the fields or visiting some friends or perhaps going to a play than to a Sermon Are these the sonnes of Abraham or the sonnes of God and not rather the profane sonnes of profane Esau What can hee tell me saith one which I know not As if thy knowledge could priviledge thee to despise Prophecy And what thinkest thou These Thessalonians had knowledge as well as thou for they were taught of God 1 Thess. 4.9 yet must not they despise Prophecy and wilt thou despise it We see not saith another but that all this preaching doth breede barrennesse as an immoderate raine and brings preaching into contempt As if the abundance of prophecying did priviledge the profane heart to despise it The Israelites made just such another reason Oh wee have nothing but Mannah Mannah and our soule is weary of this Mannah and yet by their owne confession if they loathe this Mannah they must have nothing else to live by they shall surely die and their blood be upon them Object Wee see not that this preaching doth any thing but breede contention among Preachers and hearers Answ. As if because a bad stomacke turnes wholsome meate into bad humours therefore good meate must be despised and because mans nature spider-like turnes wholsome doctrine into poyson therefore wholsome doctrine may be despised Many other allegations the Divell puts into the mindes and mouthes of men against Prophecy because he knowes by preaching his kingdome falls like lightening Luk. 10.18 But those that feare the Lord will abhorre them 3. Others are reprooved who can be content to heare the word read and thinke themselves in good case if they can reade the word or good bookes at home but despise prophecy and interpretation which what else is it but to reject Gods wisedome in his owne meanes who hath set us apart to pray men in Christs stead to be reconciled to God The conversion of men was never committed to mens owne private reading no nor to the ministery of Angels no nor Christ himselfe undertooke to convert the world by his owne industry but left his Disciples to doe greater things than himselfe Ioh. 14.12 Contemne Gods meanes and thy owne shall never succeede Besides will not any say that hee understands better by interpretation of things than by bare reading Yes any but grosse malice and wilfulnesse 4. Others will heare the word not read onely but preached and yet despise Prophecy because they despise the practise of that they heare as Herod That which a man cares not to keepe hee despiseth Blessed are they that heare the word of God and keepe it and doe it Therefore beware of despising Prophecy and of receiving the grace of God in vaine 2 Cor. 6.1 but rather heartily and sincerely embrace it Meanes 1. Labour to see the necessity of it being the power of God to salvation Rom. 1.16 and a principall ordinance of his to reveale the great mysteries of salvation which thou canst never understand without a teacher 2. Make conscience of hearing the word often 1 Pet. 2.2 As new-borne babes feeling their want would sucke every houre of the day and night Esteeme it with Mary the one thing necessary 3. Attend at the gates of wisdomes house Prov. 8.33 It was the praise of these Thessalonians that they heard the word with all readinesse Act. 17.11 and a great worke of God in Lydia chap. 16.14 The Lord opened her heart to attend to the words of the Apostles 4. Rejoyce in it as the Iaylor Act. 16.32 Hee rejoyced that hee and all the household beleeved And the wise Merchant went away rejoycing Not to delight in the word is to despise it Ierem. 6.10 Beholde the word of God is to them a reproach why they have no delight in it 5. If thou wouldest not despise Prophecy despise not Prophets This were to despise Christ himselfe for Hee that despiseth you despiseth mee Luk. 10.10 But have them in singular love for their workes sake as our spirituall fathers begetting us unto Christ. Wee see how the Prophets of the olde Testament were esteemed even of Kings themselves as Ioash though a wicked King finding Elisha ready to die fell on his face and wept and cried My father my father the horsemen of Israel and the chariots thereof 2 King 13.14 And shall not beleevers in the new Testament honour the Prophets of the new Testament who as good lampes consume themselves to give others light But
A Commandement Keepe or hold 2. A limitation That which is good For the former It is not enough lightly to examine our courses no nor yet so judicially as to finde out the truth if we goe no further as many who please themselves and feede their eyes with reading and their mindes with meere speculation but cleave to no sound opinion but are unstable and unsettled in all their wayes And therefore the Apostle knitteth to Tryall keeping or holding For what a madnesse were it to try a peece of mettall and finding it to be good golde cast it away which is the folly of many a man in the case of sound and saving Doctrine which is far more pure and precious than gold seven times tryed in the fire For the latter we must try every thing but not lay hold on every thing and not catch whatsoever comes next to hand as many are ready to keepe and holde but it is chaffe in stead of good corne and drosse in stead of golde as many curious and dainty hearers who are as men having ill stomackes which cast up wholsome and strong meate and hold nothing but fruite and trash which feede and increase the humours there already So wholsome and savoury Doctrine is rejected and a few fine sentences savouring of wit or learning fetched any where but from the Scriptures are held and nothing else in comparison Which is with the Prodigall Sonne to feede upon huskes in stead of the bread of his fathers house And therefore the Apostle limiteth us in our keeping that onely which is good Now as God is the Authour and his word the Rule of all goodnesse it followes whatsoever God appoints and his word approove that is good and nothing else Every one is bound in conscience to keepe whatsoeuer good thing he knowes approoved by the word of God For the word keepe requireth a constancy in the knowne good either of Doctrine or practise Deut. 4.6 These are the Commandements Keepe them and doe them for that is your wisedome This is the generall precept to all Gods people For particular Churches Rev. 2.25 To the Church of Thyatira hee saith That which yee have already hold fast till I come and chap. 3.3 to the Church of Sardis Remember what thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent And for particular persons 2 Tim. 3.14 But continue thou in the things thou hast learned Tit. 1.9 Hold fast the faithfull word The like for all the sonnes and daughters of wisedome Prov. 4.4.13 Take hold of instruction and leave her not and keepe her for she is thy life 1. Satan and seducers will seeke to snatch away the truth from us This reason the Apostle seemeth to imply in the composition of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if hee had said hold against all men and all adversaries which would withhold hold with both hands all good and holy truthes concerning faith and manners Theeves and robbers will meddle with no beggars but where they have hope of a booty Satan and his agents lye most in ambush against such as embrace the truth and follow the thing that good is there is the treasure of truth the wealth of grace and a booty which Satan would faine finger He makes many on-sets to this purpose and if we keepe not our ground here called the keeping of good hee pulls us from our hold and easily surprizeth and draweth us to the contrary evill We had neede therefore so much the more watchfully to hold that which is good as our adversaries are watchfull to robbe us of all our goods And were it not that wee had such enemies without us our inward and bosome companion our owne corrupt nature is ever soliciting us and drawing us aside for were we of our selves inclinable to hold good things the Apostle might have spared a number of the like precepts to this But the Spirit of God seeing our disposition so rimie and full of holes to let good things slippe and perceiving our dulnesse and sleepinesse with whom it is as with children who being once asleepe let things slippe out of their hands which before no meanes could winne from them yea and which is worse that while wee seeme waking wee hold weakly as a thing which a man cares not whether he hold or no therefore hee supplies our need and strengthens our weaknesse and awaketh our dulnesse with this and the like exhortations Hold that which is good Which shew that it is no lesse Christian vertue and fortitude to retaine and keepe than to attaine that which is good 2. Hold and keepe all sound Doctrine because of the great utility or profit thereof for 1. It is the evidence of thy salvation and of the inheritance of the Saints How carefully doe men keepe their Evidences lock them up safe in the surest chests they have because if they lose their Evidences they may easily lose their lands So lose thou thy part of the word thou losest thy part of heaven Shall men be wise to keepe their Deedes and conveyances of lands and leases so safe as no man shall cousen or cheate them of them and whatsoever casualty comes these shall be provided for and can it be wise or safe for any to bee carelesse in keeping the word his evidence for heaven without which he hath no tenure nor assurance out of his idle conceit to one foote in heaven 2. Wholsome Doctrine is the staffe and support of a man in the way to heaven A lame man if he hold not his staffe falls downe-right and if the word directs us not in our duty and supports us in temptation wee fall quite away 3. The sound doctrine and truth of Gods word is a notable preservative in dangers so farre as it is held unto A man in perill of drowning will catch and lay fast hold on any meanes of safety and will lose his hand before hee will lose his hold Every Christian is in this world as on a dangerous sea the Church is the shippe in which is salvation represented by the Arke the anchor is faith Heb. 6.9 the mast is the crosse of Christ the prosperous winde is the Spirit of God adverse windes tossing and tumbling the Church are persecutions tryalls temptations afflictions the fraught graces good conscience hope love and the like and the haven is heaven Now lose the doctrine of faith and shipwracke is presently made 1 Tim. 1.19 good conscience and all is lost But hold the doctrine of faith sound and entire by the hand of faith and all is safe 3. There is but one right rule and way to attaine salvation even the truth which the Truth himselfe hath purchased at a deare rate For the word of life and the holy Gospell was not easily purchased but by the precious blood of Iesus Christ and should wee lightly esteeme so deare and precious a purchase this will evince that it was never purchased for us For the
against the teacher which is an usuall bait of Satan to make all good things carelesly rejected Micaiah for this was turned out of dores as no fit Counsellor for King Ahab So the itching eare which is still desirous of novelties as the young man having heard the olde commandements would still heare more new And a tediousnesse in hearing the same things often which the Apostle calls a safe thing The latter are 1. Hardnesse of heart cast as much seede as you will among stones and cover them therewith no fruite followes for the stones hinder the rooting as we see in Pharaoh Mollifie the heart throughly and the word wil abide in it 2. Cares of the world which are as thornes to choake it All seede sowne among thornes getteth no strength but perisheth The Pharisies mocked Christ in his doctrine because they were covetous Luke 16.14.3 Voluptuous living makes men heare onely for fashion and to be like those widdowes which are ever learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3. or at least not to joyne vertue to their knowledge as the intemperate patient that heares the physitian but will not follow him II. Provide and furnish the soule with helpes to hold that which is good These helpes respect 1. Intention 2. Attention 3. Retention First the Intention must must bee cleane and sincere we must not heare for envie as the Pharisies and Iewes in Paules time nor for newes as the Athenians nor for gaine or curiosity as Felix but to receive as babes the sincere milke of the word to grow in grace thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 This intention shall be the better furthered by premeditation of the force use and efficacy of the word that it is the power of God to salvation the incorrupt seede the word of life the instrument of faith the sword of the spirit the bread and water that preserveth eternall life Secondly Attention must be used Acts 8.6 the people of Samaria gave heede to the things that Philip spake This attention is a keeping of the heart and affections to the word deliuered Acts 16.14 when Paul preached Lydia attended and the Lord opened her heart When Christ preached all the peoples eyes were fastened upon him Luke 4. Attention is the doore by which the word enters It is much furthered by a due estimation of the word Thy word saith David is wonderfull therefore my soule keepeth it Men will attend to their learned counsell when their free-hold is in question so here conceive aright of the word as a matter of life and death a matter that concernes thy inheritance in heaven thou wilt carefully attend it Thirdly Retention must follow In the body there are two nutritive powers one Attractive to draw meate into the stomacke the other Retentive to hold it there till it be turned into nourishment so in the soule And if the former draw too little the latter holds little and so the body pines and if the former draw too much that the body is not able to hold it the body pines still So here the soule must be still drawing but it must also forcibly holde it till the soule be refreshed Now this Retentive faculty is strengthened by 4. meanes 1. Meditation cleane beasts chew the cud Deut. 11 2. Consider the workes of the Lord Psal. 1.1 Meditate in his Law both day and night The acts of God must be in the mouthes of them that feare him Psal. 149. and 39.3 while David mused his heart was warmed Phil. 4.8 whatsoever things are honest just and pure thinke on those things men have therefore evill