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A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

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all our Doctrine and Worship And oh if hereby we profess our selves Christians that thus we baptize thus we believe thus we worship thus we bless how great is that Apostacie even from Christianity it self which will deny our Baptism destroy our Creed abolish our Worship and if possible deprive us of our Blessing To close this Beloved Let us as by the profession of a true faith so by the exercise of an holy life O let us so regain and keep firm the love of God the Father that by the grace of Jesus Christ our Lord we may so hold fast the communion of the Holy Ghost Act. 2.3 that our fiery trial shall be but as the Apostles fiery tongues not to consume and destroy but to fortifie and prepare us even to a more firm founding and more glorious building up the Church in the unity of divine Faith and the uniformity of holy Worship Further in the manner and form of Baptisms administration we observe that the Holy Ghost is the third Person in the sacred Trinity and very God upon which it will be very seasonable to enlarge our selves For that which brought Satan like lightening down from Heaven carrying Hell with him it was his rebellious pride of Ero similis Altissimo I will be like to the most High and failing in that proud attempt of advancing the creature to equal the Creator he hath ever since made it his malicious design to depress the honor of the Creator to the condition of a creature witness the horrid Idolatries among the Heathens and the blasphemous Heresies amongst Christians The horrid Idolatries among the Heathens Rom. 1.23 Changing the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like unto corruptible man and to birds and to four-footed beasts and to creeping things The blasphemous Heresies amongst Christians Heresies denying the thrice blessed and glorious Trinity especially the eternal Godhead and the incommunicable subsistence of the Son and of the Holy Ghost And amongst the many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fighters against the Holy Ghost since the Pentecost tongues silenc'd the Heathen Oracles and the preaching of the Gospel banished their idolatrous worship amongst the many fighters I say against the Holy Ghost the militant Church of Christ hath been chiefly assaulted and infested by the Arians Macedonians and Photinians of old time and by the Socinians and Anabaptists of later years Yea even at this day there are too too many amongst our selves who pretend most to the Spirit yet are most blasphemous against the Spirit heretically denying the Divine nature and eternal Godhead of the Holy Ghost Wherefore in a secret zeal to this sacred truth of the Holy Ghosts Divinity a zeal enkindled by that Spirit which descended in fiery tongues upon the Apostles give me leave to explain and confirm to you these two particulars First That the Holy Ghost is the third Person in the sacred Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Son Secondly That this third Person thus proceeding is very God 1. The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the sacred Trinity proceeding from the Father and the Son And what we here speak in so ineffable a mystery let it be salvâ reverentiâ with due reverence to the Divine Majesty The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the Trinity Mat. 10.20 Joh. 15.26 and we prove it thus The Holy Ghost is called in Scripture the Spirit of the Father not as sent by the Father but proceeding from the Father his mission is temporary and his procession is eternal And it is worth our observation that the Holy Ghost here is said to proceed as the Son is said to be begotten even 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 1.14 by an immanent act so proceeding from him as being of the same essence with him And as the Holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Father Gal. 4.6 Joh. 16.15 so also of the Son And seeing Christ saith All that the Father hath are mine what the Holy Ghost receives by procession from the Father the same he receives also from the Son and that by one immanent act of eternal spiration from them both which act of spiration was signified by our Saviour when he breath'd upon the Apostles Joh. 20.22 thereby giving them the Holy Ghost Now that the Holy Ghost thus proceeding from the Father and the Son is a distinct person from the Son and the Father is most firmly proved from that of S. John where we have expresly the Comforter Joh. 15.26 the Spirit of truth sent by the Son from the Father And lest any should think the Spirit the same in person as he is in essence with the Father our Saviour answers the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Neuter with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Masculine to denote say the Antients the distinct person of the Holy Ghost An Heterosis like unto this we have in the Text In textu legitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsum in margine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsa verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conteret est masculinun Disciple all nations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Neuter yet is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Masculine The like very aptly observe in the Septuagint upon Gen. 3.15 A dispute it is whether to read ipse ipsa or ipsum he she or it shall bruise thy head The Septuagint resolves the doubt that it is not meant of mankind in general as the Rabbins would have it and so read ipsum it nor yet of the blessed Virgin in particular as the Romanist contends for it and so read ipsa she but of Christ himself and that is ipse he For so the Septuagint reads it with an Haeterosis I will put enmity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between thy seed and between her seed where the Antecedent is in the Neuter but the Relative they give us in the Masculine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not she nor it but he pointing unto Christ He shall bruise thy head Many very many the like observations I might give you very frequent in sacred Writ but I instance in these as to second the Father's Note upon that of S. John so to hint unto you how necessary to the interpreting and so to the understanding of sacred Scripture humane literature is however cryed down and declaim'd against by the Illiterate and the Enthusiasts 2. The Holy Ghost the third Person in the sacred Trinity is very God Of this we have several proofs in sacred Scripture giving him the Names the Attributes the Works and the Worship of God To give you a cursory view only of these First The Names of God Whereas it is said the Lord Deut. 32. ●2 Isa 63.14 even Jehovah led Israel in the wilderness the Prophet he tells us this Jehovah was the Spirit of the Lord even the Holy Ghost Again that in the Acts is plain and full Why hath Satan filled thine heart saith S. Peter to
awful reverence with the incense of prayer Exod. 30.6 7. to be received to mercy and obtain attonement for his sin § 16. Blessed shall this man be blessed in his imployments abroad and in his retirements at home in himself and in his issue blessed in his imployments abroad for that whereas the way of man is not in himself it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps Jer. 10.23 when he is in a strait and knows not what to chuse the Lord shall guide him in his choyce and put upon him a good course so that whatsoever he taketh in hand it shall prosper Prosper psal 1.3 if not to his temporal advantage yet to his spiritual benefit in respect of which spiritual benefit it is that Rom. 8.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things work together for good for good to them that love and to them that fear God § 17 And as thus blessed in his imployments abroad so secondly in his retirements at home when his soul drawn abroad by worldly affairs and publick imployments shall retire home into his own breast in his reflective self-examining meditations how does it then dwell at ease within his own doors no Shrew there to bate him no accusing guilt like a hellish fury to vex and disquiet him but all is still and at rest in the quiet peace of a good conscience Yea further blessed not onely in himself but also in his Issue in his Children those pledges of love and hopes of his family whom with diligent care he instructs to the possession of the best intail the fear of the Lord not so much solicitous that as his children they may possess his temporal estate as that being Gods children they may be joynt possessors with him of the heavenly inheritance of which heavenly inheritance as Canaan was the type so are the promises of the Gospel the conveyances the Sacrament of the Eucharist the seal and the Spirit of Grace the sure earnest and pledge Vers 14. The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant § 1. HEre we have Davids Argument to prove Gods blessing upon them that fear him and he makes use of a twofold medium The first from the operations