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A41628 Christ's tears for Jerusalems unbelief and ruine Now humbly recommended to England's consideration in this her day of tryal and danger. By [faded print] reverend and learned divine Mr. Theophilus Gale. Gale, Theophilus, 1628-1678. 1679 (1679) Wing G135; ESTC R218690 143,576 274

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desirable in the eyes of men Was it ever known that the Leper was amorous of his Scabs or the Begger in love with his Rags or the Prisoner with his Fetters or the wounded Person with his bleeding Wounds How then comes it to passe that the Christian world is so much amorous of and delighted in Infidelitie which is the worst leprosie povertie deformitie and miserie that the Soul partakes of Yea how comes it to passe that Believers themselves have such reliques and remains of Unbelief in them and that in such days as these are wherein Evangelic Light Love and Grace so much abound Hath not our blessed Lord taken al the courses and means that may be to cure men of their Infidelitie As to the encouragements and motives to believe doth he not shew himself as kind as kind may be Has he not given al manner of warrants yea commands for men to believe Doth not the Covenant of Grace give as good law-right as may be for al that wil to come and embrace the good things that belong to their peace Are not the offers of the Covenant general free abundant and most affectionate Is not Christ more willing to save than sinners are to be saved As to means what can God do more than he has in saying Here is my Son my Spirit my Gospel and al the good things of My peace take al and welcome And are not the termes on which al these good things are offered most easie to any that is but really willing to be happy Yea are not the means vouchsafed by God to cure our Infidelitie in these lightsome days much greater than in former days whence then is it that men continue in their Infidelitie and that with so much delight Has Christ condescended so low in the offers of his Grace and do sinners still persist in their rejecting or not improving such rich and gracious offers Oh! What mater of sad contemplation and Lamentation is here How ought every eye to weep apart and every heart to bleed apart for personal domestic Ecclesiastic and National Infidelitie Alas how true too true is that prediction of our Omniscient Lord touching these last days Luke 18. 8. Neverthelesse when the Son of Man cometh shal he find faith on the earth Who knows how near this coming of the Son of Man may be May we not conjecture that some great coming of the Son of Man cannot be far off because faith is so much departed from the earth Was there ever since the coming of our Lord in the flesh more light and yet more Atheisme in the world Is not the disbelief of the main Articles of our faith the only faith and belief that is to be found among some Are not al the great fundamentals and vitals of faith struck at by some who would count it an high affront to be judged Unbelievers Yea to come nearer home have we not cause to fear that many who passe for shining Believers wil one day appear to be rotten-hearted Unbelievers Yea to leave others to their supreme Judge have we not al cause to lay our hands on our hearts and condemne our selves of much Infidelitie If thou art not sensible of much Unbelief indwelling in thee is it not a sad Symtome that thou hast nothing or at best but very little of true Faith in thy heart May we not safely say That he never truely mourned for any sin who never mourned for Infidelitie which is at the end of every Sin Oh! what lamentable ruines has Unbelief brought on many flourishing Churches And may we expect to be exemted from the like strokes of Divine justice unlesse we lament and mourn over our Unbelief which deserves the same Take these Motives to provoke thine heart to a deep Lamentation and Humiliation for thine own and other mens unbelief 1 Unbelief is as has been said the greatest Sin and therefore ought to worke in us the greatest sense and humiliation 2 If thine heart be not deeply humbled for thine Unbelief thou wilt soon be overcome by it 3 The more thy soul is melted under the sense of Unbelief the more evangelic and spiritual it is What better marque is there of a spiritual yea of a believing heart than a deep sense of and humiliation for Unbelief It is a great proof of our Faith yea of an eminence in Faith to mourne greatly under Unbelief 4 A little unbelief in Believers is much worse than much unbelief in others because Believers have greater Obligations Encouragements Assistances and Means to believe 5 Not to be humbled for the Unbelief of others whether Churches or State is to partake with them in their sin and so to expose our selves to their approching jugements at least temporal 3. This lays a deep and essential obligation on al to examine accurately how far they fal under the Guilt and Power of Infidelitie If the Nature of Unbelief be such as hath been described then surely it concernes al to examine how far it prevails in them Doth not the great Ressemblance that there is between saving Faith and commun oblige al to trie of what stampe and make their faith is Alas how much commun Assent is there which passeth for saving What a great verisimilitude or likenesse is there between the notional Assent of Unbelievers and real Assent of true Believers Do not many knowing Professors seem to receive the Word of God as the Word of God who yet indeed receive it only as the word of men Have not many contemplative Professors sublime and raised Apprehensions of spiritual Mysteries and yet al the while their assent to them is but carnal and natural Do not some seem deeply convinced of and confirmed in evangelic reports who yet yield but a legal staggering assent thereto Doth not the vigor and strength of many mens assent arise from some transient worke of the Spirit of Bondage rather than from a deep apprehension and valuation of Evangelic objects which they assent unto Again how easy is it for men to be mistasten in their Consent to the good things of their peace Do not many seem very forward in electing of Christ who yet retain secret reserves for some beloved Idol Are not too many from the force of legal convictions compelled to close with Christ who yet secretly hate him at heart How many adhere to Christ in Profession and yet adhere to the world or lust in Affection Are there not many who seem to recumb and lean on Christ for life but yet really recumb and lean upon self Oh! what a world of convinced sinners take up with a spurious or commun faith instead of saving How dreadfully do millions of Unbelievers delude themselves with a sick dream and shadow of commun faith Alas what an easie mater is it for Professors in these knowing times to mistake commun faith for saving to deceive themselves and and others with a forme or picture of faith and yet to remain under the real power of Unbelief
dishonor that comes to God thereby Now if this be the principal Motive of our mourning for sin then we shal mourn for the dishonor that comes to God by other mens sins as wel as by our own But the bottome-reason why some Professors mourne for their own sins and not for other mens sins is self-love they think their own sins wil draw jugements on themselves and therefore they mourne for them thereby to avert Gods wrath from themselves Whereas true godly sorrow is chiefly afflicted for the offence given to God It is grieved not so much because self as because Christ is grieved Certainly a soul truely humbled for his own sins wil also be humbled for and mourn over National sins and jugements How much then are we concerned to imitate our great Lord in this his Lamentation Do not his tears accuse and condemne our impenitent secure and hard hearts He weeps for other mens sins but alas how little do we weep for our own May not Christs tears fil us with soul-confusion and shame to consider how much we are strangers to such Christian Lamentations over sinful and ruinous England Has not this been the practice of Saints in al ages to lament over the Sins and Ruines of their Church or State Was not this the temper of Lots spirit Is it not said He was vexed with the filthy conversation of the wicked 2 Pet. 2. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 oppressed as with a burden or dispirited and weakned as with a tedious sicknes as the word imports so v. 8. Vexed his righteous soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he cruciated or tormented his soul as upon a rack such was his grief and anguish for their sins And was not this likewise the gracious posture of Davids spirit Psal 119. 53 136 158 Oh! what Lamentations did the good Prophets of old make over Jerusalems first captivitie and her sin which was the cause thereof Again has not God made many gracious promisses to such as mourne over the sins of the places they live in as Ezech. 9. 4 It s true peradventure they may not be exemted from commun calamities ay but doth not God sanctifie and sweeten al unto them But to speak a little of the Qualification of our Lamentation We are to imitate as much as may be the Qualities or manner of Christs weeping Were Christs tears Rational Spiritual and voluntarie Such should ours also be Was Christs Lamentation generous and public did he seem to forget his own private sufferings whiles he bewailed Jerusalem's Oh! how ambitious should we be of the like pure sorrow Were his tears Pathetic and Sympathetic Did every tear flow from a broken bleeding heart How much then should we affect such Tears Again were his tears so efficacious so influential What a shame is it then for us that our Lamentations are so barren and fruitlesse Alas how far short do our Lamentations come of Christs Do not we grieve more for the evils we our selves suffer than for the sin we or others commit Sense of pain or losse afflicts us but how little are we afflicted with the sense of guilt and sin We mourn over the Ruines of a burnt Citie or impoverished Nation but how little do we mourn over our sin and the wrath of a sin-revenging God which were the causes of those Ruines Lastly Christs Lamentation doth administer to us a serious Caution against al those sins which may draw down jugements on a Citie State or Church Is not this the great end and designe of al Divine Lamentations to obviate and prevent the like Sins and Ruines Was not this one main end why Christ here breaks forth into so sad a passion of weeping over Jerusalem thereby to lay in a Caveat for us that we run not into the like Sins and Ruines O then let us keep our spirits and lives at the greatest distance that may be from these or suchlike Church-sins which bring with them such stupendous inevitable Church-ruines Reformation is the supreme end of al sacred Lamentation and albeit National jugements may surprise us as wel as others yet if we can keep our selves from National and Church sins which are the causes of such jugements they wil in the issue prove no jugements but perfumed mercies to us What ever burdens lie on our backs if sin lie not on our spirits they wil be very tolerable easy burdens to us BOOK II. A General Consideration of the Text Luke 19. 42. With a particular Resolution of that first Question What it is not to know the things that belong unto our peace Or Wherein the Nature of Unbelief consists CHAP. I. The Explication of Luke 19. 42. HAving given some general account of Christs Lamentation both as to its Mater and Forme we now procede to a more exact consideration of the chief particulars thereof contained in v. 42. Saying if thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes These words carrie in them an extreme Pathos or moving Affection every word is Pathetic and Emphatic Christs heart seems so ful of bleeding pitie as if he wanted words to give it vent every expression is so broken as though his heart were quite broken to pieces Yea doth he not seem to drop a tear between every word to speak and weep to drop a word and then a tear So ful of Affection and Commiseration is every expression as it wil appear by each particular Saying Christ doth not only weep but speaks he mingles words very emphatic with tears which addes much efficace and weight to his Lamentation If 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some understand the the first Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Aitiologic or Causal and so they suppose it to discover to us the cause of Christs weeping But others upon more grounded reasons make the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be redundant and expletive according to the Greek Idiome and Luke's wonted Pleonasme wherein it usually stands as a note of Asseveration and so serves for a Mimesis For they are wont to premit it before a sentence which being spoken by some one is recited whence it is no more than an Enarrative and Expletive Particle Neither doth the Syriac version impede this construction for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is not Causal but a note of Exclamation As for that next Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred If it is variously explicated Some conceive there is no defect in this discourse of Christ and thence they expound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in an Optative sense by Vtinam Would to God thou hadst known So they make it to be the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because 1. This is not improper or unusual in the Greek 2. The Syriac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illu is also Optative 3. In this sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is also used by the Lxx. for 17 Jos
Alas how is it possible that he should know them What proportion is there betwixt spiritual Objects and a carnal Subject Must not every visive facultie have some agreament with the object visible And is there any agreament betwixt a carnal mind and things spiritual Is not every thing that is received received according to the nature of the Recipient Doth not then the carnal heart receive things spiritual carnally as on the contrary the spiritual heart things carnal spiritually Thence saith Christ to the unbelieving Jews Joh. 8. 15. Ye judge after the flesh i. e ye judge of me and of my Gospel only in a carnal manner by carnal Reason and therefore no wonder ye believe not in me 8. Such as content themselves with a general confused Assent to evangelic Truths and Promisses know not the things that belong to their peace The more particular and distinct our knowlege is the more certain it is General Notions are more confused and fallacious a particular Dissent may wel stand with general Assent Therefore he that has some general confused Notions of the things that belong to his peace lies under a particular ignorance of the same This was the case of these unbelieving Jews they had some general notices of the Messias some rude confused Ideas of Heaven and God but alas How imperfect how grosse how insignificant were their Notions Hence our blessed Lord exhorts them that they would in order to the procurement of a true saving faith Search the Scriptures John 5. 39. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It s a Metaphor drawn from the sagacitie of Dogs which with their noses closely follow and search into the sent of their prey These unbelieving Jews had much general confused knowlege of the Scriptures ay but they wanted this Divine sagacitie to inquire and search into them as Dogs do into the sent of their prey they could not sent the things that belonged to their peace because they made not a narrow scrutinie a particular distinct exact inquisition into evangelic Truths and Mysteries As if Christ had said Ah friends You pretend to believe Moses and the Prophets You conceit your life lies wrapt up in them But how comes it to passe then that you believe not in me Do not al the Scriptures testifie of me Oh! here lies your sin you wil not search into the Scriptures you content your selves with some general confused Notions without any particular distinct Inquisition into the things that belong to your peace 9. Men know not the things that belong to their peace when they suspend their Assent or yield to any prevalent dout touching the truth of them I shal not dispute what mesure or degree of certaintie is essential to true saving Faith but that it cannot consist in a mere opinion or probable conjecture without some degree of certitude I think is most certain from the current of Scripture This is evident by the character Paul gives of Abrahams faith Rom. 4. 