thoughts because they nourish not the good 2. Conference which is a whetting of holy lessons both on our selves and others Deut. 11. the Iewes are commanded to conferre of the word early and late Acts 17. The Bereans are commended for comparing the Apostles doctrine with Scripture 3. A full purpose of heart to practise good things Psal. 119.106 I have sworne to keepe thy law and 50.16 Why takest thou my word into thy mouth and hatest to be reformed 4. Fervent and constant prayer which is the key of knowledge gets the hearing eare and the soft heart it is a key to open the coffers of God out of which we may take those treasures which are not from our selves but from above our reach III. Chuse sure and safe places to hold good things in First in memory we must remember good things we heare Deut. 4.9 Take heed to thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently that thou forget not the things thine eyes have seene Psal. 119.16 I will not forget thy word and ver 93. I will never forget thy precepts because by them thou hast quickened me Secondly keep them in the faith of thy heart else all is unprofitable Heb. 4.2 for that onely gives them rooting in our hearts Col. 2.7 Prov. 4.21 Keepe them in the midst of thy heart then shall they be as alight in the lanthorne shining through every part of thy life This was the coffer that Abraham locked up the promises of God in and held them fast without reasoning though it was difficult and seemed impossible Rom. 4.20 and David Psal. 119.11 I have hid thy word in my heart Thirdly keepe it in the affections of thy soule love earnestly the word of God and all good things for the things that wee like not or affect not we care not for keeping The great commandement is to love the Lord with all thy heart And every Christian ought to appeale to the Lord himselfe as Peter to Christ Lord thou knowest that I love thee Iohn 21.16 And the tryall of our love to him is to keepe his commandements chap. 14.15 Fourthly keepe them in the practise of thy life and whole conversation 1. By professing good things as Christ himselfe professed a good profession before Pontius Pilate 2. By promoting all good causes to thy utmost power 3. By maintaining and defending all good things and causes 4. By suffering for good things and every way giving testimony and setting seale to them if neede be with thy dearest heart blood IV. If we would hold good things let us furnish and arme our selves against theeves and robbers 1. Our owne carelesnesse Many times we care not to understand the things of God vanity of minde worldly lusts and desire of riches partly take up the roome partly choake good things so as they are neither received nor held But if we understand not let us not be ashamed to enquire and seeke out till wee doe understand 2. Satans slynesse who steales the word and good purposes out of mens mens hearts strangely even while they looke on and consent Doe as Abraham who drave away the birds that troubled him in sacrificing Gen. 15.11 so doe thou drive away these ravenous birds that are sent by Satan 3. Temptation and persecution Much ground keeps the seede till the heate of persecution comes and in persecution falls away and
a good honest man but a Christian so at this day hee is a right honest man but a Puritan Come to a Papist and tell him of a profane man that walkes after the flesh how odious his wayes are this doth not much trouble him hee may be a good Catholicke for all that hee will thinke very charitably of such a one Like one in Queene MARIES time taken in adultery in Red-crosse-streete said yet I thanke God I am a good Catholicke Tell him of a man that professeth enmity to his religion in many Articles of faith yet if he be not too precise there is hope of him there may be a reconcilement at least hee is a wise moderate man hee will not out-runne himselfe But tell him of a man that will cleave to the Scripture in all things both greater and lesse and will not bee beaten an hayre-breadth out of it and doth so flie from BABEL according to the commandement that hee will touch nothing that seemes uncleane Hee hates all appearance of evill Oh these curious fellowes saith hee are not to be suffered or endured they trouble the Church and Common-wealth Nay wee may wish some of our owne had not learned the Gileaditish language to preferre the Papists as better men and better subjects than the faithfull servants of God and their Soveraigne onely because they desire to avoide the least appearance of evill But whence should this bee but out of the hatred of goodnesse that they whose hands are yearely almost in some monstrous conspiracie should bee preferred before such as whose innocency was neuer yet touched Well let such as feare God buckle to this precept of the Apostle because First God lookes on such as bowe not their knee to Baal upon such as touch no uncleane thing 2 Corinth 6 and couenanteth to bee their Father Secondly wee cannot touch pitch and not bee defiled with it Thirdly it argues soundnesse of heart in our hatred of sinne when wee hate not onely capitall crimes which shame us before men but lesser euills and such as wicked men cannot hate Fourthly sweete shall be the comfort when wee suffer the word to binde us in least things not suffering us to cast downe our countenance but couenanting with our eyes neither to whisper evill of others much lesse to reproach them or haue our mouth full of cursing repressing also even unchaste thoughts and mentall sinnes before they come to appearances VERSE 23. Now the very God of peace sanctifie you throughout and J pray God that your whole spirit and soule and body may be kept blamelesse unto the comming of our Lord Jesus Christ. THE Apostle here proceedeth to the conclusion of the Epistle and annexeth a fervent and heavenly prayer to the former precepts For the Thessalonians might say you have heaped up a number of excellent precepts together but how should we that are but flesh and blood and weake to any thing that is good performe them You command much more than we can attaine You have given us not onely many precepts but of such nature and strictnesse as are rather fit for Angels and Saints in heaven than flesh and blood weake and fraile creatures on earth wee must Try all things hold all and onely that which is good and abstaine from not evill onely but all appearance of evill which seeme to us impossible commandements All which and the like allegations our Apostle meetes withall and tells them it is his meaning indeede First that they should ayme at full holinesse which is conversant in every good duty and shunneth the least sinfull defilement Secondly he sends them out of themselues to God who can sanctifie them throughout Thirdly seeing he onely can teach them their duties but cannot goe further to give them grace and enable them to performe it he goes to God with them that by their joynt prayers they might be established in them and to sanctifie them throughout for if God sanctifie you throughout you shall be able to performe the former duties Whence note that it is the duty of godly Ministers not onely to preach exhort and admonish men in their duty but earnestly to pray for them and with them for the obtaining of good things which they have commended unto them It was the usuall manner of the Apostles to pray to God for the obtaining of those graces they had exhorted unto In this Text having chap. 4.3 shewed that this is the will of God even their sanctification and hauing laid downe the parts of sanctification in the particulars till this verse now prayes that according to the precepts they may be wholly sanctified So Rom. 12.16 hauing exhorted to like mindednesse in the 15.6 prayeth that they may be like minded Ephes. 3.14 15. having exhorted the Ephesians not to faint at his troubles he prayes for strength For this cause saith hee I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ that yee may be strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man And chap. 1.8 hauing shewed how abundant God was toward us in wisdome and understanding and in opening the mystery of his will he ceaseth not to pray verse 17. that God would giue to them the spirit of wisdome and reuelation that their eyes might be opened And in the 1 Pet. 5.10 Resist stedfastly in the faith c. then prayes the God of all grace make you perfect stablish strengthen settle you And this doubtlesse the Apostle learned of the Lord Iesus himsele whose custome was to teach and instruct in the day-time and to goe out in the night to pray for a blessing upon his Ministery Luke 21.35 1. God is hereby glorified and acknowledged the father of lights from whom every good and perfect gift is Iames 1.17 for now wee depend on him for wisdome and draw somewhat from his fulnesse 2. It is not in man to make his doctrine effectual he cannot reach the heart much lesse renew it Man may hold forth the light but God must giue eyes to see it man may speake to the eare but God onely can speake to the heart Paul may plant and Apollos may water but God must give the increase 1 Cor. 3. It is his priuiledge to write his law in the hearts of his people Ierem. 31. Lydia heard the word from Paul but not hee but God opened her heart Acts 16.14 3. As in all other labours and workes so much more here we must doe that which is our part and leaue God his The husbandman must plow and sowe and plant and water but hee must leaue all the successe to God hee cannot command raine nor blessing So in this spirituall husbandry Gods seeds-men must doe their worke cheerefully being co-workers with him but commend the successe to God in which sense the Apostle 1 Cor. 3.7 saith He that plants is nothing neither he that waters that is if hee be compared with that divine action which is all in all or nothing without him Hereby wee see
how necessary it is to begin and end our Ministery and Sermons with prayer to God who is all our sufficiency The Apostles begin and end their doctrine and Epistles with prayer and haue not wee more neede I know not what pride of selfe-sufficiency or whether profanesse shut the hearts and cover the mouthes of many Preachers who are almost ashamed to pray for this blessing nay reproach and scorne them which doe Sure I am whether he shall doe more good to others by his prayers or preaching I will not determine but hee shall certainely by his prayers reape more comfort to himselfe And he that neglects prayer with his preaching may well be suspected that he more aymes at his owne glory than Gods Let people also joyne willingly and conscionably in their Ministers prayers which strive for a blessing upon themselves and importune God who makes his Sunne shine upon the just and unjust to let the Sun of grace shine into their hearts saying O Lord if thou build not the house it shall never stand as those that waite for all successe from God It is recorded that Pope Adrian having built a stately Colledge at Lovaine did set in golden letters on the gate this poesie Trajectum plantavit ibi natus Lovanium rigavit ibi literas didicit Caesar dedit incrementum ex praeceptore Cardinalis factus One tooke a pen and wrote under Hic Deus nihil fecit Now to the prayer it selfe where we have to consider 1. To whom the Apostle prayeth The very God of peace 2. For what he prayeth in two particulars 1. For full sanctification 1. In generall sanctifie you throughout 2. In a speciall enumeration of parts spirit soule body 2. For finall sanctification untill the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ. First of the person to whom our Apostle prayeth the very God of peace Consider here three things 1. Why he useth this Attribute peace 2. What is the peace here meant 3. How he is the God of peace 1. This is not an idle epithite but well fitted to the matter in hand because our Apostle had in verse 13. exhorted them to peace among themselves and hath in all the precepts hitherto directed them how to uphold both outward peace vers 14 15. and inward peace from the 16. to this verse And he notably in this title confirmes their faith and strengthens their prayers that so long as they aske nothing but things pertaining to the peace of the Church and the peace of every mans conscience the God of peace will surely grant their requests See Rom. 15.13 14. Secondly What peace is meant Peace is threefold 1. Externall 2. Internall 3. Eternall 1. Externall which is nothing but an outward prosperity and tranquility in our outward estate and this is 1. In the Church when it hath rest from heresie schisme persecution and tyranny Acts 9.31 this is called the peace of Ierusalem which we must pray for Psal. 122.6 2. In the Common-wealth in the peace whereof we have peace when we are free from civill warre within and forreine enemies without Ier. 29.7 3. In the family and speciall places where we live which is a private agreement with all sorts of men good and bad so farre as may be Rom. 12.18 Have peace with all men 2. Internall and spirituall and this is the sweet quiet and comfort of conscience rising out of our assurance of our attonement with God through Iesus Christ and out of remission of sinnes by his blood which peace passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 and in which the Apostle placeth the kingdome of God Rom. 14.17 3. Eternall which is the perfect rest peace joy and glory that the Saints shall enjoy in heaven Esay 57.2 Peace shall come but it is when we sleepe in our beds called Rom. 8.6 life and peace Our Apostle here aymes especially at the second kinde of peace which is a steppe and degree to the third For the third why is he called the God of peace Answ. First because hee hath the fountaine of peace in himselfe peace in him is as in a fountaine Secondly as the Author and communicatour of all peace unto us in all kindes As 1. In Church the peace of Ierusalem must be begged of him he stills all warres and maketh all stirrs in the Common-wealth to be husht and gone And it is hee that makes men dwell together in one house 2. He is authour and the God of eternall peace for eternall life is the gift of God 3. After a speciall manner is he the God of internall peace the peace of conscience at which our Text aimeth which is a quietnesse of minde and conscience through our reconciliation with God First because hee sent his Sonne 1. To merit it for us when wee lay in the horrour of an accusing conscience who is therefore called in himselfe Esa. 9.6 the Prince of peace and in respect of us our peace And therefore Ambrose expounds here the God of peace to be Christ himselfe If it be asked how Christ merited our peace the Apostle answereth Ephes. 2.15 16. He made peace by slaying hatred on the crosse by his perfect obedience overcomming and abolishing whatsoever God might hate in us 2. To preach and publish this peace and invite men unto it And that first in his owne person Esay 61.1 The spirit of the Lord is upon me to preach good tidings to the poore to binde up the broken-hearted to preach liberty to the captives c. And how this Prophecie was accomplished see Luk. 4.18 Secondly in the person of his Ministers Christ preacheth peace Ephes. 2.17 Christ came and preached peace to you which were farre off Object Why Christ never preached to the Ephesians Answ. Yes hee did in the persons of the Apostles and so now in the Pastors and Ministers of his Church to the end of the world Secondly because hee sent his Spirit to apply and seale this peace onely in the hearts of his elect therefore it is called a fruite of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 and the Spirit cryes in our hearts Abba Father chap. 4.6 He workes faith in the heart and so we have peace with God Rom. 5.1 and bold accesse to the throne of grace Eph. 3.12 This is that creating Spirit which creates the fruit of the lippes to be peace Esay 57.19 Thirdly because God doth not onely command and commend to us this peace but approoves and delights in it and no where else but there he sets up his throne and dwelling his Temple is in Ierusalem the vision of peace his Disciples must onely abide among the sonnes of peace Matth. 10. and much more doth himselfe How we are to looke upon God in our prayers First in all our prayers we are to behold him a God of peace labour to see him reconciled unto us And 1. this beholding of God reconciled gives us assurance of obtaining whatsoever is good for us 2. The sence of his infinite essence and power and