of his grace The second from the manifestations of his love 1. The operations of his grace ●he secret of the Lord is with them that fear him 2. The manifestations of his love He will shew them his Covenant 1. Medium Davids Argument drawn from the operations of Gods grace the secret of the Lord c. the secret even that St. Peter calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the hidden man of the heart The new man regenerate by the spirit of grace Which new birth is set forth unto us in Scripture by the womb and dew of the morning the birth of the regenerate Psal 110.3 like that of the morning dew it is heavenly and secret the vapor exhaled by the Sun is of an earthly substance which by a celestial operation is changed into an airy dew thus the earthly minds of natural men raised and renewed by the power of grace are converted into a spiritual frame and heavenly temper § 2. Further the birth of the dew is secret and undiscerned when it is faln we see what it is but know not how it is made thus the new man we discern when it is formed but cannot discover the point of time or manner of action when and how it is wrought As of our natural generation so much more of our spiritual regeneration Psal 139.14 We are fearfully and wonderfully made the womb is not so secret a Work-House of nature for the generation of the body as the heart is of grace for the regeneration of the soul § 3. The effectual vocation whereby we are called unto Christ it is vocatione altâ So St. Aug. by a secret and deep call which speaks to the heart of the most desperate sinner in that Is 30.21 there saith God of the Christian Convert Thou shalt hear a voyce behinde thee saying this is the way walk in it a voyce behind thee not onely to denote unto us Gods indulgent mercy that when we fl●e and even turn our backs upon him he then calls unto us to turn unto him but a voyce behind thee to shew that the call of the Spirit is secret and undiscerned Joh. 3.8 Thus the voluntary breathings and free accesses of the Spirit unto the soul in the operations of grace as they are actively powerful so are they indisernably secret which secret operations of grace that they infallibly and inseparably accompany the fear of the Lord will appear by a short view of those Theological Vertues Faith Hope and Charity the very vital parts of the new man § 4. Observe we then how the Antients compare our Christian hope to the Shop and Store-house of blood the Liver and therefore Clemens of Alexandria calls hope very aptly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the blood of faith which carrieth the very life of Religion in it so that as hope wasteth so faith decaies and religion it self faints Now if Faith be the Heart and Hope the Liver of the new man then is Fear metaphorically the Lungs which with a gentle breath of awfulness and reverence fans and cools them both keeping Faith and Hope in an healthful temper which otherwise would soon have their heats and heights to the indangering the eternal welfare of the whole man For that too sad experience tels us how many by denying the Saints can sin and so excluding fear have been by Satan cast down headlong from the high top of presumption into the lowest pit of despair § 5. Yea how many puft up with the fancied conceit of their fellowship with Christ forget that he is their Lord 1 Joh. 1.3 and so casting off their awful fear become so far transported with the Gospels priviledges that they lay themselves open to Satans temptations especially the temptations most dangerous and destructive spiritual pride and a careless security Wheras that Rabbinical note may be well worth our Christian observation upon Gen. 31.42 where Jacob calls the Lord the God of Abraham then deceased but the fear of Isaac then surviving to shew that whilst we live we ought to fear and though we stand lest we fall for the way to be secure of mercy is to beware of security and to confirm our hope of possessing do we still nourish our fear of losing Heaven for certain it is an holy fear is well consisting with a firm hope which holy fear as well as hope of future blessedness is a good means to be blessed § 6. And as thus the fear of the Lord is accompanied with Faith and Hope so also with Love True it is St. John he tells us perfect love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 casteth out fear foras ejicit 1 Joh. 4.18 casteth it out of doors but it is that fear which
Jam. 1.17 And it is not any thing that can add to its immutability for as to infinity in respect of extension so to immutability in respect of firmness there can be no accession of parts nor addition of degrees § 14. Wherefore as mans oath adds not to the truth of his word so nor Gods oath to the certainty of his promise So that meerly to shew unto the faithful Heb. 6.17 the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel he confirmed it by an oath which was for the greater testimony of his love in the stronger assurance of our faith being fixt upon the firm stability of his promise from which stability of p●omise we draw an infallible argument to prove the blessing of God upon them that fear him He will shew them his covenant Who is it now that feareth the Lord and in that fear approacheth a communion with Christ in his ordinance his holy Sacrament that God may now acquaint him with his Covenant in the manifestations of his love let him first see to this that he be acquainted with his secret in the operations of his grace § 15. And here that we rest not on moral principles or on a formal sanctity do we examine the operations of grace in a real holiness such as meer morality cannot reach nor formal hypocrisie counterfeit See we then what is the secret of the Lord with them that fear him in the operations of grace 1. In respect of their contritions and humiliations 2. In respect of their hungrings and thirstings after righteousness 3. In respect of their holy purposes and godly resolutions 4. In respect of their earnest prayers and fervent supplications 5. In respect of their humble assurance of Gods love and acceptance through Christ § 16. 1. Their contritions and humiliations in which their sight and sense of sin is not only in respect of the general corruption of their nature but also the particular and more enormous transgressions of their life yea they view sin not so much in its horror of guilt Psal 14.3 Col. 1 21. Eph. 2 12. Isa 59.2 as in its pollution of filth not so much as exposing to wrath and hell as setting at enmity with God and estranging the soul from Christ And thus doth Christs grace work upon their hearts with the Laws threatnings tempered with the Gospels promises thereby bruising and breaking them in contritions of soul mollifying and melting them in languishings of spirit Oh this the secret of the Lord these the operations of grace in Contritions and Humiliations § 17. 2. In hungrings and thirstings after righteousness which arise in the soul from faith in the promises of Christ those of Justification by his Blood and those of Sanctification by his Spirit yea that knowledg of God and of Christ which they had formerly being speculative now becomes practical and they find those Scriptures true in experience and trial which before they viewed only in fancy and notion Psal 27.4 So that nothing appears more beautiful to their sou●s then the worship and service of their God nothing more joyous then communion with Christ and fellowship with his Saints And therefore do they breath forth their longings after righteousness with holy David Oh that our ways were made so direct Psal 119 5. that we might keep thy statutes And as they have no comfort in their souls till God speaks peace unto their consciences so nor have they quiet in their consciences till God give further grace unto their souls that grace of sanctification whereby they may perfect holiness in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 § 18. 3. Holy purposes and godly resolutions which resolutions of their souls are conformable to the admonition of the Apostle Act. 11.23 even with purpose of heart to cleave unto the Lord. And whereas the purposes of the Hypocrite they are ab extra from without from Gods judgments or mans perswasions their holy purposes they are ab infra from within from the sense of Gods mercy and Christs love which does so powerfully aff●ct their souls that they are with David at a Juravi I have sworne Ps 119.166 and I will perform it that I will keep thy righteous judgments They make it their solemn vow and sincere resolution to observe the Law of their God and the precepts of their Redeemer And according to the sincerity of their holy resolutions so do they order the integrity of their holy obedience even in an universal and impartial respect to all Gods commandments not allowing not approving yea Ps 119.6 not excusing or indulging themselves in the commission of the least evil of which their conscience is convinc'd that it is a sin against their just and holy God their good and gracious Father § 19. 