19. Being not weak in-faith i. e his mind did not hang in suspense or under some prevalent dout touching the truth of the promisse This is illustrated by another notion ver 20. He staggered not at the promisse through unbelief 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here signifies to hesitate or remain under varietie of anxious douts and opinions his mind was fully persuaded of the truth of the promisse as it is expressed v. 21. being fully persuaded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it s a Metaphor borrowed from Navigation as sails are filled with a good wind so his mind was filled with a fulnesse of assent to the truth of the promisse there was no room for any suspense or prevalent dout And this indeed seems essential to al true saving Faith that there be a prevalent certitude or certain persuasion touching the truth of the object albeit many sincere Believers may be altogether uncertain touching their Title to or Interest in the Object My meaning is this There ought to be a plenitude or fulnesse of Assent to the Truth of the Promisse albeit there may be wanting in many Believers an assurance of their interest in the things promissed Now this certaintie of Divine assent ariseth partly from the certitude of the object but more immediately from the Demonstration of the Spirit elevating or raising the mind unto this certain persuasion touching the truth of the promisse And herein true saving Faith is differenced from that which is commun and human The Unbeliever may yield some feeble staggering instable Assent to the good things that belong unto his peace but stil he hangs in suspense his douts are greater than his faith It s true the true Believer hath oft great douts touching the Promisses but yet his douts are not so much of the truth of the Promisses as of his interest in them or whether his apprehensions of them be true whereas Unbelievers dout of the truth of the Promisses albeit they may be presumtuously confident of their Interest in them Thus it was with the unbelieving Jews Joh. 10. 24. How long doest thou make us to dout or how long doest thou keep our souls in suspense They hung as it were 'twixt Heaven and Hel under much suspense whether those things Christ preached were true or false They did not totally dissent and yet they could not fully assent to Christ Thus they hung in suspense for suspense is a middle twixt Assent and Dissent Though as to Divine Assent every such prevalent suspense or dout touching the truth of the promisse is real unbelief he that assents not fully doth really dissent Therefore Christ addes v. 25. I told you and you believed not they seem to lay the blame on Christ the darknes of his Revelation but he resolves al into their unbelieving hearts The like character of unbelief we find Luke 12. 29. Neither be ye of doutful minds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in its primary Notation signifies to be carried up aloft in the Air as Meteors Clouds or Birds which wanting a firme foundation are tossed to and fro with every blast So it signifies the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to wander or with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a●re suspensus modò huc modò illuc inclinat Beza 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 10. 24. to lift up the mind or keep it in suspense Hence also it is used to signifie an anxious suspense hesitation or dout touching the truth of things This is the condition of many awakened sinners they arrive at some anxious suspense or doutfulnes of mind and that is al They hang in the air of commun conviction between Heaven and Hel for a little while til the prevalence of lust make them fal down again on the earth where they lie buried in the ashes of their own convictions and profession They dare not they cannot yield a ful and prevalent assent to the Gospel of Christ al that they attain unto is a mere opinion a suspensive
Believer David gives us a better account of his faith Psal 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in mine heart and why so that I might not sin against thee He gave a deep firme practic Assent to Divine truths such as kept him from sin So much for the first part of Unbelief as opposite to the assent of faith CHAP. V. The Explication of Unbelief in reference to its Real Objects and its first main Act consisting in the Wils rejection of Christ HAving finisht the Notional Objects and Acts of Unbelief it remains that we procede to the Explcation of its simple real Objects and the Acts which answer thereto 1. As for the simple real Objects of Unbelief they wil as before be best explicated by considering what are the simple and real Objects of Faith For Unbelief being but a privation of faith it has one and the same object therewith Now the simple real Objects of Faith regard either our Present or Future state As to our present state the object of Faith is either Remote and Vltimate or Next and Immediate The Remote and Vltimate object of Faith is the Deitie or Divine Essence The Next and Immediate object of Faith is Christ God-man and Mediator betwixt God and Men. The object of Faith as to our future state is approching Glorie Heaven or al those good things hoped for Heb. 11. 1. According to this distribution of the real Objects of Faith we may with facilitie determine what are the objects of Unbelief or what are those Simple Real things that belong to our peace which Unbelief refuseth Of these we shal treat but very concisely because they wil again fal under consideration when we come to the Aggravations of Vnbelief 1. Unbelief is a Rejection of God his Divine Essence Attributes Providence Workes Ordinances and Glorie which are al great Ingredients of our Peace Unbelief strikes at the Deitie or Divine Being which is the alone ultimate foundation of al saving Faith Heb. 11. 6. Oh! what a world of practic if not speculative Atheisme lies wrapt up in the womb of Unbelief Again how are al the divine Attributes struck at by Unbelief Doth not Unbelief reject the Wisdome of God by preferring carnal wisdome before it Luk. 7. 30 Is not the Fidelitie and Veracitie of God oppugned by Unbelief in that it receives not his Testimonie and so makes him a Liar 1 Joh. 5. 10 11 How much is the Soveraintie of God opposed by Unbelief in that it cannot because it wil not submit either to his secret or reveled wil How doth Unbelief quarrel at and murmur against the soverain pleasure of God both Preceptive and Providential It can neither yield Active obedience to the former nor Passive to the later It can do but little and suffer lesse for God Again Doth not Unbelief offer much violence to the Love Mercie and Compassions of God Is not Mercie clothed with the rough garment of Severitie Is not the ugly vizard of Hatred and Revenge put on the beautiful face of Divine Love Doth not Divine Benignitie or Bountie fal under censure of illiberalitie when Unbelief sets in the chair Further Is not Divine Justice impleaded or masqued with the face of Injustice by Unbelief Doth it not put light for darknes and darknes for light good for evil and evil for good Is not the Righteous God accused as one that justifies the wicked and condemnes the Innocent Moreover how doth Unbelief narrow Divine Omnipotence yea look upon it as mere Impotence and weaknes Doth not Infidelitie also prescribe bounds to Gods Omnipresence Exodus 17. 2-7 Is not Gods Omniscience also blinded by it Isai 40. 