presence with us confounds us unlesse the sense of his grace and favour susteine us and hence our Lord taught us to begin our prayer with this title Our Father 3. Our chiefe unhappinesse were to be neare God if hee be not at peace with us for our God offended is a consuming fire Then wee must beware of sinne which is the breach of peace betweene God and us especially before prayer let every one that calls upon the name of the Lord depart from iniquity 2. Wee must acknowledge our happinesse to consist in our peace with God Make peace with him and thou shalt have prosperity Iob 22.21 If they of Tyrus and Sidon made so much of outward peace that they by all meanes desired it of Herod and if the Iewes having by Felix obtained outward peace and quiet acknowledged it wholly in all places with all thankes much more should wee for spirituall inward and heavenly peace Secondly in our prayers we must labour to conceive of God in such Attributes as may strengthen our faith in our speciall suites Behold him not onely the God of all grace 1 Pet. 5.10 but of this and that particular grace 1. To this end the Scripture denominates him from particular vertues that in the want of any of thē we may resort to him confidently as the Scripture stileth him the God of love the God of patience the God of hope the God of all consolation of wisdome c. that in our want of any speciall grace wee may cast our eye upon these titles or Attributes 2. The Scriptures are stored with many names and titles of God that we might so conceive of him affected to us in our prayers as hee hath declared himselfe to be Doe wee begge the accomplishment of any promise come to him in the name IEHOVAH who gives being as to all things so to his promises Doe wee pray for any thing but see many things stand in the way of our good publike or private now come to him in the name of EL a strong God who can quickly bring mountaines to plaines and effect by a mighty power whatsoever he will Lacke we any blessing and are destitute of all meanes and comfort now come to him in the name of of EL-SHADDAI I am God All-sufficient and that is meanes enough Findest thou thy selfe beset with severall wickednesses and armies of wicked Angels in high places and invironed with temptations or dangers now come to him in the name of EL-TSEBAOTH Lord of hosts who hath armies of Angels to set round about the tents of his people this name of the Lord is an assured strength when the righteous fly unto it Hast thou received any blessing or promise now come to him in the name IAH as wee are commanded Psal. 135. who is thy good Lord and bountifull benefactour If the Apostles had neede thus to encourage their prayers much more wee Whosoever would have true peace must have it from the God of peace as he that would have water must goe to the well or fountaine Iob 22.21 Acquaint thy selfe with God be at peace with him so shalt thou have prosperity The Apostles in all their salutations pray for peace from God and from our Lord Iesus Christ. 1. Because God himselfe and our Lord Iesus challenge this peace to be their owne prerogative to give neither can it be had elsewhere For the former as God is called the God of peace 2 Cor. 13.11 c. so this peace is called the peace of God Col. 3.15 Phil. 4.7 as whereof he is the sole Authour For the latter our Saviour saith to his Disciples Ioh. 14.27 My peace I give unto you my peace I leave with you not as the world giveth give I unto you Where he first challengeth it to be his owne having clearely purchased it Secondly his owne to give men may wish peace but he can give it men wish the peace of God or Christ he gives his owne Thirdly hee sheweth that this peace cannot be elsewhere had not as the world giveth plainly distinguishing his peace from the worlds both in the gift and the manner of giving The world 1. gives a kinde of peace but that is a false peace mine is a true peace 2. That is a peace in externall things mine in internall 3. That is temporary and inconstant mine lasting yea everlasting For your joy shall none take away from you 4. That is given most to wicked men for the world loves her owne but this is given onely to beleevers being a fruite of faith against whom the world bends all her forces 5. That peace is against Gods glory and indeede the worlds peace is the keenest warre against God the very foment and cherisher of lusts and impiety This peace is for God and his glory and a warre against sinne a cherisher of grace and piety 6. That peace ends in destruction though men cry peace peace c. This is given for salvation and for the fruition of perfect peace 2. As this peace is onely Gods to give so is it onely the portion of the children of God who are called sonnes of peace this is onely childrens bread and must not be cast to doggs Matth. 15.26 And it is a gift of promise Gal. 6.16 Peace shall be to all the Israel of God Such onely as have God for their Father and the Church for their Mother have right unto this and that because they be sonnes Esay 54.13 Much peace shall be to her children that is of the Church and because they be beleevers for this peace is the fruite and undivided companion of faith Rom. 5.3 leaning upon the mercie of God in Iesus Christ for the pardon of sinne The wicked man hath none of this peace of God because he hath not mercy nor grace with the God of peace The seate and place where this peace resteth prooves plainly that it is a proper and peculiar gift of God and that is the heart soule and conscience which none can reach but God himselfe Col. 3.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The peace of God must take the chiefe command in the heart and Phil. 4.7 The peace of God which passeth all understanding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall preserve your hearts A military word taken from souldiers that come in to ayde an army so this peace shall bring ayde to the heart and strengthen it when Satan and sinne and temptation and persecution lay siege to it And who else can revive the heart but he that made it Who can reach comfort to the conscience but the Lord of it Who can say to the soule I have pardoned thy sinne but the Lord the party against whom it is committed and so pacifie it Who can worke faith in the heart but the Spirit of God and who can preserve this gift there being by so many enemies surprised but the hand that creates it by the power of which we are preserved to salvation 1 Pet. 1.5
to the sanctification of the Spirit so as this is a sanctification appropriate to the elect Thirdly the forme of sanctification And that is 1. in putting off of corrupt qualities 2. In bringing in new and inherent holinesse which daily changeth the beleever into the image of God as Col. 3.10 Seeing yee have put off the old man with his workes and put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him This new quality created in the hearts of the elect by the Spirit of God whereby they can in some measure truly hate and forsake sinne and truly love the Law of God with an indeavour to keepe it is the very being of sanctification Fourthly the processe of sanctification It is begun in grace here and not perfected till hereafter in glory Which is added 1. to distinguish it from justification which is perfect in one act 2. To note the toughnesse and strong heart of sinne which is slowly weakned here and never here perfectly subdued for in the most perfect the flesh lusteth against the Spirit Gal. 5.17 3. To shew that the matter of sanctification is to be in perpetuall motion as a living water Hee that is righteous must be righteous still Rev. 22.11 4. To shew that sound holinesse never gives over till it attaine perfection perfection is a fruite of soundnesse in grace The way of the righteous shines more and more untill perfect day Prov. 4.18 For the second What it is to be sanctified throughout Answ. 1. These Thessalonians were already sanctified and therefore the Apostle prayes that they might happily proceede to full sanctification 2. This full sanctification is partly in this life partly in the life to come the Apostle intendeth both the former first as a way to the latter The through sanctification in this life is the imperfect sanctification of parts the other is the perfect sanctification in degrees The former is 1. in respect of the whole rule of sanctification which is the Law of God when a beleever can truly say with David that hee hath respect to all the commandements Psal. 119.6 and 18.22 for all his lawes were before mee and I did not cast away his commandements from me 2. In respect of all sinnes it is a through change from all sinne not a turning out of one sinne into another nor a turning from all sinnes save one as Herod but an hating of all appearance of evills yea of darling and bosome sinnes yea of right eyes and hands Matth. 5.29 3. In respect of all gifts of sanctification which the Spirit gives in part to every beleever not onely knowledge faith love which are eminent but other inferiour also as patience meeknesse temperance peace with every other fruite of sanctification 4. In respect of all the parts of the man in which the Spirit of God putteth forth this noble worke as Cant. 4.1 c. the Church is described to be faire in all parts eyes hayre teeth lippes temples c. the sanctified person must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wholly perfect The latter i. full and through sanctification in the life to come stands in the perfection of degrees and in these particulars 1. An utter abolishing of sinfull flesh 2. A perfect freedome from all the causes and workes of repentance 3. Perfect and speciall communion with God and Christ and good Angels and elect men 4. Perfection of all graces both in kinde and in measure 5. A perfect exercising of our graces in glory and happinesse And all this our Apostle seemes to ayme at in the last words where he mentions the comming of Christ in which he shall attaine through and full sanctification For the third What be these parts mentioned spirit soule body Answ. 1. Some by Spirit understand the third person in Trinity as Ambrose Some a third part of man But the Scripture speakes but of two namely a body and a soule and Aquinas saith the spirit and the soule differ non secundū essentiam sed potentiam not in essence but as divers faculties Others by the spirit understand the whole man regenerate so farre as hee is opposed to flesh the man considered not according to the parts of nature but according to the parts of grace So Athanasius said Spiritus est donum quod jam per baptismum accepistis the Spirit is the gift of God received in baptisme for keep this gift saith he and both soule and body wil be unblamable This exposition is not unfit yet I take another to be fitter thus It is common in Scripture for our better apprehension of our duty to distinguish those faculties which God hath put in the soule of man that we might take notice of the worke of sanctification in the severall faculties There be two parts of man a soule and a body Of the soule there are two noble faculties under which all the rest are comprehended 1. the spirit 2. the will here called the soule by a Synecdoche of the whole for the part By spirit in this and all places where the spirit and soule are mentioned together is meant that noble and eminent faculty of mans soule called the understanding or minde the Philosophers call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the leader and ruler of all other parts and faculties and the most noble of all Vnder this is the conscience included which being renewed is called also by the name of Spirit Rom. 8.16 The spirit witnesseth to our spirits and Eph. 4.23 Be renewed in the Spirit of your minde 2. The other superiour faculty but not so noble is that whereby we doe will affect or desire that which wee understand and conceive to bee good This they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 under which is comprehended the will and affections So these words are used elsewhere Luke 1.46 My soule doth magnifie the Lord and my spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour 1 Sam. 18.1 The soule of Ionathan was knit to David that is his heart affections desires 3. The body is that part of man which is the house of the soule consisting of flesh bones humours and the like Now then the whole man is sanctified throughout 1. When the minde thoughts cogitations and conscience are pure and holy wisely to think and meditate and guide safely by wise discerning of things profitable and pertinent 2. When the heart affections and desires are rightly composed and given up to the guidance of right and renewed reason when a sound heart and a sound minde meete together 3. When the whole body as the soules instrument is in all the members of it obedient to act and effect good actions according to the dictate of right reason and the command of renewed will when the members are weapons and servants of righteousnesse Or more briefly when the spirit thinkes nothing the will affects nothing the body effects nothing contrary to the will of God For the fourth Quest. Here is perfection of holinesse