4. Earnest prayers and fervent supplications How many oh how many are the deep sighs how many the mournful groans how many the secret wishes how many the pantings and longings which they feel in their souls as so many ebullitions of grace so many breathings of the Spirit And all these oft-times before they can in affiance of faith gain wing in prayer to present and enlarge themselves in supplications before the Throne of grace In which supplications they are not more earnest and importunate for justification then they are for sanctification for remission of sins then for newness of life yea they sue with as much fervency and importunity for holiness as for happiness for grace as for glory § 20. 5. Their humble assurance of Gods love and acceptance through Christ And for this know that the Spirit of supplication which gives them words to put up their prayer unto God through Christ the same Spirit doth often bring back word unto their souls that their prayer so put up is accepted whereby with David they taste and see that is Ps 34 8. experimentally find and feel that the Lord is God receiving even whilst they are praying an answer of their prayers returned into their bosom by a secret contentation of soul wrought by a sweet illapse of the Spirit And thus their souls become even transported with a divine joy and heavenly delight the spiritual communion they obtain with God through Christ in humble prayer being an earnest of that eternal communion they expect with God and with Christ in the heavenly presence Joh 17.24 Of which eternal communion and heavenly presence this blessed Eucharist is the Sacramental seals and pledge confirming unto us the truth and comfort of this doctrine and Text That the secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant Vers 15. Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord for he shall pluck my feet out of the net § 1. HIs guards are strong his fence is sure whose salvation is Christ which salvation is communicated to us in the promises of grace exhibited in the ministry of the Word and more plentifully conveyed yea more effectually confirmed in
me Isa 49.14 he hath withdrawn himself in the comforts of his Spirit from me so that I am desolate and afflicted the troubles of my heart are enlarged For thy comfort and direction 1. ● Know Comfort is not of the necessary being but of the happy well-being of the Saints it is rather a partial reward then a particular grace an earnest of glorification rather then a part of sanctification It is the light not the heat of the Sun that makes the day and it is the grace not the comfort of the Spirit that makes a Saint 2. For thy direction 1. Be zealous to find out the Achan to discover the cursed thing if any there be which hath caused or occasioned this desertion and having found it be humbled in repentance for commonly Spiritual comforts take their first rise from Penitential sorrow § 24. 2. After humiliation enquire of God in the means of grace press near to him in his ordinances especially this of the blessed Eucharist And in this holy Sacrament hear Christs Venite ad me his Come unto me Mat. 11.28 extending it self to the hungry that they come and be satisfied to the thirsty that they come and be refreshed to the weary that they come and be eased to the weak that they come and be strengthened to the sick that they come and be healed to the fainting that they come and be revived to them that are fallen that they come and be restored yea to all that have faith and repentance that they come and be saved Here the treasury of heaven here the fountain of life here the storehouse of comforts are all set wide open Here O ye afflicted souls here you are at the right door knock and knock hard be not answered without admittance God loves an holy importunity and know the Lord is here Christ is here life is here salvation is here here dwells everlasting mercy here dwells eternal peace Oh look in look in with all reverence and faith into these sacred mysteries of grace and love and see see there the delights of Paradise and rivers of joy feeding them Oh how the Angels sing whilst devout souls exult at this blessed Feast of the Lord of life and Prince of peace § 25. 3. To preserve the comforts of the Spirit when received of God in Christ be faithful in the exercise of grace For God imprints his love upon the heart in the characters of grace which the more large the better read yea Grace is Gods seal and the more visible the stamp the more evident the assurance the more evident is our assurance the more full will be our comforts Further know the wayes of holiness are as beds of spices Cant. 4.16 the more we walk in them the more they requite the soul with their sweet delight and spiritual refreshments Thus must mans obedience be conformable to his devotion his conversation to his supplication not doing that which may drive God from him in justice whilst he would have God turn to him in mercy Turn thee unto me and have mercy upon me c. Vers 18. Look upon mine affliction and my pain and forgive all my sins § 1. AFfliction is the proper object of compassion misery the proper object of mercy And therefore we read how Pilate willing to release Jesus he brings him forth having his back furrowed with the whips his head harrowed with the thorns and his derisive purple stained yea drencht with blood and presents him thus ghastly a spectacle to the Jews with an Ecce homo Joh. 19.5 behold the man supposing so sad a sight would have moved malice to mercy and envy it self to compassion Now what Pilate did to the Jews with Christ Christ in a fit resemblance and apt allusion does with the Penitent to his Father he brings him forth in the Court of Conscience having his heart wounded with sorrow his spirit broken in contrition and his soul fainting in languishments of repentance and presents him so sad a spectacle to the Father with an Ecce homo Behold the man § 2. Behold the man once so lofty in his pride now so lowly in his penitence once so hardened in his rebellion now so humbled in his contrition once so obstinate a sinner now so pittiful a penitent And oh whilst this man of sorrows mourns in affliction how does the Father of mercies melt in compassion When the wounded sinner is presented by the wounded Son and the Penitents tears cry aloud with the Mediators blood how must the Fathers compassion needs melt into sins remission Of which sacred truth and heavenly comfort was David well assured when in this his Psalm of penitence he makes this prayer of faith Vide afflictionem Look upon mine affliction and my pain and forgive all my sins § 3. Observe we in these words two particulars 1. The proper object of Divine mercy 2. The firm ground of the Souls peace 1. The proper object of Divine mercy it is affliction and pain Look upon my affliction and my pain 2. The firm ground of the Souls peace it is sins forgiveness Forgive me all my sins § 4. 1. The proper object of Divine mercy Look upon mine affliction and my pain This affliction and pain is either that of the penitent Sinner or that of the devout Saint That of the penitent Sinner who having withdrawn himself from the world and retired into the secret closet of his Conscience Isa 38. how does he with Hezekiah even Recogitare annos in amaritudine animae Overturn the Annals of his life in the bitterness of his soul And after a strict survey having faithfully observed the sins which he hath committed and the several circumstances by which they are aggravated he then sums them up into a Catalogue which is no sooner in his eye but sorrow is in his heart endeavoring to blot out those letters of guilt with his tears of repentance through faith in the blood of Christ § 5. And whilst he sets his sins in order before him Oh how does a secret affrightment chill his blood and make his heart to tremble in the apprehension of their loathsome filth and dreadful curse yea he beholding himself under the heavy sentence of the laws condemnation Oh how how is he wholly encompassed with terror and amazement When he looks within him Oh the terrors of an accusing conscience and a killing guilt When he looks without him Oh the horror of a deserved death and a tormenting Hell When he looks above him Oh the dread the dread of an offended Majesty and an avenging Judge Oh whither whither then shall this poor penitent fly for succour Where oh where shall his affrighted and afflicted soul seek for shelter Where but at the cross of his Redeemer § 6. And when Christ so full of pitty so full of love when he beholds the humble suppliant and sincere penitent in the lowest depth of his humiliations pouring out his complaint at the foot of his