25 So also for al Gods works of Providence how doth Unbelief draw a Veil on the most glorious of them Lastly as for al Divine Ordinances and Institutions are they not dispirited and made ineffectual by Unbelief Is not prayer no prayer Hearing the Word no hearing are not Sacraments no Sacraments to the Unbeliever 2. Unbelief refuseth Christ the next immediate object of faith and the great Mediator of our peace Oh! what a large heart has Christ to give but how narrow-hearted is the Unbeliever in receiving the things that belong to his peace Is not Christ the great Ordinance of God constituted designed and adapted to be the Mediator between God and man And yet Lo how doth Unbelief sleight him yea slander him reproche him plunder him grieve him provoke him and crucifie him day by day Is not Christ extreme liberal towards Sinners Doth he not meet them half way yea prevent them in the offers of Grace And yet oh how backward is Unbelief how unwilling to come to him for life What Distances Shinesses and estrangements from Christ doth it continually delight in Doth not Infidelitie attemt to turne the whole of Christs Mediatorie office into a mere shadow or Romance What rare experiments hath Christ given of the efficace of his bloud the energie and power of his grace to redeme sinners and yet how doth unbelief question and cavil at al What wonders are there in Christs love to sinners how omnipotent and invincible is it What sweet charmes to conquer hearts has it and yet how doth Unbelief cover al with the masque of hatred and crueltie Oh! what incomparable beauties are there in Christs person how amiable and lovely was he even in his lowest condition in the Womb Manger and on the Crosse Do not al the lines of Gods grace and our duty meet in Christ as Mediator how inglorious are the most excellent things in the world if compared with Christs glorious perfections and yet lo how doth Infidelitie disgrace and reproche Christ What low mean scandalous yea cruel thoughts has it of him 3. Unbelief rejects not only God and Christ and the Holy Spirit but also approching Glorie and al those good things hoped for of the other world Oh! what grosse and carnal conceptions has Unbelief of al those invisible and coming Glories How doth it turne al the great and glorious enjoyments of Heaven into mere insignificant Fancies Notions Fables and Sick-dreams Yea doth not Unbelief despise and contemne those rich delices of future Glorie Are not the sensual enjoyments of the flesh the pleasures of Egypt preferred before the ravishing delights of the celestial Canaan Do not sensible goods weigh down the invisible weight of Glorie in the Unbelievers heart But thus much for the real objects of Unbelief of which more largely hereafter Sect. 2. We now procede to the several Acts of Unbelief in relation to these real Objects which may be also distinguished according to the several acts of Faith whereof they are Privatives The first and general act of Faith in relation to Christ its next and most immediate object is Consent Election or Reception of him as tendred in the Gospel And opposite hereto the first and great act of Unbelief is Reprobation or Rejection of
reject Christ 4. The wil may be said at least virtually to reject Christ when it doth not justifie or approve those Reports that are made of Christ by the ministerie of the word or in conscience This is a more refined degree of rejecting Christ very commun among many great Professors Some convinced Sinners are not so disingenuous as to be alwaies cavilling at Christ yet they do not approve the Reports made of Christ as they ought They have no considerable objections against evangelic offers and yet the heart is unwilling to entertain them They are unwilling to grant what they can hardly denie This Christ cals being slow of heart to believe Luke 24. 25. O fools and slow of heart to believe al that the Prophets have spoken This is the first part of faith in the wil to justifie recognise or approve that Assent which is wrought in the jugement touching Christ And when Christ has obtained the Wils approbation and consent he soon gains its affiance or confidence As a carnal heart that approves of the offers of sin is soon overcome by it So an awakened heart when once it comes to approve the offers of Christ and the Assent made thereto by the mind how soon is it induced to yield its consent to Christ But oh here lies the root of Unbelief the wil doth not fully approve and allow of what the mind is oft forced to assent unto This was also the condition of many unbelieving Jews So Luk. 7. 29. And al the people that heard him and the publicans justified God being baptised with the Baptisme of John The commun people and publicans are said to justifie God i. e they approved of what reports were made touching Christ though its likely many of them did it but with a temporary faith But then it followes ver 30. But the Pharisees and Lawyers rejected the counsel of God against themselves being not baptised of him How did the Pharisees and Lawyers reject the counsel of God Why it was by not justifying or approving what God reported touch verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod est approbare laudare Groting Christ So that when the wil doth not justifie approve or commend what God in his word or by the dictates of conscience doth report touching Christ it may be said to reject the counsels of God and Christ As the wil by approving the Assent of the jugement turnes it into Consent so by disapproving the same it declares its rejection thereof This holds true both in maters of Sin and Grace 5. The Heart may be justly said to reject Christ when it admits of demurs and delayes as to a complete closure with him This is a more subtile and refined degree of Unbelief Some there are who seem to justifie and approve the Reports made of Christ and their own Assent thereto they have nothing to object against Christ they seem wel-satisfied in the offers he makes But yet al this while there is a secret dilatorie procrastinating delaying spirit in them they would fain close with Christ but not as yet they have a wil for hereafter but not for a present choice of Christ they cannot as yet bid Adieu to their beloved lusts a little slumber a little sleep more they must have in the lap of their Delilahs This was the case of some tardy Disciples of Christ among the Jews as Luke 9. 59. And he said unto another follow me but he said Lord suffer me first to go and bury my father He hath nothing to object against Christ but seems abundantly satisfied in Christs offers only he desires to be excused for a while til he had buried his Father Again ver 61. And another also said Lord I wil follow thee but let me first go bid them farewel which are at home at my house Thus awakened sinners put off Christ as Felix did Paul with delays If Christ wil but wait a while their leisure wel and good they are then content to espouse him for their Lord but at present they have no leisure because they have no heart to close with Christ Yea is there not much of this dilatorie humor in many wounded souls who conceit they are not yet humbled enough and therefore not meet to go to Christ Whereas indeed there is no such way to get an humble spirit as to come to Christ for it Certainly al such delays argue much unwillingnes to believe A Wil for hereafter only is a present Nil An election for the future is no better than a present Reprobation If you consent only for hereafter you at present reject Christ So long as you defer to do what you know you ought to do so long you wil not do it Yea what are these delays to embrace Christ but a more slie rejection of him May not Christ justly estime your delay to embrace him a refusal of him Are not such put offs a kind of denial When Christ wooes thee long by many sweet Inspirations both of Word and Spirit for thee to stifle al these good motions by continued delayes doth not this argue a mightie unwilling heart to believe Hast thou the least shadow of Reason for thy delays to believe Thou saiest thou wantest Grace ay but mayest thou not by believing receive Grace for Grace Is not Grace both in being and degrees the effect of Faith in Christ Do not thy sins greaten much by delays to believe Are not thy debts to Justice multiplied by not believing The longer thou forbearest to believe wil not thy heart be the more averse and backward to believe Peradventure thou conceitest Christ wil not receive thee if thou comest to him ay but whence springs this prejudicate conceit but from the unwillingnes of thine own heart to receive Christ Has not Christ declared himself to be more willing to receive thee than thou canst be to come unto him as 't is evident from the Parable of the Prodigal Luke 16. 22-28 Are not al thine objections against believing presently but the forgeries and figments of thine unwilling heart Remember there is as great hazard in thy loitering delays as in down-right rejection of Christ For albeit thy delays may be painted over with some apparent colours of humilitie and fears lest thy faith would be presumtion yet Christ is as effectually opposed and excluded thereby as by manifest opposition Thou hadst as good say it in down right termes thou wilt have none of Christ as thus put him off time after time with dilatorie answers Though the Acts differ in degrees yet the Principle and root is the same in one and t'other namely an unwilling heart and this Christ sees ful wel and therefore thy demurs suspense and seeming caution or delay to believe greatly provokes Christ and is by him interpreted no better than a flat refusal of him Al the relief thou hast is this thou hopest to embrace Christ hereafter when thou art more humble and fit for him But