indeede Did ever any or can ever any attaine to this perfection Answ. This question brings us to the explication of the fourth thing in the Text How a man may be said to be blamelesse in spirit soule and body in this life Whereto we say No man ever attained to this unblameable perfection of degrees in this life except the first Adam in his innocency and the second Adam who had sanctification in all parts and degrees for Paul a most holy man after regeneration confesseth how farre hee was from perfection Rom. 7. and Phil. 3. But a man regenerate may be said to be blamelesse and throughly renewed 1. In respect of his relation with Christ his head who is made to him sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 and in whom hee is perfectly holy and unblameable Ezek. 16.14 Thy Beauty was made perfect by my Beauty 2. In respect of open and grosse crimes which might impeach the honour of his profession so Zachary and Elizabeth walked in Gods ordinances without reproofe Luk. 1.6 so did Samuel and Iob and other holy men For though no man can be without sinne yet a man may be without crime when after his conversion hee carries himselfe so uprightly as he cannot be noted for any reigning sinne before men 3. In respect of Christian indeavour and inchoation when the beleever labours and aymes at full sanctification in all his faculties and parts for sanctification produceth holy motions in the soule and holy actions in the body See it 1. In the spirit 1. In the soule First the spirit i. the minde and understanding of a sanctified man is indued with a sound and distinct knowledge of heavenly things and he still indeavours to a further measure Psal. 119.33 34. Teach mee give mee understanding c. Matth. 13.11 To you it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdome not to others And it is joyned with a speciall faith applying the promises which maketh his person and worke acceptable Ioh. 20.28 My Lord and my God Heb. 11.6 Without faith it is impossible to please God Vnder the spirit include the conscience in the purging of which the beleever striveth and loseth not his labour For 1. it is a tender conscience and remorsefull for sinne 2 Chron. 34.27 Iosiahs heart melted at the reading of the Law 2. It is calme and peaceable it blameth not nor accuseth seth it selfe but giveth good witnesse first that the person may be assured of his reconciliation with God Rom. 5.12 and 8.36 And secondly that he walketh with God sincerely 2 Cor. 1.12 This is our rejoycing even the testimony of a good conscience that in simplicity and good sincerity wee have had our conversation in the world 1 Ioh. 3.21 If our heart condemne us not we have boldnesse with God The second faculty called the soule here includeth the will and affections in both which this worke of sanctification is begunne and increased 1. In the will when being renewed it is now subject and pliable to God in all things Rom. 7.18 To will now is present with mee not onely in doing but in suffering as 1 Pet. 4.9 in suffering it can commit the soule to God in well-doing as unto a faithfull Creatour 2. In the affections herein is a change being guided and carried by the minde and will renewed His love is not the olde carnall love of himselfe and the world but a new affection Love out of a pure heart a good conscience and faith unfained 1 Tim. 1.5 His hatred which was against God and his Saints is now against the haters of God and things which God hates Psal. 139.21 His joy which was sensuall and earthly is now delightfull in doing the will of God yea in suffering it Rom. 5.3 We rejoyce in tribulation His sorrow which was for worldly losses crosses c. is now for sinne and for the afflictions of Gods people His delights which were in carnall profits pleasures corne wine or prosecuting his lusts are now in Gods countenance in Gods Law in Gods house in Gods Ordinances the Word and Sacraments and in Gods children above all persons as those that are excellent on earth His desires are answerable what ever his former desires were now he desires the presence of God the pleasing of God pardon of sinne softnesse of heart the constant fruition of the meanes of salvation with a blessed successe of them Hee desires the prosperity of Zion the salvation of the Israel of God and the comming of Iesus Christ to his full redemption Thus we see how a sanctified man profiteth and prospereth in the whole inner man But fire within will breake out and so will grace which is like fire and the body shall be a weapon of righteousnesse his outward actions shall be done in an holy manner his whole life is changed 1. For the matter of his actions Gods word is the rule of them all Psal. 119.35 Direct me in the path of thy commandements for therein is my delight 2. For the manner they are done first in humility Mich. 6.8 Walke humbly with thy God Luke 17.10 Say thou art an unprofitable servant Secondly in sincerity without guile of spirit Psal. 32.2 Thirdly with cheerefulnesse delighting greatly in his commandements Psal. 112.1 2 Cor. 9.7 as every man wisheth in his heart The Lord loves a cheerefull giver Fourthly with courage and stoutnesse Dan. 3.17 We are not carefull ●f this matter our God whom we serve will deliver us Acts 4.19 Peter and Iohn said to the Rulers Whether it be meet to obey God or men judge yee Gal. 2.11 I withstood him to his face 3. For the end first hee will approove his heart to God and lookes not so much to men for his praise is not of man but of God Secondly hee desires to please God in that hee doth Acts 11.23 w●th fall purpose of heart cleave unto God Thirdly he doth not good things for his private ends as ease profit credit but even against all these if he be called thereunto The 4. respect in which a beleever may be called unblameable even in this life is in Gods account and gracious acceptation Where himselfe workes and sees such beginnings proceedings and indeavours it is accepted as perfection by meanes of Christs merit promise and intercession Thus Paul saith Rom. 7.17 It is not I that doe evill Whence our Lord pronounceth of his Church that she is all faire and that no spot is in her 5. In respect of that perfect sanctification in all degrees which is growing unto and shall attaine in the day of Christs second comming when every beleever shall be free from all blame and staine and set into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God which now they have onely in desire in in faith in promise in an earnest and inchoation the Lord mercifully accepting them for that they are growing unto And thus we have expounded this worthy petition of the Apostle The summe and substance whereof is this
to grow up in holinesse as plants and children naturally grow so also doe the children of God being planted in his courts To helpe us herein we will somewhat at large consider three things 1. Meanes of obtaining a full measure of holinesse 2. Markes of one that hath attained it 3. Motives to provoke us thereunto The meanes are five I. Meditation and sound consideration concerning 1. God 2. thy selfe 3. grace it selfe First in God thinke 1. of his will 1 Thess. 4.3 This is the will of God even your sanctification We ought to follow God if he should call us through hell it selfe much more in the sweete practise of sanctification which hath a happy fruite 2. Of his promises 2 Cor. 7.1 Seeing we have these promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow up unto full holinesse All the promises are made to the practisers of holinesse Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart 3. Of his glory which thou oughtest by all thy endeavour to promote being the end of thy life and of thy selfe but herein especially is our heavenly Father glorified when our light shines before men Matth. 5.16 Secondly in thy selfe consider these things 1. In thy creation thou receivedst a soule a body faculties and sences with parts and members from him and in him thou now livest movest and hast thy being and canst thou doe him too much service in them Doth any man build an house but he will looke to dwell in it Doth any plant an orchard or vineyard and not looke for usefull fruites to himselfe Thy selfe art Gods house thy soule Gods garden and doth not hee expect not onely fruite of holinesse but much fruite 2. In thy redemption the end of which was not onely to deliver thee from the condemnation of sinne but from thy vaine conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 redemption is not onely from the guilt and punishment but from the service and corruption of sinne and sanctification is an inseperable companion of justification 3. In thy life and present estate thou art a Christian and professest Christian religion which onely prescribes the rule of holy life whereby thou must walke thou must life like a Christian that hast communion with Christ that walkest in the light as hee is in the light 1 Iohn 1.5 that hast the Spirit of Christ which perfecteth daily his owne worke and beautifieth his owne dwelling 4. In thy death and future estate remember thou must die and onely holinesse of heart and life shall attend thy soule when all things else shall leave it and without holinesse thou shalt never see God Heb. 12.14 If death shall leave thee unholy the last judgement shall so find thee So therefore live now as thou maist ever live hereafter Thirdly meditate on the grace and worke of holinesse it selfe 1. what a difficult worke it is and therefore thou must goe seriously about it oh the worke of mortification is a painefull work a man cannot die without paine no more can the olde man sinne hath a strong heart and is loath to die and therefore as to die is no dallying matter so he that meanes to dally in this businesse shall never happily proceede in the degrees of holinesse 2. What an excellent worke it is for hereby we shall be daily partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.3 which is not in respect of the nature and essence of God which is incommunicable but in respect of the most excellent and precious qualities and gifts bestowed by the Spirit of God on those that are regenerate wherein we shall be like unto our heavenly Father and grow up to the similitude of Iesus Christ till he shall be all in all unto us II. Meanes of growing to a full measure of holinesse is in our Text Prayer First for the grace it selfe Psal. 51.10 Create in me a cleane heart O God and renew a right spirit within me Secondly for the increase of the grace Phil. 1.9 And this I pray that yee may abound yet more and more in knowledge and judgement verse 11. being filled with the fruites of righteousnesse 1 Thess. 3.13 The Lord make your hearts stable and unblameable in holinesse Thirdly for continuance and confirmation in grace as in the Text. Ephes. 3.14 I bow the knee that yee may be strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man Psal. 51.12 Oh stablish me with thy free Spirit Let it be thy daily prayer as Davids Psal. 86.11 O Lord knit my heart unto thee let thy good Spirit leade mee even to the land of the living Fourthly for a blessing on the meanes of grace Psal. 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonders of thy Law III. Meanes An holy use of the word and Sacraments For the word in generall Iohn 15.3 Now you are cleane by the word which I have spoken unto you and chap. 17.17 Father sanctifie them in thy truth thy word is truth Rom. 1.15 by preaching the Gospell the righteousnesse of God is revealed from faith to faith Now there be in the word foure things which specially helpe forward our sanctification 1. The commandements and precepts Psal. 119.4 Thou hast commanded that wee should keepe thy precepts diligently These let us see what wee ought to ayme at and how farre we are off from our duty 2. The promises and comforts of it Psal. 19.11 In keeping of them there is great reward Revel 20.6 Blessed and happy is hee that hath part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power 3. The threats and denunciations of judgement that are in it Revel 22.15 Without shall be dogges and enchanters and whoremongers and murtherers and idolaters and whosoever loveth or maketh lyes 2 Pet. 3.11 Seeing all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in holy conversation and godlinesse 4. The examples that are in it Heb. 12.1 Seeing we are compassed with such a cloud of witnesses let us cast off every thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth fast on us Examples of holy men will make us trust in God Psal. 22.4 Our forefathers trusted in thee and thou didst deliver them this confirmeth our confidence Godly women must shew the holy and hidden man of the heart as Sarah did 1 Pet. 3.5 Observe in the reading or hearing of the word these particulars for the decay of corruption and the increase of sanctification The Sacraments or visible words helpe forward sanctification because by baptisme we are borne into the Church and notably it both representeth and sealeth our mortification and quickning Rom. 6.4 and by the Lords Supper wee are fed and nourished in the grace of the covenant in faith love and comfortable assurance IV. Meanes Godly company That man goes apace in the grace of sanctification who is a companion as David of all them that feare God Psal. 119.63 Now godly company furthereth sanctification 3 wayes 1.