in our mind and this will conduce much to the composing our souls when their Words of Complaint are answered with Grounds of Comfort and Rules of Direction CHAP. I. The Souls Conflict from the importunate Crowd of Vain Thoughts OUr secret Thoughts are commonly the immediate issue of our inward Principles vile affections still begetting vain imaginations and holy desires administring matter for divine thoughts Wherefore when our Lord Jesus Christ sets up his Throne in the Heart he there governs by the golden Scepter of his Grace which Grace it is that casts down every high imagination and brings into captivity every vain thought to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which vain thoughts however they may seem small sins yet their strength of evil like that of the Egyptian caterpillars it is in their number Ps 10 5.34 35. whereby they prevail oftentimes to eat up every green thing in the land every good motion in the heart And this importunate crowd of vain Thoughts is not the least of Satans temptations in which he is right Beelzebub the God of Flyes Mat. 12.24 for as busie Flyes were to the Altars sacrifices so are vain thoughts to our holy services their continual buzzing disturbs the Mind and distracts its devotion This Cogitationum tumultus this tumult and crowd of vain Thoughts was once S. Bernards trouble of which he complains Bern. de inter Dem. that introeunt exeunt they pass and repass come in and go out and will not be controll'd Amovere volo nec valeo I would fain saith he remove them but cannot either as slie Thieves they creep in undiscern'd or as bold Guests they force admittance though they find no welcome Now because nothing is more dreadful to the godly man then sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so says S. Chrysostom that to him is death that to him is hell Even therefore though no exorbitancie of life be discerned by man yet is he afflicted deeply afflicted for the very risings and rebellions of his Thoughts which being in the secret closet of the Heart can only appear unto God And in this his affliction hear we his Complaint The Words of Complaint Oh the perplexing trouble of my distracting thoughts How do they by their slie insinuations and secret importunities continually disturb the quiet of my mind and make my holy duties become a weariness to my soul They cool the heat they damp the vigor they dead the comfort of all my devotions Even when I pray God to forgive my sins I then sin whilst I am praying for forgiveness yea whether it be in the Church or in the Closet so frequently and so violently do these vain Thoughts withdraw mine heart from Gods service that I cannot have confidence he hears my suit because I know by experience I do not hear my self and therefore sure needs must God be far off from my prayer whilst my Heart is so far out of his presence hurried away with a crowd of vain Imaginations The Grounds of Comfort 1. These vain Thoughts O thou afflicted soul being indeed thy burden they shall not be thy ruine and though they do take from the sweetness yet they shall not take from the sincerity of thy devotions Yea 2 King 10.16.31 Ps 26.2 3. hereby thy sincerity is approv'd for that some external interest of temporal relations may make us guard our words our actions but it must be some internal Principle of holy fear which makes us to watch our thoughts our desires If then thy devotions were not sincere thy heart would not be troubled for to be taken off from a work we regard not Ps 119 115. is no disquet to the mind but it is an argument we set a value and esteem upon the work in hand when we are loth to be disturbed in the doing Ps 7.9 139.2 Jer. 11.20 2. It is no little glory which we give to God in the acknowledgment of his omnipresence and omniscience that we own him present in the Closet of our Hearts and privy to the first risings of our most inward thoughts And as it is the excellencie of Gods law that it reacheth our thoughts to discern and judge them Heb. 4.12 Luk. 2.35 so it is the riches of Gods mercy that it goes beyond the number of our thoughts to remit and pardon them Were it not indeed for the multitude of Gods compassions Ps 51.1 Gen. 6.5 dangerous yea desperate were our condition in the multitude of our sinful imaginations Which Imaginations being in number infinite are not to he forgiven but by those Mercies which are infinite and numberless Ps 145 8 9. This oh this is the sure foundation of firm comfort to the soul the tender mercies of its God! 3. It is much the experience of Gods children even the devoutest Saints that their thoughts of God and of Christ of heaven and of holiness are very unsteady and fleeting Like the sight of a Star through an Optick glass when held by a Palsey-hand such is our view of Divine objects we are long in finding them and soon lose them our thoughts wavering through our minds weakness Besides when we are most intent and our eye fixt then is Satan ready to strike us on the elbow Ps 57.7 Ps 31.21 22. and by some suggestion to shake us from our steadiness and disturb our devotions Indeed as Satan so the World and the Flesh they are most importunate suitors and let our communication with God and with Christ in fervent Prayer or any other holy service be ne'r so earnest and secret yet will they thrust in upon the soul for reception and audience Yea though we observe our Lords command and watch unto prayer Mar. 13.33 yet in our strictest Watch how do these enemies slip by our Guards If we stop and turn back some vain Thoughts yet even then whilst we are busied in that watchful care how are we surprised with some other as vain imaginations notwithstanding all our care and watchfulness Think not then O distressed soul think not 1 Cor. 10 13 in the common condition of Gods children that thou art cast out of Gods favor 4. Know thou hast the gracious mediation of an alsufficient Saviour to supply thy defects and procure an acceptance of thy sincere though imperfect Devotions In thy Saviours mediation Heb. 2.17 Joh. 6.27 Luk. 4.18 Rom. 8.34 Heb. 7 25. behold him a merciful and a faithful High Priest seal'd of the Father and annointed by the Spirit to this very office that being entred the Holy of Holies and set down at the right hand of the Majesty on high he should ever live to make intercession for us so that he he it is who compassionately toucht with a feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4 15. presents the sincere desires of our souls and holy purposes of our hearts as the firstlings of our flock made acceptable unto God through
in its filthiness is the mother Answ Jer. 4.14 Answ True if we find the mother hug and kiss the child the Heart I mean embrace and indulge the thought then indeed though the foul suggestion be only an egg laid in our nest yet because we brood it with our own warmth it becomes the issue of our own corruption and lays a black stain and guilt upon the soul Wherefore seeing as naturally tender children affect the womb so do corrupt thoughts the heart that bears them Know O thou afflicted soul if thy foul thoughts be of thine own begetting or begotten of thee thou shalt find a secret disposition of liking and of loving to them and an inward softness will be ready to foster and to cherish them Ps 119.113 But if they are the objects of thy hate which startle and affright thy soul and thou findest a secret antipathy against them and an inward abhorring of them then they are certainly altogether from without and so I have our Saviours warrant to assert and thou his word to believe that they defile not the man Mat. 15.18 19. But what is it that thy troubled soul still objects Thou sayest Obj. 2 Never any of Gods children were in this condition and sure it is some strange corruption discern'd by Satan which makes him thus tempt and it is some heavy displeasure conceiv'd by God which makes him thus permit the temptation Answ Thus to be afflicted is no new thing Answ 2 Cor. 2.11 and that with Gods Saints even I the least of those who minister to the Flock of Christ can witness to thee that in the service of my Ministry amongst other afflicted Consciences I have met with more then two or three even very many who had been thus buffeted by Satan and with such violence of fury for length of time even for some years that they have pin'd away and languished in their Convulsion-fits of secret tortures brought down to the very gates of death yea of hell too concealing their temptations because asham'd to utter them And these have been persons of no mean piety who observ'd Satans assaults to have been most violent when their devotions had been most enflam'd Yea their first conflict with these foul temptations was some time after their thorow-conversions when having given up their names unto Christ they had been exercised in solemn humiliations and graciously enlarg'd yea ravish'd with the sweet delights of holiness in their communions with God and with Christ in prayer and in praises Good souls thus brought to Mount Tabor they thought of building Tabernacles but alas Mat 17.4 they were presently made to come down and bearing their Cross Luk. ● 23 follow Christ to Mount Calvary yea to the grave and to hell that the glory of their victory and triumph might be the greater And blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.3 who in the power of his Spirit and grace was pleased to make these very Grounds of Comfort and Rules of Direction to become effectual to their restoring 3. It appears then that these faedae tentationes as Casuists call them these foul and filthy temptations even of Infidelity Blasphemy Atheism and the