and Horrors of conscience seem strongly inclined to receive Christ who but Christ Ay but how little have they of a chearful ready wil Are not al their closures with Christ wrung and forced from them merely by the violence of a tormented terrified conscience Do they not come to Christ only as a wounded person to his Chirurgeon for a Plaister to heal conscience They receive Christ but is it not only as a Bankrupt entertains a rich Suretie to pay their debts to the Law Surely such involuntary constrained Receptions of Christ if they do not end in a more chearful Election are but more modest Refusals of him Involuntarie election is a degree of real Reprobation Albeit every Election hath something of the wil in it yet that may be termed an involuntary forced election when the Wil might it with securitie use its own freedome would not elect what it now closeth with And oh how many terrified souls do with such an involuntarie forced Wil receive Christ They see no beautie or worth in Christ only they make use of him to serve a turne to quench the flames of Divine wrath in conscience and when that is done they lay him aside again as an uselesse servant What is such an unwilling choice of Christ but a more courtly rejection of him Do not such forced consents passe for real dissents among more civil persons Such as entertain Christ in the● extremities and perplexities of conscience with such an involuntary Wil how soon do they lay him aside when the storme is over Was not this the very case of the unbelieving Jews even from their infant-state in the Wildernes So Psal 78. 34. When he slew them then they sought him and they returned and inquired early after God When God awakened their consciences by terrible jugements Oh! how early do they inquire after their Messias what chearful Reception do they seem to give unto him Ay but this was but a terrified affrightned wil they did but flatter him with good words their heart was not right as it follows ver 36 37. A forced wil is but a false lying wil it is no real Wil but Nil When there is nothing on the Wil but mere compulsive terrors it never gives a fiducial reception to Christ Til the wil be in faith it 's never saving Convictions of sin seconded by legal Terrors may compel some to believe but if there follow not a Spirit of Adoption and libertie that faith proves only legal and temporary We find a good character of evangelic faith in Zacheus's reception of Christ Luke 19. 6. And he made haste and came down and received him joyfully His wil was in his faith he received Christ and would not for a world but receive him He believed and would not but believe His heart was in the work it was his joy and delight to entertain Christ not only in his house but in his heart also But is it thus with al that pretend to receive Christ Are there not many who receive Christ under dolors and rackings of conscience who yet have no liking to him yea who would gladly shift themselves of him were their troubles of conscience once wel over Do not the hearts of such secretly draw back from Christ yea entertain an inveterate old grudge against him while they seem willing to draw near to him and make use of him in their extremitie Have not such soon enough of Christ are they not soon weary of him and therefore turne him off again assoon as he hath served their turne Do they not secretly wish that they might be saved by their own doings rather than by believing in Christ It s true they in a sort receive Christ but how is it Is it not as a wounded captive receives his enemie with fair words to save his life whiles yet he hates him in his heart and is grieved that he should need his enemies favor Surely this is not to receive Christ gladly For to such it is a burden to be beholding to Christ for Salvation They had rather be saved any other way than by Christ Oh how glad would they be if God would but accept of their own goods works instead of Christs merits whereas a true Believer would to choose be saved by Christs merits rather than by his own he is abundantly satisfied in Christ and the way of Salvation by him his wil doth electively hug and embrace Christ as his best friend Thus Zacheus received Christ joyfully It s true many sincere Believers at first whiles under a Spirit of Bondage have only a terrified affrightned wil yea after they have received a Spirit of Adoption and Christ by saving Faith how much of an unwilling heart do they find mixed with their faith What legal selfish regards have they oft towards Christ Ay but this is the distemper and therefore the burden of their souls They are never better pleased than when their wils are most chearful spiritual and forward in closing with Christ How greatly do they approve of and delight in the way of salvation by Christ What contentement and pleasure do they take in believing How much rather had they have their Grace peace and comfort in Christs keeping than in their own But is it thus with Unbelievers such as receive Christ only with a terrified legal Wil Is it not a burden to them that they should be driven to such streights as that none but Christ can relieve them Is there not a secret displeasure and dislike against Christ even while they are forced by reason of their extremities to make use of him Would they not be glad to be eased of Christ were their consciences eased of their trouble Such is the temper of a terrified wil. And so much for the Unbelievers defective Reception of Christ CHAP. VII Unbelief explicated as to its Defects in Adherence to Recumbence on Satisfaction in Obedience to Application of and Waiting for Christ 3. HAving explicated the Nature of Unbelief from its defective Reception of Christ we now procede to those defects which attend the Consequents of such a Reception And we shal begin with the Wils Adherence to Christ which seems to be an immediate consequent of the foregoing Reception of Christ Adherence is an essential branch of Faith and that which naturally follows upon al reception of Christ So that he who doth not firmely yea inviolably adhere to Christ may be justly said never to have received him aright Faith is defined a firme rooted Disposition or Habit Moses in his Exhortation to the unbelieving Israelites adviseth them to cleave unto God Deut. 10. 20. The Original in its primarie notion signifies a conjugal adherence such as is between Man and Wife as Genesis 2. 24. and so it denotes here that conjugal adherence which the soul ought to maintain towards Christ as its husband which Paul also expresseth by the similitude of Mariage Ephes 5. 25 32. and 1 Cor. 6. 17. by cleaving to
now after that ye have known God or rather are known of God how turne ye again to the weak and beggerly elements whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage How turne ye again What doth he mean by this Were the Galatians ever under the legal ceremonies here stiled beggerly elements as ver 10 No The Galatians were never before under those Judaic ceremonies only they are said to turne again unto them because they affected a similitude or ressemblance to the Jews herein Oh! how fain would they Symbolise or agree with the Jews and so mingle something of the Law with Christ So it follows whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye desire or ye greedily covet ye greatly wish and long to be under the Law oh how much do you desire what strong wishes have you to join the Law with Christ the like ver 21. Tel me ye that desire to be under the the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e ye who are so hungry and greedy after the law This was the temper of many Judaising Galatians they would fain compound the Law with Christ they could not rest satisfied in Christ alone as the mater of their justification but must needs join the law with him which Paul tels them Gal. 5. 2 3. Was to make Christ of none effect For he that rests not in Christ alone as the mater of his justification trusts not at al in him So also in point of happinesse he that doth not acquiesce in Christ alone as the object of his rest and satisfaction doth not really believe in him whence saith Christ Luke 14. 