fishes and plants all these stand and proceede in the service of their Creatour and all these have a voice by which they continually cry Hallelujah Praise yee the Lord Psal. 148. All these being created and given for our use call us unto constant thankfulnesse to uphold his glory who made them for us as all they doe in their kinde If thou lookest ●●thin thy selfe thou hast three things which ●ondl● call for this duty 1. The joy of the holy Ghost which is unspeakable and glorious Psal 97.11 Light ariseth to the just in darknesse and joy to the upright of heart If Gods Spirit by thy increase of grace be gladded and cheared he will make thee a glad man but if he be grieved or quenched thou shalt smart for it yea suppose thou be the Lords 2. The testimony of thy conscience this is the sweete Paradise in which God is familiar with man and that hony which as Augustine saith is sweete in it selfe and makes all other things sweete let them be never so tart or sowre in themselves Paul in great affliction had a sweete relish 2 Cor. 1.12 For this is our rejoycing euen the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly purenesse wee haue walked 3. Gods approbation and acceptance who would not be allowed of God but hence thou shalt be allowed that thou art made a Disciple of Christ if thou beare much fruite Iohn 15.8 as a Schoole-master commends them for good schollers who stand not at a stay but goe on in learning with diligence climbing to the highest formes And if God worke in the hearts of his children a delight in those that excell in vertue how much more will himselfe delight in them who the longer they live the more they excell Lastly if thou lookest as low as hell there thou shalt see the Divells and wicked Angels as busie as bees to promote their kingdome and to pull all men yea even thy selfe into their corruption and condemnation And should not this adde courage to thee to set up the kindome of God with all thy power every where but especially in thy selfe II. Motive Consider why God hath elected called justified us whereas he might have left us in our common masse and passed by us as well as a great part of the world as good every way as our selves First he hath elected us that wee might be holy and that not in a small measure but also unblameable before him in love Eph. 1.4 and Rom. 8.29 God hath predestinate us to be made like the image of his Sonne How and wherein Answ. Partly in humility partly in holinesse that as hee by an humble and holy life went on to his glorie so must we Secondly why or to what hath God called us but unto holinesse 1 Thess. 4.7 God hath not called us to uncleannesse but unto holinesse yea unto full holinesse that as obedient children we should resemble our heavenly Father who is holinesse it selfe 1 Pet. 1.15 As he which hath called you is holy so be ye also in all manner of holy conversation because it is written Be yee holy as I am holy Levit. 26.6 Now the word as signifies not an equality in measure which we can as little attaine as a spoon can containe the Ocean but onely a conformity or resemblance in our nature renewed and made obedient to the rule 1. He is throughly holy without want or sinne so must thou strive to be 2. He is holy at all times in the day and in the night so thou must never lay aside thy holinesse neither on the Saboth nor on the weeke day or night 3. He is holy in all places in earth and in heaven so must thou as well in earth as in heaven as well in the market as in the Church 4. He is holy in his word in his workes in all his wayes so must thou in thy words workes and whole conversation Heare this thou that hearest the Gospell which is Gods voice calling thee to holinesse Leade henceforth a profane life at thy perill He that calls thee is holy the calling is to holinesse yea to conformity in his owne holinesse aime at it else thou shalt never partake of it hereafter Thirdly thy justification tells thee that Christ dwells in thee by faith and that thy heart is built up to be an habitation of God by the Spirit Eph. 2. ult Now the blessed Spirit cannot dwell any where but in a Temple dedicated unto him where the olde man is daily put off and the new man put on daily where the power of sinne is daily weakened and the grace of holinesse daily getteth power and strength for Gods Spirit will not dwell any where but as the Master of an house as a ruler and commander Neither can any attaine the comfort or sense of his justification but by the undivided companion of it which is sanctification and as this growes so ariseth the measure of sense and comfort of this present happinesse for he that doth righteousnesse is righteous saith the Apostle 1 Iohn 3.7 III. Motive Consider what thou art namely a Christian in the very name thou professest communion with Christ and consequently to walke in the light as hee is in the light A Christian must adorne Christian profession by Christian life and conversation A Christian called so of Christ must shew in his whole course that hee is partaker of Christs annoynting 1 Ioh. 2.20 1. Shew thy selfe a Christian Prophet by profiting in the knowledge of God and instructing others in the same 2. Shew thy selfe a Christian Priest who hast received the annoynting by offering thy selfe an holy acceptable living and reasonable sacrifice Offer thy prayers and the sacrifices of prayses those calves of thy lippes Offer the sacrifices of almes and mercy for with such sacrifices God is well pleased Heb. 13.16 Offer thy life and dearest blood a sweete sacrifice for the chiefe and high Priest of our profession if God call thee unto the same 3. Shew thy selfe a Christian King by raising all thy power against thine enemies and aduersaries of salvation by defending and maintaining thy Christian liberty in which thou art set by ruling over thy selfe and keeping a strait hand and authority over thy lusts and affections make them subjects by carrying thy selfe as a King with clemency meeknesse liberality measuring and judging every thing according to the Lawes of Christ enacted in the Parliament of heaven What a Christian and an epicure a Christian swearer a Christian adulterer a Christian gamester lyer c. quàm malè conveniunt how harsh is this to the eare of men of God much more IV. Motive Consider that hee that is once truly good growes from good to better and so is best at last Our Saviour plainly prooves that he who hath the least measure of sound fruite his fruite shall increase Ioh. 15.2 Every branch that beareth fruite the Father purgeth it that it may beare more
the day of Christ Neglect thy selfe for the present and give thy selfe lost for ever sowe now to the flesh and reape corruption 3. The order First the inside spirit and soule and then the body First wash the inside saith our Saviour get faith which is a purifier apprehending Christs righteousnesse for 1. Can wee draw a cleane thing from that which is uncleane Iob 14.4 or sweete fruite from a bitter roote 2. Satan lyeth closest here as a serpent in thickets 3. It is the most compendious way to damme a streame in the fountaine to quench the fire in the sparke else if it live within it will kindle and flame on tinder or tow where the disease begins there must begin the remedie 4. God lookes out of what treasurie good things come if not out of the good treasury of the heart if not from a pure heart if not from faith all is sinne hence the workes of unregenerate men as good in shew and beautifull are rejected because they flow not from a pure fountaine and mites with the heart put to them weigh downe many glorious workes 5. Distinguish thy selfe from the hypocrite he washeth the outside Pilate washeth his hands not his heart as if sinne stucke onely in the fingers ends the harlot wipes her mouth and it was not shee But wee are to know that the Lord is as well angry with intentions and inward impurity as with outward enormities And therefore let us labour to keepe first our spirits and soules and then our bodies unblameable Here we will somewhat largely consider certaine directions for each of them I. Directions for the Spirit First Labour to have a right spirit renewed within thee Psal. 51.10 Now to a right spirit there goe five things 1. Illumination even an heavenly light to discerne and judge aright of things that it may preferre heavenly things before things of earth and out of sound judgement forecast and provide for them first and principally David joynes it with creating a new heart for this is not in nature but a worke of new creating grace The Agent is God alone who gives light to the blinde who takes away the vaile and makes the scales fall from Paules eyes in his conversion The companion is sound conversion 2 Cor. 3.16 the turning of the heart to the Lord and the remooving of the vaile joyned and the signe of it is a base estimation of the world with the profits pleasures and preferments of it the pursuing of which makes most men so blame-worthy in the day of Christ. 2. Poverty of spirit which stands in the sense sorrow shame and hatred of sinne and cannot stand with selfe-wisdome or high-mindednesse or a proud spirit puft up with conceites whom God resists but a contrite spirit is acceptable and the poore in spirit are blessed and blamelesse Matth. 5.3 3. Purity of spirit which is attained by daily bringing in and increasing of the graces of the Spirit as faith love of God sincerity charity mercy meeknesse c. these fruites of the Spirit argue cleannesse of spirit though it were formerly never so foule and blame-worthy Col. 3.12 Decke the minde with graces 4. Spirituall worship Rom. 1.9 Whom I serve in my spirit not bodily formally hypocritically coldly but with my whole heart in sincerity and fervency This fervency is a motion of Gods Spirit inflaming the spirit of the beleever with great love of God and hatred of whatsoever hee hateth And where this spirituall worship stands up in the Spirit downe must Dagon goe and all the idols that men have set up in their hearts downe goes the externall and carnall worship of civill men who what ever they pretend respect not in their spirit the worship and service of God but their owne pleasures ends and praise and that in their most slightly duties 5. The testimony of the Spirit that thou art the child of God Rom. 8.16 This testimony is sure when the Spirit of God renewes our spirits and upon firme and unfailing grounds makes us able to call God Father working sound tranquillity in our conscience through our union with Christ boldnesse and confidence towards God fervent love of God constant obedience with other fruites not common or competent to hypocrites This testimony sealeth up our acceptance yea the inheritance of children The spirit that wants any of these is not a right or renewed spirit Secondly labour as Saint Paul did Acts 24.16 for a good conscience before God and before men To a good conscience are required foure things 1. Clearenesse 2. Clearing 3. Peace 4. Watchfulnesse 1. It must be a cleare or pure conscience 2 Tim. 1.3 This is when the conscience is cleared or purged from naturall impurities which the Apostle calls dead workes This purity is not native as it was in the first Adam but acquisite and obtained by the second Adam for the materiall and meritorious cause of the goodnesse of conscience is the blood of Iesus Christ who by the obedience of his death hath freed us from all guilt and punishment of sinne reconciled us to God and become our peace whereby this and all other faculties are purged through faith in his blood Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the blood of Christ purge our consciences from dead workes The companions of this purity of conscience are two First a frameing of conscience to the rule of the word which is a torch-light for the direction of it for the conscience being the eye of the soule must be lightsome not erronious blinde or doubtfull Secondly a studie to preserve the purity and himselfe unspotted before God and man and no man hath purity of conscience that wanteth this care 2. It must be a clearing conscience taking the Masters part against all accusers It selfe is not blamelesse unlesse it can justly pronounce the Master blamelesse And this is First when it beares witnesse concerning our sinnes 1. That there is no sinne we have committed but we have repented the same 2. There is none committed but wee hate it wee purpose against it and keepe a watch that it be never committed any more Secondly when it witnesseth concerning our persons that we are now righteous and justified by faith in Iesus Christ of uncleane blackmores we are washed and made white in his blood and sonnes of God who of an enemy is become a friend and Father to us Thirdly when it witnesseth concerning our graces that as by the former wee are freed from the guilt of sinne so we are now freed from the power of sinne and are no more servants of unrighteousnesse but now our conscience tells us we are in part sanctified that the evill wee doe wee hate and love the good wee doe not and that in the inner man we delight in the Law of God Fourthly when it witnesseth concerning our course and actions that now they are wrought according to God by the warrant of his word and because he hath commanded so to