like they are Satans scare-crows when his baits fail when he cannot allure and win the soul by carnal pleasures and worldly delights then he seeks to fright and deter it from duties of holiness by secret horrors and dreadful suggestions Which dreadful suggestions rightly considered Job 30.15 Ps 88.16 they bring more of terror then of guilt to the soul being so contrary to the light of Nature and the dictate of Reason not rais'd by man but cast in by Satan And being thus cast in they have their passage thorow not their dwelling in the heart they make their entrance as bold Intruders but find not entertainment as welcom Guests Wherefore as many good Thoughts which only come into the mind by sudden motion and like sparks die as soon as brought forth as those do not argue a regenerate estate so many evil Thoughts which thrust into the heart by a sudden irruption and are opposed as soon as discern'd they do not prove a state unregenerate The Rules of Direction 1. Rightly inform thy judgment by making it a part of thy spiritual understanding to discern aright between the temptation Phil. 19.10 Heb. 5.14 and the evil of the temptation Which evil of temptation lies in the consent of the Will which Satan may perswade but cannot enforce So that if the temptation be consented to it brings guilt upon the soul but if repulst it returns upon Satan 2. Strictly examine thy Conscience for the discovery of what transgressions may have occasion'd these temptations For sometimes they are the punishment of sin though themselves not a sin to be punisht they are a just affliction when they are not a condemning guilt If ●inah gad abroad her chastity suffers a Rape Gen. 34.1 as the punishment of her curiosity and to wander in our thoughts from God is oftentimes punish'd with meeting a Bug-bear in our way Thoughts of Blasphemy or the like to fright us back and drive us neerer to him Yea when we become disobedient to Gods will not laid low in our humble submissions he suffers Satan to buffet us even against our wills sore vext with his foul suggestions and thus our grieving his Spirit Eph. 4.30 is by a Lex tali●nis justly chastised with a grieving ours Again observe that when we have had our Eagles flight soaring aloft in spiritual ravishments and then been pufft up with spiritual pride 2 Cor. 12 7. Luk. 10.10 God as once to chastise this sin and subdue this lust he justly suffers Satan who for his pride fell from heaven like lightening 2 Cor. 12.8 to buffet and afflict the soul with these affrighting terrors which like lightening amaze with horror though they do not wound with guilt Further yet as thou examinest thy self to find out what sins have occasioned these temptations so examine what sins have been caused or occasion'd by them as what deadness of heart what impatiencie of spirit what neglect of Gods service what weariness in holy duties what froward discontent what repining distrust and the like 3. Now having rightly inform'd thy Judgement as to the quality and nature of these temptations and strictly examined thy Conscience as to the cause or occasion of them the best way to free thy self from their violence and vexation is this 1 Do thou prostrate thy self in Gods presence and in a deep humiliation of soul with fasting and prayer Mat. 17 21. do thou supplicate the Throne of Grace to obtain the mercy of thy God through the merits of thy Saviour for the free and full pardon of whatsoever sin hath occasioned these temptations or hath been it self caused by them 2 When thou hast made this humble supplication with all earnest contrition then cite Satan
have no more Sacrifice for sin because Christ being denied none other Messias was to he expected and as for the Sacrifices of the Law they were now no more available to take away sin they being ended and fulfilled in Christ So then there is no more sacrifise for sin to wilful Apostates but there is still a sacrifice for sin to humble Penitents The merit of Christs passion shall nothing avail him that renounces his Christianity but it shall much avail yea effectually save him who bewails his iniquity Obj. 3 3. Obj. Against the renewing of Repentance And this Objection is raised from that of the Apostle Heb. 6.4 c. where he saith that it is impossible for those who were once enlightened and have tasted of the heavenly gift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost and have tasted the good Word of God and the powers of the World to come if they fall away to renew them again unto repentance From hence the relapsed Saint in his deep distress of Conscience frames this objection Seeing I have been once enlightened and have tasted the heavenly gift and have been partaker of the Holy Ghost and have tasted the good Word of God and the powers of the World to come and now having fallen away from my God by my multiplied iniquities it is impossible that I should be renewed again unto repentance Answ Answ This place as that other before mentioned is not to be understood of falling but of falling away not of the Children of God falling through sins of humane infirmity but of the Professors of Christ falling away through the sin of wilful Apostacie Of which sin many in the primitive times became guilty either through fear or through covetousness renouncing the faith of Christ and returning again to Judaism or Heathenish idolatry and of such it is that the Apostle here speaks when he tells us that they crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh v. 6. and put him to an open shame For they that fell away to Judaism did as much dishonor injure and abuse Christ as if with the Jews they had actually spit upon him buffeted him and crucified him And for such to renew them again to repentance it is impossible Impossible non physicè sed moraliter as the School speaks Impossible according to the ordinary course of the Church according to the common and usual way of salvation otherwise our Saviour tells us in the like case With men this is impossible but with God all things are possible True it is Mat. 19 26. Novatus and his followers from this Heb. 6.4 and that Heb. 10.26 did deny repentance and admission into the Church not only to those who fell away from the faith but also who fell into any scandalous sin but for this were they justly condemned by the Church of God for Heresie So that this place of the Apostle is to be interpreted as meant of such professors of Christ who fall away from the faith by wilful Apostacie as did Judas and Julian Not of such servants of God who fall into sin through some prevailing temptation as did David and Peter 4. Obj. Against a partaking of the blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist Obj. 4 Alas how shall I so unworthy a person be a worthy partaker of that holy Sacrament And to receive unworthily 1 Cor. 11.27.29 is to increase the horror of my guilt not regain the favor of my God I believe indeed but alas it is but faintly I repent but it is but weakly And what shall I then so vile a sinner attend so dreadful a solemnity Answ O thou dejected yet penitent soul Answ who art dismaied in thy self having weakened the power of grace by thy relapses into sin oh let not the weight of sin or the weakness of grace so thy repentance be faithful and thy faith sincere let not either deter or detain thee discourage or withhold thee from this blessed Ordinance but attend unto our Saviours call and come at his gracious invitation Hearken and hear Come unto me Mat. 11.28 all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest Even because weary come and be refreshed even because burdened come and be eased because weak come and be strengthened because poor come and be enriched because sick come and be healed because wounded come and be cured because sad come and be comforted because dull come and be quickened because relapsed come and be restor'd Come to this spiritual feast with thy wedding-garment Mat. 22.12 Gen. 27.15 the pure robe of Christs righteousness put on by faith and thus clothed with the sweet smelling raiment of our elder Brother thou shalt obtain a multiplied blessing from our heavenly Father even a blessing of righteousness of peace a blessing of mercy and of love of grace and of strength of comfort and of joy R●m 86. the testimony of the Spirit setting on the seal of the Sacrament for the recovering and continuing the renewing and confirming the assurance of Gods love in a communion with Christ in his fulness It remains then O thou afflicted soul that thou fix upon the immutability of Gods love and the stability of his Covenant together with the merit of Christs passion and the benefit of his intercession these the sure Grounds of Comfort Again do thou raise thy faith renew thy repentance and apply thy self to a wor●hy partaking of the blessed Eucharist these the faithful Rules of Direction All which the God of mercy and compassion bless unto thy soul and make effectual to thy salvation through Jesus Christ our Lord Amen CHAP. IV. The Souls Conflict from the daily Assaults of Sin WHich Conflict that it is truly spiritual and sincere will appear by these signs Rom. 7.21 22 24. 1. The sanctified person acts against the power whilst he groans under the weight of his sin Ps 51 2.7.10 He hates its pollution as well as dreads its guilt He abhors its filth as well as fears its punishment 2. The Saint of God in his spiritual conflict he is both earnest to discover his corruptions and zealous to subdue them 1 Cor. 9.27 whereas the Natural man seeks out his corruptions as the Coward does his enemy unwilling to find him and afraid to fight him 3. Whereas the Natural man like a Neuter in a State is offended with the tumult and uprore that disquiets him the Spiritual man like a loyal Subject is incensed against the Rebel-Lusts that raise this tumult Ps 18.23 and cause this disquiet 4. His heart does as suddenly startle at the motions of sin as the Lamb does at the presence of the Wolf and this from that great contrariety and secret antipathy which is betwixt sin and grace the flesh and spirit an antipathy as great as that betwixt light and darkness Christ and Belial 2 Cor. 6.14.15 heaven and hell Lastly above all the evils sin brings upon the soul this that