26. If any come to me and hate not his father c. i. e if he be not satisfied in me as the fountain of his life he hath no share in me For to hate here is to love lesse Christ doth not injoin his Disciples simply absolutely to hate Parents c. No that were sin But he means comparitively i. e whoever doth not love Parents Wife c. lesse than me cannot be my Disciple So ver 33. Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not al that he hath he cannot be my Disciple What doth Christ mean by this Doth he expect that when we turne Christians we bid Adieu to al outward comforts No surely This command of Christ doth not so much respect the Act as the Affection we are not commanded to cast away al but to love Christ above al. 6. Again Vnbelief is ful of murmurs Disobedience and Reluctance against the soverain Wil of God Faith is the most obsequious obedient and dutiful Grace Oh! how ful of Resignation and Submission is the believing Wil so far as it is believing When Christ enters into any soul he expects that every proud imagination every high thought stoop unto him That the whole soul bow before him and adore his soverain wil and pleasure Thus Job 1. 20. Then Job arose This notes his speed courage and resolution in complying with the divine Wil. And rent his mantle and shaved his head these were Symbols or tokens of great sorrow and humiliation under the hand of God Faith doth not destroy natural affections but it regulates and spiritualiseth them When the hand of God is on us our hand should be on our hearts in order to a deep sense and humiliation under Gods visitation Then it follows and fel down upon the ground and worshipped The Hebrew words do both signifie a bowing to the ground Because in their worship they usually fel to the ground or bowed their head knee or whole bodie therefore the same word among the Hebrews signifies both to bow and to worship What then doth Jobs falling to the ground and worshipping import 1. A sense of Gods hand in this visitation 2. An Adoration of or bowing before the Divine wil as most righteous 3. A satisfaction in the present issues of the divine Wil. In short it implies a melting or dissolving of his Wil into the Divine wil as most holy and best Hence v. 21. it s said That in al this Job sinned not nor charged God follishly i. e Jobs faith brought his wil to correspond with the Divine wil. O! What a sweet harmonie was here But this unbelief cannot endure Oh! what risings of heart are there against the Truths Grace Wil Waies and Crosse of Christ How doth unbelief strugle and fret against the supreme pleasure of Christ Hence the same word in the Greek signifies both Unbelief and Disobedience as John 3. 36. He that believeth not the Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies also He that is not obedient to the Son Al faith carries something of obedience in it or a subjection of the mind and wil to the Word and Grace of Christ whence Unbelievers are stiled Ephes 2. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Children of disobedience or unpersuasible untractable children such as cannot bring their hearts to bow and stoop to divine Truths Grace and Commands And indeed much of the nature of Infidelitie is lively exprest by this notion of Disobedience Thus the Israelites unbelief is set forth to us Act. 7. 39. To whom our fathers would not obey but thrust him from them and in their hearts turned back again to Egypt How did they disobey Christ and thrust him from them Was it not chiefly by their murmurs and Unbelief So in like manner we find unbelief set forth by fretting against God which is an high degree of Disobedience Psal 37. 1. Fret not thy self because of evil doers Fret not thy self or be not angrie chide not Unbelief is very prone to be angrie yea to chide God because of the prosperitie of wicked men whereto is opposed vers 3. Trust in the Lord c. This trusting in God is opposite to that fretful spirit v. 1. The like Antithesis or opposition we find ver 7. Rest in the Lord and wait patiently fret not thy self because of him that prospereth in his way Rest in the Lord Hebr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be silent unto the Lord Don't let one murmur or impatient word drop out of thy mouth but wait patiently or expect with much silence and patience relief from the Lord beware how thou doest fret and repine against his Soverain pleasure So that a fretful murmuring spirit is quite opposite to that silence and obedience which faith implies What is faith but a free and chearful resignation of al concernes to God with a complete subjection to his Soverain Wil Grace and Spirit for the accomplishment of al Faith subjugates and captivates our wisdome to divine Wisdome our consciences to the divine Law our whole heart and life to the divine Wil either preceptive or providential A Believer as such lives no longer than he lives in the divine Wil and Grace and no thing is so fit a subject for such a Divine life as a broken heart and what so effectually breaks
of Eternitie Had we eternitie in our eye and heart how would the view thereof darken the glorie of this lower world Did Believers eye much their home how vigilant active and vigorous would they be in their way thither Life and death are the same thing to one that daily expects the coming of his Lord But oh How apt are Believers themselves to put far from them that great day Were not the the wise Virgins overtaken with fits of slumber aswel as the foolish Again how little can the most of Believers acquiesce and rest satisfied in Christ as the alone spring and mater of their life Do they not sometimes conceit that there is some grace or other good to be found out of Christ And are they not hereby oft inveigled to wander from Christ Ought not the heart to be where the treasure is And is not the Believers treasure in Christ How then comes it to passe that he is so little satisfied in Christ but for want of faith in him Moreover how short-spirited and impatient are many Believers What confined and narrow hearts have they under the crosse Do not the length and weight of their burdens oft make them extreme short-spirited as Exod. 6. 9. for shortnesse of Spirit So Num. 21. 4. its said They were short-spirited because of the way i. e the length of their sufferings shortned their spirits they could not in patience possesse their souls and many of them were true Believers for the main Oh! how soon do such short-spirited Believers despond and sink under their burdens What faintings under duties are they obnoxious unto How straitned are their spirits as to present or expected mercies What murmurs and discontents have they against the Yoke and Crosse of Christ Yea how dissolute soft and feeble are they in resistance of Tentations How timorous and faint-hearted at the approche of difficulties Whence procede Believers black and dismal Imaginations under Desertions but from their Unbelief Is is not hence also that they are so humorous and il-minded towards Christ so apt to raise black lies and slanders of him Do not their unbelieving hearts change Christ into another Christ by covering his face with a masque of hatred and displeasure Oh! How much are the sinews of many poor believing souls shrunk how much are their spirits cramped and dispirited by Unbelief specially in cases of soul-trouble or tentation So great is the prevalence of Unbelief in many sound Believers 6. Hence we may further collect That Vnbelief is a sin of the first Magnitude a great mysterie of Iniquitie the greatest Monster that ever was This naturally flows from the former Idea and explication of Unbelief For if the character and nature of Unbelief be so comprehensive if it seize so much on the vitals of the soul then certainly it must needs have a very maligne and venimous influence on al sin yea it must contain in it the malignitie and poison of al sin Oh! What a prodigious Sin is Unbelief What Abysses and depths of iniquitie are there in the bowels of it We have seen how it infuseth itself into the whole soul and dispirits al the faculties thereof Oh! what darknesses and mists doth it infuse into the mind How foolish and sottish doth it make sinners What grand mistakes and prejudices doth it breed touching al the good things of our peace How stupid and senselesse doth it make conscience What a world of securitie and false peace doth it produce What made the old world so secure before the Deluge came and swept them al away but their Unbelief How comes it to passe that both wise and foolish Virgins slumber before the coming of the Bridegroom but from their Unbelief What makes sinners so stout-hearted and opposite to the righteousnesse of Christ but their Infidelitie Isai 46. 