shew all love to their persons still All which discovers a great deale of corruption in our affections First Many hate sinnes in another and not the same sinnes in themselves and this is the hatred of the person and not of the sinne Secondly many seeme to hate evill but not out of love to goodnesse some say they hate Popery but are farre from the love of the truth they dislike grosse profanesse drunkennesse adultery but have no affection to true godlinesse hatred of evill is joyned with cleaving to good Thirdly many hate most where God most loves as persons for grace sake and two sorts of men are the butts of the hatred of this age 1. Zealous and godly Ministers because their life and doctrine reproove evill mens workes Ahab hateth Eliah Hast thou found mee O mine enemy the more they love the lesse they are loved for a Minister to hate mens sinnes or to speake the truth doth it deserve such hatred If we should love mens sinnes wee should hate their persons and if we hate not our brothers evill we could not wish his good 2. A generation of men who are so precise they will not sweare nor be drunke nor game away their time they are Iewishly strict in keeping the Saboth so zealous as they cannot abide the sent of Popery they repeate sermons pray in their families cleave to the Scripture in all things so curious and nice they will touch nothing that is uncleane But are these hated of God Nay are they not in singular favour with him 2. Are not their workes objected against them the workes of God imposed by God upon all Christians upon paine of damnation as to hate swearing to be strict in the Saboth to detest Popery to be frequent hearers of the word to set up Gods worship in the family to cleave to the Scriptures and get out of the way of evill men In this way which they call heresie must we worship God 3. All this zeale against zeale is kindled not with a coale from the Altar but fired with a flame from hell Iohn 15.19 Because I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you 4. How generall is the hatred of grace by gracelesse men that pinch and reproach good affections zeale they call distemper sorrow for sinne is but melancholy and next to madnesse love of the word is but precisenesse and more than needes love of good men but faction and partiality hatred of every evill worke but singularity holinesse a kinde of heresie purity hollownesse and all that is nought How unlike is the world to God and Christ who commended shewes of goodnesse in the young man never quenched smoking flaxe but kindled it and enflamed it and whosoever hateth grace in another first hates it in himselfe 5. How generally doe we love and cherish in our selves what the Lord hateth First hath hee not specially manifested his hatred against an outward forme of religion severed from the power and life of it Esay 1.14 My soule hateth your feasts and new Moones his owne institutions because they were severed from faith truth and inward holinesse But how generall is the profession of religion without power prayer of words not of spirit hearing without conscience of doing washing the outside when all is foule within Secondly how great indignation hath he testified against people unfaithfull in the covenant as a jealous husband hates the wife of his bosome that playeth false with him Ier. 12.8 yet how universall is our unfaithfulnesse to God the contempt of grace the slighting of the meanes the Apostacy and turning backe of the kingdome from God So as we see how our affections are swerved from the rule and what great neede we have to be stirred up to a more carefull watch over our affections Consider therefore and see the mischiefe of disordered affections First how powerfully they draw us from Christian duties as how they interrupt prayers which was the Apostles argument betweene man and wife an heart troubled with passions cannot be familiar with God nor behold his face no more than a man can see his owne face in a troubled water Consider how they hinder the powerfull working of the word 1 Pet. 2.1 Therefore lay aside all malice envie c. and then receive the word A full vessell can receive no liquor sweete water in a fusty vessell is but lost seede cast among thornes commeth to nought how they unsettle the heart in grace pulling it off from confidence in God love of the truth from exercise of grace from the joyes and consolations of the Spirit For as no man can see the beames of the Sunne when the heavens are covered with clouds so cannot the soule discerne the shining beames of Gods love when it is clouded with passion Secondly how potent are unruly affections to draw us from our duty so suddenly and violently doe they carry us into many sinnes how suddenly are great professours snatched into the love of the world and so become Apostates as Iudas and Demas How doth the love of the world draw on a number of sinnes and drowne men in lusts and perdition How suddenly was David snatched into foulest sinnes not watching his affections How was Peter pulled from his purposes and promises by inordinate selfe-love to the deniall of his Master Acquaint thy selfe with the difficulty of guiding the affections aright for though the common errour thinke it the easiest thing in the world yet the whole power of nature cannot reach it for what a divine wisdome is required holily to temper the affections and keepe them even To temper faith and feare that they enterfeare not to mingle love and hatred that they entrench not one another to holde the ballance even betweene Moses zeale and Moses meeknesse to contend for faith and not be contentious to be couragious and bolde and yet suspitious and alwayes fearefull to be christianly patient and not stoically insensible The same Spirit must afford this wisdome that appeared in the shape of a dove and of fire Consider the necessity of this care and carriage of our affections 1. In beholding the numbers of occasions which daily thrust in upon us to thrust them besides their right objects and enthrall us in pride unjust anger envie wantonnesse carnall love feare c. And were there no such outward occasions who feeles not the spirit in him lust after envie and after the world and after all forbidden fruites so as all care is too little wisely to watch and prevent the continuall disorder of the whole man by his affections 2. What great necessity is it that wise Christians difference themselves from common men it is a great weaknesse to corrupt our affections by the provocations of wicked men to shoote in their bowe to doe as they doe But the godly must be different from them not feare with their feare nor joy with their joy nor kindle anger by theirs nor curse when they
glory where then is our free-will to attain salvation before our calling can we not holde our salvation after our calling unlesse God holde it for us and can wee lay holde on it before our effectuall calling Away with such Pharisaicall and proud conceits of Popery that all the glory and praise may be ascribed unto him whose faithfulnesse can and will present us spotlesse before the presence of his glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. Let us cast downe our crownes at the feete of the Lambe and put off all praise of doing any thing from our selves and confesse that unlesse the Lord should adde his last worke to the first all were lost In naturall life our selves conferre nothing to our lives or being at first and after we are it is Gods care that preserves us for man lives not by bread onely but by every word of God Neither doth mans life stand in abundance Luke 12.15 Much more in supernaturall life his worke it is to preserve us whose will is to save us Secondly it serves for a ground of consolation in that the authour of all our grace is faithfull and unchangeable hee beginneth and accomplisheth and worketh all our workes for us He not onely bestoweth a free grace upon his people but undertakes to preserve and perfect it And therefore we may 1. Rely confidently upon this faithfulnesse for all supplies roule all thy burden upon him and he will doe it Psal. 37.5 2. By prayer of faith importune his faithfulnesse not to forsake the worke of his owne hands till hee have finished it Hereby commit thy whole way unto him commend thy selfe thy soule unto him in well-doing and hee will keepe it 2 Tim. 1.18 3. Rest thy selfe undaunted in afflictions in dangers and losses seeing Gods faithfulnesse will keepe thee safe he will keepe thy salvation for thee Heaven is reserved for thy childes part no great matter what other things be lost or endangered 4. Findest thou want of strength in temptation feelest not thou the joy of thy salvation groanest thou under the burden of corruption weaknesse of faith dulnesse in duties goe to this faithfulnesse of God importune him for needfull grace say to him Oh thou that art a faithfull God thou hast called me and therefore doe thou doe it finish and perfect thine owne worke in me Thirdly for a ground of watchfulnesse and care over our selves that we may not grow either secure or idle and say If God will keepe us all is well for hee keepes his owne by meanes and keepes none who have not a care to keepe themselves Quest. What are the meanes whereby God will keepe me Answ. 1. Hee finisheth the worke begun by the word the arme of God which began it Observe the worke of the word in thee Keepe the word and it shall keepe thee attend the word for the powerfull preaching of Christ keeps the soule till the day of Christ. 2. By his holy Spirit who renewes our strength and graces therefore stirre up the Spirit that is in thee and cheare him in thy heart by listening to his motions and taking his part against thy daily corruptions 3. By the grace of faith 1 Pet. 1.5 Yee are kept through faith to salvation Therefore nourish faith quicken it encrease it walke by faith live by faith observe the growth of faith in the power of prayer and strength in good duties this is the victory that overcomes the world 4. By his daily providence guiding us to such courses and companies as by which we may not be losers in grace but gainers keepe thee in thy wayes and hee will keepe thee in them Psal. 91.11 Beware of consenting much more of delighting in sinne and sinners Fourthly a ground of thankfulnesse for graces received all which have flowed from Gods faithfulnesse Hast thou faith hope strength peace of conscience or comfortable assurance ascribe all the glory to God who hath declared his faithfulnesse in giving and encreasing and upholding the same whereas every day our weaknesse and carelesnesse would lose it every sinne might forfeit it and every assault of Satan and seducers would easily robbe us of it Prize this estate in grace make it sure a man will be sure of a good title of any thing hee holdes Rejoyce in it and in the evidences of it as well as in it selfe VERSE 25. Brethren pray for us IN these words the Apostle commendeth a duty of love toward their Ministers which must expresse it selfe in earnest prayers for them In which words 1. wee have a loving compellation Brethren to these onely the duty is directed for they onely can pray or can be heard the wicked mans prayer because he wants the Spirit wants faith is no sonne none of the brethren his prayer is abominable 2. The persons commended to their prayers For us that is Paul Silvanus Timotheus chap. 1.1 men of highest place of most excellent gifts and of rarest graces the Ministers of their faith These chosen vessels and worthy instruments request the prayers of inferiour and ordinary beleevers 3. What the things be which they must pray for in their behalfe and these are elsewhere expressed First for gifts and skill in dispensing the mysteries of the Gospell that they may speake the word as it ought to be spoken Ephes. 6.19 20. And for mee that utterance might be given that I may speake boldly as I ought to speake Did Paul need their prayers for that purpose and doe not ordinary Ministers much more Secondly for liberty and free passage of the Gospel in the mouthes of the Ministers that without let and impediment the Gospel might be preached without interruption or contradiction 2 Thess. 3.1 Brethren pray for us that the word of God may have free passage This is called sometime the opening of a doore which was shut Col. 4 3. Praying for us that God may open to us a doore of utterance Thirdly for happy successe and prosperity of their labours in the hearts of the Saints for their gathering 2 Thess. 3.1 Pray for us that the word of God may be glorified even as it is with you Now the Thessalonians had received it in power and with much assurance People must pray that by the labour of their Ministers the conversion and salvation of men may be furthered for Paul may plant and Apollos may water but unlesse God give the increase all is lost 1 Cor. 3.7 Fourthly for the daily sanctification of their persons that they may by unblameable conversation remove the lets and scandalls which might hinder their doctrine and become examples to their flocke in good life and in expression of all good workes So the Apostle Hebr. 13.18 Pray for us for we are assured that we have a good conscience in all things desiring to live honestly As this is an argument that you should pray for us being innocent and honest men so pray that wee may so continue Fifthly for the protection and safetie of their