and salvation Rom. 8 33. oh how will it at once raise the mind with wonder and fill the soul with comfort and this in beholding how in every link in every mysterie Mercy and truth do meet together Ps 85.10 righteousness and peace do kiss each other O thou afflicted soul how will it strengthen thy faith and thereby confirm thy peace yea enlarge thy joy To behold Christ seal'd by the Father to the office of Mediation Joh. 6.27 1 Tim. 2.5 Luk. 4.18 1 Tim. 3.16 and anointed by the Spirit to the work of Redemption which Redemption he hath perfected by his Passion declared sufficient by his Resurrection and applies as effectual unto his Church in his Intercession So that S. Paul makes it his confident challenge to all in heaven in earth and hell saying Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect Rom. 8.33 34. Magnificentissima conclusio Bez. in loc it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us 2. Humbly applying the Promises of life In this exercise of faith O distressed soul thou shalt experimentally find and feel how aptly the Graces of the Spirit are resembled by fire for that as fire by burning Mat. 3.11 so grace by exercising it further enlarges and spreads it self Thus Charity is increased by loving Patience by bearing Mercy by compassionating and Faith it self by believing The best exercise of Faith then is in application of the Promises and the best application of the Promises is in the supplication of Prayer when in a devout fervor we urge God with the truth of his Word and cast our selves upon him in his free grace for the performance of his Promise which as it is made so is it made good in Christ Jesus unto the faithful 2 Cor. 1 20. 3. The Grounds of Comfort as to a distrust of the sincerity of Repentance 1. A man may be truly sanctified and so through the power of grace in the work of the Spirit a sincere Penitent notwithstanding the reliques of sin to hinder his progress in holiness This we have made good by the example of S. Paul who in an high accent of sorrow and a full confession of guilt complains of a body of sin a law in his members and a being brought into captivity to that law of sin Rom. 7.23 24. which sin though it rules not as a King it hath no willing and ready obedience yet it sometimes bears sway as a Rebel and prevails upon the soul so that with the Apostle the good which he would v 15 19. that he does not and the evil which he would not that he does And this S. Paul speaks of himself not as personating the unregenerate estate which many do imagine but as engaged in the spiritual warfare as S. Augustine hath determined For observe S Aug lib. retr v. 18. v. 22. v. 25. to will saith the Apostle is present with me and what is it not the Spirit of grace that thus sanctifies the will Again I delight in the law of God after the inward man this the voice and the practice too sure of a man regenerate Again With my mind I my self serve the law of God Here the Apostle is certainly either a Saint or an Hypocrite Wherefore then from the example presented it is evident a man may be truly sanctified and so through the power of grace a sincere Penitent notwithstanding the reliques of sin which hinder his progress in holiness 2. The more stirring motions and prevailing power of corruptions is not always from the greater impiety but oftentimes from the fitter opportunity to sin Know then O thou afflicted soul though opportunity doth not beget yet it is worth thy enquiry whether it doth not help to bring forth thy sins of infirmity It may be thou art apt to be more angry and passionate then formerly but is it because thou hast less meekness or more provocation It may be thou findest unclean affections more defiling then formerly but is' t because thou hast less chastity or more temptation It may be thou feel'st more grudgings of impatience and distrust then formerly but is it because thou hast less faith or more affliction Mat. 26.35 compar d with v. 56. 2 King 8.12 13 No man knows what corruptions are in him till he be tempted and that occasion and opportunity by an unhappy midwifery bring them forth Besides the difference of thy condition in the world may have made a difference of estate in thy soul Thou art now it may be at ease and rest and if so know the Birds appear in a calm which hid themselves in the tempest Active imployments yea Deut. 32 15. Jer. 48 11. and an afflicted condition in the world silence and still many corruptions which when we are at ease then they appear and shew themselves not that lust hath then more more life but more advantage not more strength but fitter opportunity 3. Thy sight of sin is from more light of Grace Rom 7 7.8 9. Eph 4. ●8 1 Co● 6 11. Rev. 3.17.18 and thy sense of sin from more life of the Spirit Oh how many lustings and sinful corruptions are there which the soul till exercised in the ways of holiness takes no notice or knowledge of So that thy corruptions increased in their number at which thou art so much dismaied do not necessarily argue that thou hast formerly less iniquity but rather that thou art now able to make a more clear and full discovery of thine iniquity which discovery of sin is a good argument to pro●e the growth of grace For as the dust and atomes in the air are not discern'd till the Suns beams present them to the eye so the lusts and corrupt affections of the heart they are not seen till the Beams of divine light do make their discovery to the soul The Rules of Direction 1. Apprehend aright what is the proper sign of a sincere Repentance even the hatred and detestation of sin accompanied with a striving and contending against sin which contention is to be continued weakening sin in its power till we mortifie it in its motions It is not then the not committing of sin which is in it self the proper sign of a sincere repentance For what were this but to send us to the Wilderness or the Cloyster for the only Penitents yea and not find them there neither seeing the sad experiences of the Godly do sufficiently witness that sins of infirmity and of daily incursion as Tertullian calls them they do too too often surprise the best of Saints Peccata quotidianae incursionis Tert. 1 Joh. 1.8 Ps 18.23 Heb. 12.1 and that in the best of duties Yea there is in most if not in all some particular sin of nature which by special appropriation we may with David call
no condemnation then no punishment For what is punishment but the execution of the just condemnation which is past by God upon the guilt of sin S. Augustine then gives us a short and full resolution that verè Christus communicando nobiscum sine culpa poenam culpam solvit poenam Christ by communicating with us of punishment without sin hath taken away both sin and punishment The afflictions then of the faithful they proceed from God as a provident Father not as an avenging Judge and are not for satisfying of his justice but the reforming of their lives To close What is it that most retards our pace tyres our spirits and dulls our vigor in the way to life and glory but the Corruption in our hearts and the Cross on our shoulders By so much then shall we the better bear our Cross by how much we the more subdue our Corruption To instance Root out Vainglory and ô how much is taken away from the weight of ●nfamy Root out Pride and ô how much is taken away from the weight of Poverty Root out Wrath and ô how much is taken away from the weight of Injury So that the better to bear our Cross what can be more effectual then this to reform our lives 2. To the exercise of a sincere repentance join the invocation of fervent prayer Ps 86.7 See Davids resolution In the day of my trouble I will call upon the Lord. And according to his resolution see his practice Ps 116.3 4. The sorrows of death compassed me and the pains of hell got hold upon me I found trouble and sorrow then called I upon the name of the Lord O Lord I beseech thee deliver my soul And for our encouragement to this duty we have the comfort of Gods promise Ps 