12 How comes it to passe that Sinners are so inflexible as to al Chrsts gracious offers but flexible towards sin and its allurements What is it that fortifies the heart so much in its adherence to Idols and false objects of trust What makes mens wils so rebellions against Christ yea destroyeth obedience in the principal root thereof Are not al these the fruits of Unbelief Oh! What a lazy slothful remisse and softnatured thing is Unbelief as to al that is good And yet how vigorous and active is it in and for the production of al sin Yea is not Unbelief virtually al sin Doth it not breed preserve foment incourage actuate and spirit al sin Whence procede the great errors of mens minds hearts and lives but from Infidelitie How comes it to passe that sinners are so hasty in snatching at present goods but so slow-hearted and backward in closing with the good things of their peace Surely it is from Unbelief Whence spring mens confusions and distractions of heart in times of trouble but from their Unbelief Whence also springs al that formalitie and deadnesse in duties but from Unbelief Is not this also the cause of mens hypocrisie both in heart and life Oh! what a world of irregular and exorbitant passions doth Unbelief worke in mens hearts What makes the sensual world so tenacious in adhering to sensible good but their Unbelief as to good things hoped for May not then every sin deservedly cal Unbelief father Is not this sin of Infidelitie to be found at the end of every sin Whence spring the main exorbitances and distempers of mens hearts and lives but from Infidelitie Men discourse variously what was the first sin by which Adam fel but have we not much reason to believe that Unbelief was Adams first sin which opened the dore to al sin and miserie For had not Adam disbelieved the Word of God which threatned him in the day that he did eat of the forbidden fruit he should die he had not believed Satan And as Unbelief at first opened the dore to al sin so doth it not stil hearten and improve al sin Yea is it not the prodigious womb of al sin Yea has it not more of sin than any or al other sins It s true scandalous sins have more of Infamie but has not Infidelitie more of obliquitie and guilt in it Is not that the greatest sin which is against the greatest Laws and Obligations And is not Infidelitie against the greatest Obligations that ever were even a Covenant of Grace which makes such free such ful such rich such suitable such general such importunate such heart-satisfying offers of Grace And can there be a greater law than the Mediators evangelic law which is composed of such sweet alluring precepts and promisses and yet lo how doth Unbelief oppose the royal Law of Christ Oh! what a world of rebellion lies wrapt up in the bowels of Infidelitie How doth it scorne reject yea spurne at bowels of evangelic Love and Grace Yea is it not extremely opposite to al the principles of obedience Is there not also abundance of Idolatrie in Infidelitie Can there be a worse Idol than
It is indeed very difficult to gain a true solid divine Faith but oh how easie is it to take up with a seeming faith which yet shal look as much like saving faith as may be Oh! how securely doth Infidelitie lurke in many poor souls under the vizard of Faith Doth not commun faith oft look so demurely as that you can very hardly discerne its difference from saving Are not the most of Professors too soon satisfied in their own faith Do not multitudes of awakened sinners lay their consciences asleep or amuse themselves with the apparences of faith Is not every Unbeliever yea Believer also a mysterie to himself How much then are we al concerned to make a narrow scrutinie into our hearts and to examine whether our Faith be of the right kind Oh! What a foolish and dangerous thing is it for any to deceive themselves with false Images and Apparences of Faith Is not the least error here fundamental Alas What a poor felicitie is it to steal silently to hel in a fond persuasion of being Believers when as our faith hath no foundation but in our own sick dreaming Phantasies Of what use wil a Forme of Faith without the Power of it be unlesse to sinke us deeper into Hel To have a Notion of Faith and yet to live under the practice of Unbelief what wil this serve for but to concele and fortifie hypocrisie and al manner of spiritual lusts in the heart Doth not this then further oblige us to examine strictly what we are as to Faith and Infidelitie Again if after al this men wil not examine and use the means to discover their state are not such willingly deceived And if men are willingly deceived in this particular do not they willingly perish And oh What a sting wil this be to torment wilful Unbelievers in Hel that they were so willing and took so much pains to deceive themselves with a mere semblance and shadow of faith but were no way willing and took no pains to examine their hearts thereby to undeceive themselves and lay a foundation for saving Faith Wil not this make the Evangelic Unbelievers Hel seven times hotter than al other Hels that he took so much pains to deceive and ruine his soul but was not willing to take a little pains to undeceive and save his soul Oh! What cruel self-murder is this Doth it not then nearly and greatly concerne us al to make a very curious examen and strict research into our hearts touching our faith whether it be saving or only commun O that Professors would put such Questions as these unto their Consciences and never desist til they have brought the whole to some good issue It s true I have a Notion and Forme of faith but have I indeed the real Power and Virtue of Faith Am I not rather under the Dominion and Prevalence of Infidelitie I assent to some words of God that are agreable but do I not dissent from some other which disagree with and crosse my lusts I do receive the word of faith but have I Faith mixed with the word I receive Mine awakened Conscience attendes to the joyful sound of the Gospel but doth not my lustful heart attend as much to allurements of lust The Peace of the Gospel is pleasing to my wounded Conscience but are not the duties of the Gospel displeasing to my rebellious heart My mind hath some estime for the good things of my peace but has it not as great estime for the good things of this world Have I a right valuation of those things I hope for Mine assent to Evangelic truths and Mysteries seems firme and strong ay but doth it leave suitable impressions on mine heart Is it vigorous affective and active Doth it kil my lust and give life unto my soul Moreover O my soul thou seemest to have a good liking to Jesus the Savior ay but hast thou as good a mind to Christ i. e as anointed by the Father to be King over thy lusts person and goods Art thou brought over to a voluntarie free cordial complete and fixed closure with him as offered in the Gospel Canst thou take a whole Christ with thy whole heart and that for ever Doest thou give Christ that place in the Intention and Bent of thy Wil which belongs to him Hath his Lave and Grace the Soverain dominion over thy Wil And is thy wil bended to a correspondence with his Divine Wil Canst thou be content to be nothing that Christ may be althings to thee Is his Glorie thy last and utmost end And is it thy joy to see althings to suit with his end though they may crosse thine own private ends Wil nothing but Christ content thee Art thou restlesse ' til thou attainest to the enjoyment of him Is this the grand motive of thy seeking after Christ that thy good is laid up in Him and not in thy self And art thou wholly for Christ as he is wholly for thee Doest thou adhere to Him with a plenitude of Wil as the Iron to the Loadstone Canst thou do much for and yet trust in nothing but Christ Art thou obsequious and obedient to the Spirits dictates as to thy supreme Conductor and Director And when thou comest short of honoring Christ by Obedience doest thou honor Him by humble acknowlegement and Dependence Canst