persons for their workes sake against persecuters and enemies 2 Thess. 3.1 Pray for us that wee may be delivered from unreasonable men from absurd wicked men which in all corners rage against Gods standart-bearers men of corrupt mindes resisting the truth and thus Philemon 22. the Apostle trusted by their prayers to be given to them out of bands as Peter was delivered out of the lyons mouth miraculously by the strength of the prayers of the Church made for him Acts 12.5 and Rom. 15.30 31. Strive with mee by prayers that I may be delivered from the disobedient in Iudea Whence observe that men of greatest gifts and graces that are in highest favour with God have neede of the prayers of the weaker and meaner Christians Paul rapt into the third heaven and filled with unutterable mysteries contemnes not but craves and earnestly beggs the prayers of the simple Christians Rom. 15.30 he intreates them earnestly even for the Lord Iesus his sake and for the love of the Spirit to strive with him by prayers to God Because men of greatest parts are farre from perfection in gifts or graces Paul saw hee had not yet attained but may receive a daily increase and therefore stands in neede of the prayers of others for increase and further degrees of the graces he hath Even they are men subject to the same passions and infirmities with others Acts 14.15 The more grace and gifts they have the more are they in danger to be puffed up and forget themselves Yea themselves being as fraile as others their prayers are often weake and faint and neede many hands lifted up for them to strengthen them even Moses needes Aaron and Hur to susteine him in lifting up his hands for even his hands may grow heavie Men of greatest gifts are in the greatest fight faire markes for Satan Satan will be sure to stand at Iehoshuahs right hand Zach. 3.1 and will winnow Peter as wheate Luke 22.31 He knowes if he can cast downe one of these hee falls not alone but many are like to fall and that God is more dishonoured and the Gospell more disgraced by one of these than many others and therefore these have most neede to be supported by the prayers of the Saints This meetes with men of great and high spirits because of the greatnesse of their parts they thinke themselves all-sufficient in themselves rapt into their owne admiration They have a notable gift of prayer themselves and what neede they crave the prayers and assistance of others But suppose thou hadst the sufficiency of an Apostle nay wert rapt into the third heaven as Paul was Hadst thou one drop of the grace of humility as he had thou wouldest descend and out of sense of thy wants begge the prayers of the meanest Christians and that not coldly or formally but with earnestnesse and vehemency as hee did It teacheth not to despise the meanest Christians seeing the meanest may be usefull and thou maist receive a blessing by him sometime by counsell or comfort or example at least by his prayers To incourage poore Christians to pray seeing here were we see God is no accepter of persons He will heare as well the Thessalonians for Paul and Silvanus and Timothy as them for the Thessalonians he gives as soone to the meanest as to the greatest these are as welcome to him as they for he casts none in the teeth Object I am unworthy to pray for my selfe or others Answ. Thou prayest not in thy owne worthines but in the merit and intercession of Christ which belongeth to the poorest brother as well as the richest Object I am unable to pray I want gifts Answ. 1. Prayer receiveth not vertue or answer from excellency of gifts but from Gods promise and from faith and affection in our selves Not the words but affections and sighes which may be in men meanly gifted are regarded of God 2. Thou seest here the Lord so farre from refusing thee as that hee commends the greatest matters to thy prayers even to pray for those that in respect of gifts can better pray for thee Bring thou so much the more faith more sense of want more thirst after grace and thou bringest better gifts to prayer than hee that bringeth more words Rhetoricke forme and fluence of speech And here observe The duty of all Christians is to pray for their Ministers yea for all their Ministers Pray for us for Silvanus and Timotheus as well as for Paul for Paul envies not to them a roome in the prayers of the Saints So a number of places afore alledged doe prove And many reasons presse the duty upon the people First howsoever the Ministery is Gods ordinance effectuall by his power and Ministers as starres in his right hand safe by his providence and protection yet he hath made it the duty of people to pray for their Ministers as a recompence of their care and paines and labour in the worke of their salvation and as a part of the honour that people owe them as fathers by vertue of the fifth commandement and in way of returne of prayers for prayers So the Apostle had earnestly prayed for them in the former verse and now earnestly beggs prayers for them So Ministers are the peoples mouth to God they stand in the gappe and breach for them they by prayers procure blessings on their people it is equall and just the people should by their prayers procure blessing on them Secondly If we be bound to pray for all Saints and private men much more for our Pastors and Fathers in Christ by whom the Lord offers and conveyes his best and most lasting blessings upon us whom hee hath separated as one of a thousand to declare to man his righteousnesse to be lights to them that sit in darknesse guides to the blinde and patternes to the flocke Ministers by whom the Lord conveyes his saving graces into the hearts of the Saints Thirdly People neglecting this dutie lay themselves under the guilt of many sinnes 1. In that every man being bound to respect the glory of God in the furtherance of his pure worship which cannot be done but by an able and gracious Ministery they sinne against dutie that by their prayers strengthen not their Ministers 2. Every Christian is bound to be an helpe to the truth 3 Iohn they plainly detract this helpe that withhold their prayers from their Pastours their teachers and maintainers of truth 3. Every Christian ought to be compassionate to the soules of their brethren and by all meanes promote the salvation of men And therefore out of compassion of millions of soules who stand in neede of powerfull preaching and without vision are like to perish ought to pray that God would mightily worke with the word in the mouthes of his Ministers to make it powerfull to rescue people out of the snare of the Divell 4. All those people make themselves guilty of the troubles falls
and ill successe of their Ministers that faile them in this duty of prayer Thy prayers might have upheld him or helped them out of trouble out of frailty 5. Such as pray not for their Ministers deprive themselves of the blessing and happy fruite of that Ministery the more earnestly people pray for their Pastours the more assurance of good and happy fruite may they expect from their Ministery and often of their Ministers themselves who are worthily removed from an unworthy people that never prized them for their workes sake First This serves to reprove inconsiderate men who by neglect of this duty signe themselves to be out of the communion of Gods people they care not whether their Minister stand or fall sink or swimme leave him to himselfe take no notice of his labours trialls sufferings his person his worke his wages is no part of their care they have no hand lift up for him to God or men but perhaps both against him These are at least inconsiderate 1. That the blessing and benefit of a good Minister is invaluable and must be begged of all those that must share in the benefit One of the speciall clauses of the new Covenant is that God will give Pastors according to his owne heart and wil he give such a speciall gift to such as prize it not nor praise him for it 2. They consider not the weight of the calling the charge of soules for which who is sufficient The rage of Satan and all wicked men against this great worke never sleeping but alwayes hindering the free passage of the Gospell both with open fury and secret devises The many sharpe assaults that these leaders of Gods armies against the Prince of darknesse and his forces are exposed unto often in the forlorne hopes not onely bestowing their lives and strength in preaching the Gospell but often being bestowed for it and die to seale it with their blood Did they consider this they would pray in Peters words Acts 4.29 Lord grant thy servants that they may speake boldly thy word 3. They consider not how deepely themselves are interessed in the welfare and happy estate of their Ministers Is not the fall of the Minister commonly the ruine of the people Can the shepheards be smitten and the sheepe not be scattered Can vision faile and people not perish Can a watch-man of a Citty or Castle be corrupted or surprized by the enemy and the Citty be safe Or can a man be an agent or accessary in the corrupting and surprizing a Captaine set to keepe a Fort without treason to his Prince Even so hee that prayes not for the prosperity of every good Minister shewes himselfe in enemy to the Church and no friend to his owne salvation Secondly To reprove that cursed generation of men who in stead of praying for the prosperity of the Ministery and Ministers who being sent of God in mercie are a principall blessing 1. They repine and grieve as if some heavie scourge or plague were come upon them as the Divells did at Christs coming because they were tormented before their time It was never merry with them since there was such running and thronging after preaching now they cannot sit at ease nor have roome to bring their beds with them nothing is such a corrasive unto their hearts as to see Gods blessing and successe of a godly Ministery and the people of God flocking after his owne Ordinance This was the dust and daggers in the Pharises and hypocrites in Christ his time that they could profit nothing but that the world runne after him Iohn 12.19 Oh that such men would seriously consider that 1. Whosoever esteeme this excellent blessing a burden a plague it shall be so to them It offers it selfe now as a blessing but shall turne to the most intolerable plague that can befall them even a witnesse a bill of inditement aggravating their damnation burdening them with plagues and curses easelesse and remedilesse 2. There is not a more proper note of a Divell incarnate and a man in state of damnation than to envie and grieve at the grace of God at the prosperity successe and growth of the Gospell The Divells proper sinne Ye are of your Father the Divell his workes ye doe 3. The time hastens on thee when in terrours of soule and agonies of heart thou shalt wish one Sermon one word of comfort and know by the want of the blessing the benefit of it but perhaps shalt never finde opportunity Thirdly others in stead of praying for their Ministers curse them revile them slander them runne to the Rulers every week to disturbe them as if they were loath to be too farre behinde the Divell or not to be chiefe instruments in the ruinating of the Kingdome of Iesus Christ. Thus those that are bound to pray for their Ministers that they may be delivered from absurd and unreasonable men are most ready to make a prey and spoile of them But doubtlesse they are wicked and gracelesse men neare to a curse a wonder their steely hearts feare not some extraordinary judgement and messenger of Gods wrath every moment 2 King 2.24 When little children in their play cursed and reviled the Prophet Elisha beares came out of the wood and destroyed them how much lesse can the aged escape who teach their children by example to revile and scorne the Prophets and servants of God Fourthly others will not revile them but can spy wants and imperfections in them as indeede there is in the best can sit as Iudges on his person cast him off for one weake in gifts colde in his doctrine carelesse in his life and so turne him off But when did they pray for him that God would enable him to the worke of his Ministery that God would bestow the Spirit to deliver the word so as he might save his owne soule and them that heare him And if they faile herein are they not guilty of all his defects which they complaine of Surely would they spend as many earnest prayers for him as they doe words to taxe and disgrace him who knoweth whether the Lord might not open his heart and mouth for their comfort and profit And what reason hath the Lord to minister comfort and benefit by a man when it is never desired Thou findest no sweetnesse nor comfort in a Minister thou prayest for none How canst thou finde without seeking Secondly for instruction Seeing our want and sinne heretofore let us reforme our selves and provoke our selves to so needfull a duty daily to commend our Ministers to the grace of God as Paul and Silas were by the Church Acts 15.40 The first ground and to doe it aright 1. Wee must love them heartily our prayer must flow from love where prayer must be earnest love must be earnest first even as the love of fathers begetting us and breeding us up to Christ 1 Cor. 4. true love and prayer are ever inseparable it is impossible for a man to