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me O the divine power of fervent prayer which by an holy importunity does even vincere invincibilem overcome him who is invincible Exod. 32.10 Let me alone says God to Moses let me alone Domine quis tenet te saith the Father Lord who holds thee Why the instance and importunity of Moses prayer Let not then O afflicted soul let not the extremity of thy distress dead the vigor of thy faith or damp the importunity of thy devotion No as the thickest darkness of the night is nearest to the dawning of the morn and the lowest Ebb to the Tides return Thus the greatest misery which in natural men prompts to despair in the spiritual man becomes a ground of hope and a rise of comfort knowing well that of David is good instruction as well as true devotion a maxim of faith as well as a petition of prayer Ps 60.11 Help Lord for vain is the help of man When our affliction then is sharpest let our devotion be hottest and the more fervent is our prayer the more near shall be our help The tears of the afflicted when poured forth in fervent prayer cannot so f●ll to the ground but that their cry does ascend unto heaven and prevail with God for a blessing So that he shall either overshadow them with his wing or support them with his hand either protect them by his power or sustain them with his grace either give them deliverance out of troubles or strength to undergo them And indeed by so much a greater blessing it is to be strengthened to undergo troubles then to have present deliverance out of them by how much spiritual graces are more excellent then temporal mercies Ps 4 1. Ps 32.7 A greater blessedness was that of Davids when enlarged in his distress then when encompassed with songs of deliverance Hear me when I call O God of my righteousness thou hast enlarged me when I was in distress Upon this saith S. Chrysostom excellently Chrys in loc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He saith not thou hast kept trouble quite from me or thou hast quite rid me out of trouble but that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a wonder and paradox to the world In the midst of my distress 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou hast placed my soul in rest Let it be thy prayer then O distressed soul in all thine afflictions that God will either support thee by his grace or deliver thee by his power And so 3. To the invocation of fervent prayer join an humble submission unto Gods will For that God oftentimes deals with his children by way of exchange and commutation denying them wealth he gives contentment denying peace he gives patience denying an end of troubles he gives strength to undergo them Such is Gods wisdom that he knows and such is his goodness that he gives what is best and fittest for h●s to receive 1 Pet 5 6 7. Wherefore S. Peter's admonition is savingly good Humble your selves under the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you in due time casting all your care upon him for he careth for you Casting all your care upon him what may not Benjamin then have his sack and Christ his bag may not the Master provide for his family and the Father for his children Yes sure When the Apostle then will have us to cast all our care upon God he does not exclude any prudential providence but all sinful diffidence he does not forbid any moderate care but all immoderate carefulness Wherefore so cast we our care upon God as that in all things we humbly submit unto his will With old Eli in our greatest dangers and deepest necessities say It is the Lord 1 Sam. 3.18 1 Macch. 3.60 let him do what seemeth him good Or as Judas Macchabaeus in the midst of the calamities of his Nation As the will of God is in heaven so let him do Indeed a greater proof of grace there cannot be then this in the midst of afflictions humbly to submit unto the will of God For though there be no striving with our Maker yet how does froward Nature still prompt us to a quarrel in our murmuring against him Oh in how sweet and divine a temper then is that mans soul who when Gods hand is upon his back he hath his own hand presently upon his mouth and is at David's Tacui Domine quia tu fecisti Ps 29.10 I was dumb and opened not my mouth because it was thou Lord that didst it 4. To an humble submission unto Gods will join a patient expectation of his help Hear the Psalmists advice sound and saving Ps 37.6 7. Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for him and he shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light and thy just dealing as the noon-day Gods children must have a patient expectation of Gods help for without him all is but vanity all policie and strength all wisdom and wealth without God they are but like Jonahs gourd Jon 4 7 8. when the sun beats hottest when trouble and affliction is the
the Word of the most High God it alters not but as the Lord is gracious in his promise so will he be faithful in the performance Answ Answ General promises have their particular application and so become as the object of faith so the support of the soul in each particular condition Indeed it hath been the priviledge of some more devout souls and more divine tempers by an experienc'd communion with God in prayer to implore him for particular blessings with as firm an assurance as if they had had a particular promise Thus it is reported of good Latimer Bishop in the beginning of Reformation that he had frequent in his prayers and firm in his confidence these three things Queen Elizabeths obtaining the Crown His sealing the Truth with his blood and the third which he used to express with greatest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of devotion and vehemencey of zeal was this The Gospel restor'd once again once again in England All which God hath fulfilled But what said I all fulfilled No sure Upon perusing this passage of History I was affected in my thoughts observing the duplication of the good Fathers prayer that it was for the Gospels restoring once again and once again in England I hope the Spirit of prayer and of prophecie here went together and as the Gospel hath been already once again restor'd unto our fathers so it shall be once again restor'd unto us and unto our children as it hath been once restor'd from Romish Superstition so it shall be once again restor'd from Heretical Schismatical and Sacrilegious Profanation And this oh this do we further with our prayers our teares our deepest humiliations I call to mind the Historical tradition concerning S. Augustine That his mother Monica frequently applying herself to S. Ambrose that famous Bishop with bitter mournings for her son then a blasphemous Maniche and of a dissolute life though after an Orthodox Father and of a religious conversation S. Ambrose observing her continual lamentations dismist her with these words of comfort and confidence that Tot lachrymarum filius c. The son of so many tears should not perish Oh! did the Sons of this Church for their Mother as Monica the Mother did for her Son Isa 62 6 7. Luk. 18 7. importune God with prayers and tears day and night giving him no rest I could with confidence make particular application of Christs general promise and tell them in the words of S. Ambrose a little chang'd Tot lachrymarum Mater The Mother of so many tears the Church of so many prayers shall not be ruin'd The gates of hell even the policie of men and devils shall not prevail against her But oh I fear I fear our prayers have been so long out of the Church that most men leave the Church out of their prayers However then it be a divine priviledge of Gods devoutest Saints to have a secret perswasion and impulse of the Spirit for the asking by prayer and believing through faith particular blessings as if given in particular promises yet that which is the pattern of our practice is an application of the general promises to our particular conditions with an humble submission unto God in the order of his providence to dispose of our distress and of our deliverance as shall make most for his own glory and his Churches good And though God set a long date of time to the performance of his promise yet let not our hearts faint nor faith fail seeing there is certainly no void and empty space no vacuum in his providence but the interval is that of preparing the seed to harvest the fitting his people for deliverance and as the sharper Winter makes the Spring more fruitful the harvest more plentiful so the sharper affliction makes our graces more pure our deliverance more glorious Obj. 2. I have long expected and could with patience have Obj. 2 longer waited for the the salvation of my God did not the blasting of my hopes make my faith to wither In stead of recovery behold a festering of my wound I expected a mitigation but I find and feel an aggravation of my distress I did hope for a deliverance but now am prest down with a greater trouble Answ Answ If God increase thy burden continue thou instant in prayer and he will doubtless either increase thy strength or else hasten thy deliverance That of S. Paul stands firm God is faithful who will not