thou wait on and adhere to Christ in his Ordinances albeit thou feelest no sensible impartments of comfort peace and quickening These or such like questions which take in the spirit and life of Faith thou shouldest frequently put to thy soul and never desist from urging of them ' til thou hast brought the question to this Conclusion Whether thou art a true Believer or not If thou desirest more expresse rules to examine thy state by then take those mentioned in the foregoing Chapter Corollarie 2. touching the Differences between saving Faith and commun Whereby thou mayest with the concurrence of Divine illumination arrive to a wel-grounded persuasion Whether thy faith be only commun or saving 4. This also affordes mater of exhortation unto al to abjure and abandon Infidelitie as the worst enemie in the world yea worse than Satan or Hel itself Can there be a worse enemie than that which deprives us of our chiefest good And is not this the grand design of Infidelitie Yea doth it not put a bar to al Mercie but open the dore to al Sin and Miserie How sottish and foolish doth it make Sinners What a dul lazy remisse loitering spirit doth it breed in Men Yea how negligent slow-hearted and backward to whatever is good are Believers themselves so far as Unbelief prevails on them Luk. 24. 23 O! how doth it slug mens spirits in whatever good they are about What a clog is it to the soul in al its spiritual Exercices How doth it crampe and dispirit the Affections those feet of the Soul What stubbornesse rebellion and obstinace doth it infuse into the Wil How much
doth it distract deaden and harden the heart in al duties How lean poor and barren in Grace and gracious fruits are many Believers by reason of their prevalent Unbelief Doth it not also take off the Beautie Lustre and Sweetnesse of Mercies received or expected Oh! how bitter are many sweet Mercies when mixed with Infidelitie Yea doth it not turne al Mercies into Curses to those who are under the complete dominion of it as Rom. 11. 9 And how many choise Mercies are Believers deprived of by reason of their Unbelief Whence spring their groundlesse troubles of Consciences their misjugements and mistakes about their state their heart-faintings sinking discouragements and despondences under Desertion their hard and scandalous thoughts of Christ his Heart and Dispensations towards them but from their Infidelitie Oh! What a sting doth it put into al afflictions How burdensome and irkesome is the Crosse of Christ to the unbelieving heart How sweet and easy is the bitter heavy Crosse so far as Faith prevails But oh What a troublesome vexatious neighbor is Infidelitie How doth it torment the heart and cause it to pine away and consume to nothing even under groundlesse expectations and needlesse fears of trouble May it not become a true Proverb Much Infidelitie and much Sorrow How do afflictions pinch and gal unbelieving spirits How unable are such to see any good in afflictions What need have afflicted persons of Faith Again how soon doth Infidelitie betray us into the hands of every Tentation Faith hath Omnipotence engaged for its assistance but oh what a poor impotent thing is Unbelief How unable is it to to conflict with smal Tentations Satan is oft the father but is not Unbelief the mother of al Tentations What made Adam and Eve yield to Satan's tentation but their Infidelitie Was not this also that which made Judas betray Peter denie and the Jews crucifie the Lord of Glorie It s true when the Tentation is asleep the unrighteous man is righteous the unclean person is chaste the passionate man is meek the invidious man is kind the avaricious man is liberal the unfaithful man is faithful but oh when the tentation is awakened how soon doth Unbelief betray the heart into the hands of these or the like corruptions Thinke not thy self secure from the prevalence of any Tentation so long as thou art under the prevalence of Infidelitie Alas how soon is Tentation fired by Unbelief but oh How is the believing soul that by faith adheres to Christ strongly fortified and armed against the most violent Tentations Moreover how are the main breaches of our lives maintained and improved by Infidelitie What departures from God what turnings aside from or remisnesses in Duties are Unbelievers exposed unto Doth not Unbelief cut the Sinews and Nerves of al evangelic Obedience Doth it not let out the vital spirits heart-bloud of al good Inclination and affections Is not the very root and seminal virtue of good Intentions withered and blasted hereby How much beneath the least evangelic dutie is the unbelieving soul How doth Unbelief poison many good Inclinations Oh! what a venimous maligne thing is Unbelief How doth it infuse a malignitie and poison into al the parts of the Soul Is not the spirit of the mind the most noble part of the soul envelopped or wrapt up in contagious black darknesse by it Are not al the faculties of the soul spoiled of their vigor beautie harmonie order and exercices by Unbelief Oh! What a bloudy hard-hearted soul-murdering sin is it How doth it compel the Sinner to embrew his hands in his own bloud to sheath a sword in his own bowels by a wilful rejection of Evangelic offers How welcontented is it to see the Unbelievers sentence of condemnation subscribed and sealed with the Mediators dreadful curse John 3. 18 What flames of vengeance what treasures of wrath doth Infidelitie treasure up against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 5. 2 Thes 1. 7 8 9 How patient is it whiles Satan claps on the chains and fetters of spiritual slumber and hardnesse of heart on the Sinners legs How willing is it to see the poor Unbeliever famished and starved amidst the rich and sumtuous feasts of evangelic Grace and Mercie Has not Christ made a plentiful and costly feast for Sinners And is he not extreme free and cordial in his Invitations How then comes it to passe that Sinners come not to it when invited Why is it not Unbelief that keeps them back and that as it were by hairs namely some poor and foolish excuses Mat. 22. 1-6 Oh! how studious and ready is Infidelitie to shift it self of Christ and al the good things of its peace offered to it What silly excuses and pretences doth it make to put off Christ and his evangelic offers What little reason or cause have Unbelievers to object against Christs gracious offers Are not Christs armes open to receive them when they come Yea Doth he not day by day cal upon and importune them to come unto him Prov. 1. 20-25 Did he ever refuse or look strangely on any that came unto him Yea is he not more willing to receive Sinners than they are to come unto him or are the flames of Hel more elegible than the joys of Heaven Is the Vassalage of Satan more desirable than the Libertie of the Sons of God Is there so much Beautie in Sin as to make men desire it before the Beauties of Holinesse Are the Remorses and Stings of the worme of Conscience more agreable and pleasing than peace of Conscience and the smiles of Divine Love If not how comes it to passe that Sinners choose the evil and refuse the good offered to them Oh! is not Infidelitie the cause of al this miserie Is not Christ's hand and heart open towards Sinners but are not their hearts shut against him by Unbelief Is there any thing in Christ or his evangelic offers that keeps men from believing O then What an irrational sottish perverse cruel sin is Unbelief What a world of miserie doth it bring on Sinners How justly doth Christ pronounce a sentence of death against them who wilfully reject his offers and means of life Alas how is it possible that Salvation itself should save such so long as they wilfully spurne at the offers of Salvation Is there any sin that doth more directly oppose Salvation by Christ than Unbelief Christ comes by his Evangelic offers of Grace to draw the Unbelievers heart unto him but oh how doth he draw back Yea how doth his unbelief oppose Christ as He comes clothed with Grace Love and Pitie And can Unbelievers expect that Christ should passe by such affronts and indignities without severe punishments Doth any thing more provoke Christ than to have his bowels and compassions towards Sinners spurned at Cannot he put up any injuries better than this Is not Unbelief the most cruel and bloudie enemie in the world in that it takes away not only the active power of doing good