that which is an effect of Gods mercy in Christ. 183 Perseverance of Saints set on 3 sure grounds 303 Perseverance is never divorced from true faith 3 reas 312 Perseverance most assaulted by Satan 314 Lets of it 5.324 Meanes 3.322 Meditations to stablish it 326. Motives to it 329. Examples 330 People must pray for their Ministers 3 reas 401 People neglecting to pray for their Ministers lay themselves under the guilt of many sins 5 instances 402 Perseverance of Saints all grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 351 Places choyse and safe to keepe good things in 4. 140 Popish doctrine leades men away from Christ 6 instances 101 Popery most pleasing to corrupt nature 6 instances 104 Popish doctrine a most desperate and uncomfortable doctrine and therefore false 5 instances 107 Pope a strange mysticall name unknowne to the learned Papists themselves 135 Power of Christ discernable in our effectuall calling by 4 signes 362 Preservatives against decay in the measure of graces 3. 29 Present at Idolatrous service unlawfull with pretence of keeping the heart to God 5 reasons 156 In all our prayers we must behold God a God of peace 177 Prayer a meanes of growth in holinesse in 4 things 212 Prayer for perseverance not in vaine for them that shall persevere 3 reas 306 Prayers of faith all grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 347 Prophecy what 40 Prophets not to be despised 49 Propound to our selves still an higher pitch and degree in grace 37 Prosperity of the wicked no true peace 4 differences 182 Profession of faith must all be grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 348 Q. To quench the Spirit more damnable than to want him 16 Questions Whether a doctrine backed with consent of ancient Fathers or the authority of Councels or other Antiquity may not be free from tryall 54 Whether any thing comming backed with example of great men or of the generall multitude or custome ofttimes be free from triall 55 Whether any thing comming with Caesars authority and superscription be exempted from triall 56 Who must try all things 57 How a man may know anothers calling 354 Whether a man called alwayes know his calling 359 R. Reason corrupt no right rule of tryall for 3 reasons 74 Recreations on the Sabbath of what kinde 119 Regenerate said to be blamelesse in 5 respects 196 199 Renovation in all the faculties 197 Renovation must be without as well as within 3 reas 278 The retentive faculty of the soule strengthened by 4 meanes 140 Rules of tryall whether the Spirit be quenched reduced to 5 heads 27 Rules in respect of our owne sinnes shewing the Spirit to be abated 5. 31 Rule of all tryalls what 58 Our Rule must be ever in our hand 88 Rules for tryall of all doctrines 6 132 Rules for holding good 6 90 Rules to keepe the affections unblameable many 257 S. Sanctification unsound wants 3 things which should make it hold out 382 Sanctification the description explained in 4 things 189 Sanctification of the Spirit why so called sundry reas 190 Sanctification in perpetuall motion 4 reas 191 Thorow sanctification in this life in 4 things 192 Full sanctification in the life to come in 4 things 193 Sanctification stockes up the roote of sinne civility onely cuts off some waste boughes 307 No Saint in earth none in heaven ●●8 Saints have all the same Spirit for 4 reasons 6 Scriptures the rule of all tryalls 4 reasons 59 Scriptures afford us five safe rules concerning following our forefathers 78 Shew of evill in doctrines must be avoided 153 All shewes of evill must be shunned in practise and behaviour 154 Signes of the Spirits presence 6. 1● Signes of generall Apostacy among our selves 6 316 Silence of God must not animate sinners 4 reasons 85 Singlenesse of heart knowne by 3 signes 249 Similitude betweene calling effectuall and ineffectuall five instances 367 Sinnes of others great meanes to quench the Spirit 24 Small evills to be shunned for 4 reasons 156 167 Speech given men why 3 uses 294 Spirit what is meant by it in Scripture 1 Spirit the same in the godly and wicked but differently 7 Spirit subject to be quenched in the best 14 Spirit of God is holy both in his nature and operation 15 Spirit discerned to be quenched both in the 1. number 2. measure of graces 27 Spirit referred to man what it meaneth 193 Spirit how taken away from the Saints 4 wayes 307 Stage-playes ought not to be frequented 6 reasons 121 Successe no certaine rule for actions 85 T. Teachers no way disparaged by triall of their doctrines but the truth a gainer by it 70 Things to be tryed what 52 Theeves and robbers incessantly stealing good things from us 3 sorts 142 Three things in a mans selfe call on him for growth in holinesse 223 Thoughts how to be holily ordered 242 Thoughts to be watched and why 243 Time of a mans calling not alwayes knowne 3 reas 357 Tongue abused 5 wayes 295 Tongue to be ordered and watched for 4 reasons 298 Trial● whether the Spirit be quenched in regard of good motions 29 Whether in regard of good duties 4 rules 30 Triall of things what 52 Trialls of growth in holinesse 5. 16 Traditions unwritten rejected 4 reasons 61. ●01 Transubstantiation against the analogy of faith ●0 Truth not to be tryed by persons but persons by truth 54 True teachers not so assisted but that they may deceive and be deceived ●● That is the true doctrine which giveth mos● 〈…〉 ●●stances ●7 V. Vniversall election and redemption derogateth from Gods glory 99 Vsury cond●mned 96 W. Well watching of the heart stands in 4 things 250 The will to be rightly ordered 4 rules 253 The will must determine with God and for God in every thing Instances 254 The will renewed knowne by many signes 255 The will of man why it must be well bended 3 reasons 256 Wicked men esteeme the godly unpeaceable because they will not lose their peace 188 Christian wisdome will avoid all beginnings and appearances of evill 151 Seeking to witches condemned by 6 reasons 118 Whole man sanctified throughout in 3 things 195 Word and Sacraments in their reverent use doe notably excite the Spirit in us 33 Word a meanes to increase holinesse 4 wayes 212 The word upholds us in our way 4 wayes 327 Our words must be faithfull 4 reasons 338 Working on the sabboth day condemned 7 reasons 119 Worst things must be most hated 260 GOod Reader among some smaller faults in printing which wee desire thy curtesie to passe by two are observed as changing the sence Page 268. line 28. reade those 4 lines thus All wise and 〈◊〉 walking is included under the affections of the feare of the ●ord 〈◊〉 the ●uties of the whole Law are all 〈◊〉 prized under 〈…〉 Love Page 319. li●e 3 〈…〉 highly 2 Tim. 2.25 Magnes amoris amor From my study Novemb. 17. the happy day of that admired Queene Elizabeth the worlds wonder the famous Mother of our
that God by his Spirit who onely can raise the dead in sinne would bestow this grace not belonging to the wicked upon these Thessalonians by which they putting off all the corrupt qualities of nature might by a new created quality in their hearts grow up in the image of God standing in knowledge true righteousnesse and holinesse And because they were already sanctified in part hee prayeth that they may goe on to through sanctification both here and hereafter for the present that they may attaine full holinesse in respect of all sinne which they must forsake and of the whole law and word which they must set before them in respect of all gifts principall and lesse principall and of all parts and faculties here expressed to be the spirit the soule and body that thus they may be blamelesse in respect of relation with Christ their head in respect of grosse crimes and reigning sinnes in respect of Christian inchoation of the Lords acceptation and of perfect consummation of whole sanctification at the comming of Iesus Christ. In that the Apostle prayeth for through sanctification and enumerateth the parts in which it is and desireth they may be kept blamelesse in every of them we learne that No Christian must content himselfe with the beginnings of holinesse but must proceede to full sanctification as vessells of honour to be full of goodnesse and knowledge Rom. 15.14 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow up unto full holinesse in the feare of God 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ Eph. 4.13 In all things grow up into him which is the head All which places shew that the whole life of a Christian must be a continuall progresse in sanctification 1. Our Text sets downe the orderly proceeding in this worke It must begin in the spirit and minde and then change the heart and will and so come forth into the body and actions that the whole man consisting of these parts may be blamelesse And further this care must be nourished untill the comming of Iesus Christ either to the generall or particular judgement All which shewes that the highest and most noble parts in man are corrupt and unholy and as the Apostle saith even the minde and conscience is polluted till this new quality be created for whatsoever is borne of flesh is flesh Ioh. 3.6 Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse And therefore our whole life is little enough for the renewing of all these parts so corrupted 2. Sanctification is but in part in this life for God would have sinne left in the best our best duties spotted and a pricke left in our flesh to buf●et and humble us who else through the abundance of grace would be proud and lifted up out of measure and that wee might goe out of our selves to the Lord and begge the increase of grace and sanctification from him Adde hereunto that the weake measure of grace present is often interrupted our daily lapses disturbe it sinne makes daily b●eaches in it Satan incessantly plants his great Ordnance against it experience shewes how easily we lose both many degrees of it and all sense of it and therefore we had neede still to be repairing our selves A beggars coate needes continuall patching We cannot be rid of our ragges wholly and therefore we must ever be mending Souldiers that keepe a fort or hold looke what batteries and breaches are made by skirmishes and assaul●s on the day they will repaire them in the night else could they not hold out no more could we against Satan and our owne corruptions without daily repaire And as our houses so our hearts they will grow dusty and nasty if they be not daily swept and cleansed 3. Sanctification is a continuall act and proceeding in grace so long as we live because it is nothing else but a returne to our first estate and image to which wee cannot possibly attaine till death And therefore if wee would proceede to the glory of the Saints we must proceed in sanctification to the full measure of it for glorification is nothing but the end and perfection of sanctification 4. God hath set apart many excellent and glorious meanes for the perfecting of this his owne worke by all which if we rise not to full holinesse we shall frustrate him of his end The holy Scripture is able to make the man of God perfect to every good worke 2 Tim. 3.15 the holy Ministery of the Word and Sacraments are able both to beget and strengthen faith which purifieth the heart holy meditations conference prayers with promises of blessing and successe if wee rightly use them all these witnesse to us that the Lord would have us to be still adding what is lacking to our graces and rise up to full assurance and holinesse and as those that are planted in the house of God to be more fruitfull and flourishing in our age 5. The necessity and utility of this practise imposeth it on all the godly 1. In respect of the wickednesse of their hearts and a number of beloved and darling sinnes against which all care watchfulnesse and strength is too little 2. In respect of the steine and soyle of sinne which is like a crimson dye hardly fetched out of those that are the Lords for when the sting of sinne is gone and the guilt of sinne is taken away and washed in the Kings bath even the fountaine of the blood of the Sonne of God opened to the house of Iudah and Ierusalem for sinne and uncleannesse yet is there a staine of sinne left which remaineth to be washed with the fountaine of water for Christ came by water and blood this fountaine of pure water is the grace of sanctification which is as the flood Iordan to wash the soules leprosie which stickes faster than Naamans so as we had neede wash seven times that is often yea continually and yet for all that it shall be with the faces of our soules as with the faces of our children the dyrt shall sticke till it be washed off and being washed soone growes foule and dyrtie againe 3. In respect of good duties wherunto we shal ever be unapt unready further than by profiting in sanctification wee are kept in a readinesse For as a man in fetters and irons cannot doe any service to his Prince till his fetters be knockt off so here our corruptions and lusts are heavier and presse us downe harder than a thousand chaines onely the grace of sanctification unties us and gives us liberty in good duties 4. In respect of finall perfection which is not attained in justification but by sanctification It is true that justification heales the wound but sanctification shuts the skarre justification brings pardon but sanctification brings peace neither was there ever any justified person who had received the first fruites but hee longed for