suffer those that are his to be tempted above what they are able 2 Cor. 10.13 Theoph. in loc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Theophylact God proportions our burden to our strength or else gives strength propor ionable to our burden so that the force of Satans temptations shall not exceed the power of Gods grace Wherefore Thou relying upon the promise of thy God neither shall thine affl ction in its burden of weight nor in its length of continuance so damp thy faith or dead thy devotion as to destroy thy soul Further take this admonition That thou cherish an expectation of distresses happening and withall make good a preparation against the happening of distresses for nothing more discomposeth the frame of soul or disturbeth the peace of mind then when our troubles are sudden beyond expectation and our hearts unfenc'd without preparation We say Quae alii diu patiendo sapiens diu cogitando levia facit Those things which others make light by patience in long-suffering the wise man makes light by patience in long foreseeing Good it is then in afflictions still to expect the worst And thus what ill befalls us will be the lighter and what good happens to us it will be the sweeter Expect we the worst not in a distracting fear but in a wary prudence not in an ill presaging distrust but in a well resolved faith Neither may we fancie groundless troubles and thereby create crosses to our selves To fear shadows argues either guilt of Conscience or weakness of Judgment Neither may we yet anticipate Gods work by imposing a certainty of event upon probable afflictions For this were to double our cross if the evil happens and to create a cross if it happen not Thus O thou afflicted soul it remains firm as a sure Rule of Direction That whatsoever is the weight or continuance of thy trouble thou stay thy self upon the Promise waiting by prayer and patience for the salvation of thy God O Blessed JESVS the Lord of life Prince of glory and Captain of our salvation who hast vanquisht Satan and all the powers of darkness O give victory to all languishing Souls in their Spiritual Conflicts Guide them with thy councels sustain them with thy grace refresh them with thy comforts preserve them in thy love and crown them with thy glory Amen Amen Halleluiah THE Preacher's Tripartite BOOK III. TO Establish TRVTH and PEACE IN SEVERAL SERMONS Against the present Heresies and Schisms ESPECIALLY As to The Gospels Ministry Infants Baptism The Mystery of the Trinity
either to confirm your faith or give some reasons why you desert it yea you will have the advantage happily of gaining him who seeks to pervert you 5. An itching curiosity and affectation of novelties This is that which hath made so many Seekers that they are become a Sect. Seek and ye shall finde saith our Saviour Seek is the precept Matth 7.7 ye shall finde is the promise But no wonder if men finde what is not intended in the promise when they seek what is not commanded in the precept let Humility seek and it findes Truth but let Curiosity seek and it finds Heresie let Prayer seek in a devotion of Piety and it finds Grace and Peace but let Passion seek in an affectation of Novelty and it findes wrath and a curse To be setled in mind is a right means to be established in truth and to be wise unto Sobriety Rom. 12.3 is a temper for all those who will be sincere in the Faith But he who still is affected with novelties no wonder if he be soon infected with Heresies they that have the itch of curious disputings no wonder if they get the Scab of Heretical opinions 6. Covetous desires and ambitious designs All Heresie and Schism we finde still cherished with the warm zeal of a full purse Had not the Church of Rome those strong attractives of Cardinal Dignities Papal Indulgences Ecclesiastical Immunities and Spiritual Benefices I believe she would finde few Patrons of her cause and gain few Proselytes to her profession The Foxes would not trouble the Vineyard were it not for the Grapes neither would Heresie and Schism so much rend and tear the Church were it not for her Revenues That poorer Fry and meaner Sect of Quakers would not as they do 2 Tim. 3 6. Creep into houses and boast themselves in so poor a Triumph as a leading captive silly women were it not as some mens ruined estates can tell them That there-out they suck no small advantage And I refer it to the Consciences of most Ministers whether the sequestred Living was not the strongest Argument to convince their Judgments to a deserting as well as a dissenting from what they had subscribed yea I refer it to the Conscience of every Sacrilegious Invader of the Churches possessions whether this be not the great weight which keeps down his wishes of the Churches restoring even the thoughts of vomiting up the morsels he hath so greedily swallowed giving up the possessions he hath so covetously seized When covetous and ambitious mindes see profit and preferment soonest obtained by Faction what Schism what Heresie yea what Perjury will they not allow embrace and follow Primianus and Maximianus heads of two Donatist factions St. Augustine tells them That were it not for Faction Primianus would be Postremianus and Maximianus Minimianus The like we may say of the greatest Patriarchs of Heresies and Schisms That were it not for Faction kept up by covetousness and ambition they would soon become as low in esteem as in merit as mean in degree as in desert To close then from the Premisses we may infer That Heresie is the cursed Issue of most cursed Parents The father that begets it is the Devil and the mother that conceives it is the Flesh And as Domitius used to say Nil nasci potuit nisi detestabile infausium Suet. That of him and Agrippina nothing could be begotten but what was ominous and odious hateful and monstrous and such was Nero. The like may be said as to this cursed Brood That of the Devil and the Flesh nothing can be begotten but what is horrid and hainous Carnal and Diabolical and such is Heresie Joh. 8 44. Satan he is the Father of lies and therefore as Ignatius saith Ignat. ep 1. ad Trall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heretical opinions they must needs be Satans off-spring the Devils inventions And as Heresies are from Satan as the Father of lies so begot of the Flesh as the mother of corruption Gal. 5.20 and therefore the works of the flesh are manifest saith the Apostle amongst which are reckoned up with adultery and murders Seditions and Heresies Some carnal affection either of pride and pertinacy of spirit or of impurity and prophaneness of life or of envy and malice or of slothfulness and indifferency or of affectation and curiosity or of covetousness and ambition some one or more of these carnal affections it is that gives birth to Heresie and is as the Womb to bear so the Paps to nurse this ugly and deformed Brat the perfect likeness of its father the Devil And thus we have done with our proposed task To shew you by what means Satan draw's men to the sin and involves them in the guilt of Heresies Now give me leave to close with a few words of Application Applic. Be we sincere in our obedience as a cheif means of being sound in the Faith and be we sound in the Faith otherwise it will be in vain to plead the sincerity of our obedience For this is our Calling to walk worthy of the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all well pleasing Col. 1.10 Of which general notion the Greek Scholiast gives us this equal distribution 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in words in works and in opinions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Hom. 5. in 1 Tim. or Doctrines of Faith And therefore with St. Chrysostome True Faith is compared unto a sound Ship without which we cannot pass the Sea of this troublesome World to the safe Harbor of Heavens rest For suppose we a man Chaste Temperate Hospitable Just in his Dealings Zealous in his Devotions for such was Pelagius such was Donatus yea such were many of the Arrians of the Macedonians even to an high repute amongst the Orthodox themselves as St. Basil and Nazianzen both will witness Suppose we then I say a man to be Chaste Temperate Hospitable Just in his Dealings Zealous in his Devotions but withal that he is an Heretick and then hear what St. Augustine will tell us August tom 7. de Bapt. l. 4. c. 18. Nulli utique dubium est propter hoc solum quod Haereticus est regnum Dei non possessurum There is no doubt at all but for this alone That he is an Heretick he shall not inherit the Kingdom of God And this of St. Augustine does well accord with that of St. Paul 2 Thes 2.13 14. Where he gives us to understand That if we hope to obtain Salvation and glory by Jesus Christ it must be through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth And O thou blessed Spirit of Grace so sanctifie us through the Truth that we be not led away into the errors of the wicked but amidst the many Heresie which are amongst us let it be manifest that we are approved Amen THE SECOND SERMON UPON 1 COR. 11.19 There must be also Heresies among you that they which are