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A31037 The Christian temper, or, A discourse concerning the nature and properties of the graces of sanctification written for help in self-examination and holy living / by John Barret ... Barret, John, 1631-1713. 1678 (1678) Wing B907; ESTC R20482 253,096 440

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a fit Object to work on our Fear and we are commanded to fear him that is able to destroy both Soul and Body in Hell Mat. 10.28 Luk. 12.5 And commonly this is the first Motive in place though the last in dignity and worth as Mr. A. Burgesse says But more of this when I come to speak of the Grace of Fear At present note If we are only restrained and kept in by a Fear of Punishment this is but a natural Principle and shews only a slavish Spirit To follow Vertue only or chiefly in hope of Reward is mercenary to flee Vice only or chiefly for fear of Punishment is servile But where the true Fear of God ruleth in the Heart there is a Fear of displeasing and offending God and not only of suffering 2. When we forsake Sin out of Love to God Psal 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate Evil. So this is right when our Love to God will not suffer us to walk contrary to him Jer. 44.4 Oh do not this abominable thing that I hate When this is a prevailing Argument to keep us from Sin that God hates it this would shew that we love God When we would not displease him would not grieve his Spirit and would not dishonour God as we would be ashamed to wrong and abuse our best Friend and would not be so unlike to God as Sin makes us and would not follow such a Course as would separate betwixt us and our God and would hinder our Communion with God these things would shew a loving child-like disposition towards God and that we forsake Sin from a gracious Principle 3. When we forsake Sin from an hatred of it When Sin is not onely barely left but loathed when we turn from it having our Hearts turned against it Psal 101.3 I hate the Work of them that turn aside then it follows it shall not cleave to me Prov. 8.13 The Fear of the Lord is to hate Evil not only to depart from Evil but to hate Evil There is a Contrariety and Opposition betwixt Grace and Sin Where true Grace is therefore there is not only a declining of Evil from the force of Education or Example or as being moved with Rewards promised or Punishments that are threatned but there is an Aversness to Sin it self from a contrary Principle within a Detestation of it an Antipathy against it It is part of the Description of a wicked Man Psal 36.4 that he abhorreth not evil And a bare Abstinence from the ward Act of Sin is not enough without an abhorrence of it While a Man retains a secret love and liking of Sin in Gods account he lives in Sin though he refrains from the gross outward Act. † Quid quod volumas facti origo est Vanissimum est dicere volui nec ramen feci Sicut malum non persicis nec concupiscere debueras Tertul. de Paenit Though one be not drunk with the Drunkards though one doth not swear with the Swearers nor mock and taunt with the Scoffers yet it is bad enough to have pleasure in them that are such Rom. 1.32 As it is a sign that we do not truly hate Sin if we are not willing to forsake it So on the other hand we do not rightly forsake Sin if we do not hate it There are some whose Sins leave and forsake them rather than they leave and forsake their Sins Some there are who do not put away their Sins but are forced to part with them As Pharaoh was forced to let Israel go As Phaltiel parted with Michal when he could keep her no longer but was sad at parting 2 Sam. 3.16 But there is a great difference betwixt a Mans parting with what he loveth and his casting away what is loathsome to him It is very unpleasing and grievous to him to part with what he loveth And this shews a Man's love to Sin when he is sad to think of parting with it when it is grievous to him to think of parting with his vain Companions sinful Pleasures c. When it is very unpleasing to him to hear his Sins spoken against reproved and threatned When it is irksome to him that Parents or Governours keep him in will not suffer him to take his Swing or when he is under restraint by Poverty Sickness c. But what a Man loaths and abhors he is most willing to put away Such things as one hath an Antipathy against he is ready to flee from or is not at ease till they be removed out of his sight So a Man that loaths Sin how earnestly does he desire to be rid of it how glad would he be to have Sin removed quite out of his sight He could not be satisfied only with a removal of the Guilt of Sin to be left under the Power of Sin The presence and prevalency of Sin greatly afflict him The very presence of Sin is a sad annoyance and disturbance to a gracious Spirit A Man cannot delight in the Company of those he hates So if we hate Sin we are sick of it weary of it we would have no more to do with it And this is a right turning from Sin when it is cast off and abandoned with hatred and detestation So 4. When it is forsaken from a firm and fixed resolution in the Soul against it Many have a wishing Will as Mr. Perkins says but no settled purpose Vid. Cases of Consc l. 1. c. 5. §. 4. p. 16. in Vol. 2. But now where the Fear and Love of God and hatred of Sin prevails in the Heart there will be a rooted settled resolution against Sin 2. It is a good sign that a Man truly forsakes Sin when he setteth against his inward corruptions and feareth to Sin in secret Some are tender of their credit while they have no tenderness of Conscience as they are not afraid of being guilty of those Sins in secret which they would be ashamed that others should know Close Chapmen cunning Gamesters that love to play under-Board Some are for their private Walks and so sly that others shall have much a doe to trace them Their way is like the way of a Serpent on the Rock or of a Ship in the Sea But let such know The Eyes of the Lord are open upon all the ways of the Sons of Men to give every one according to his ways and according to the fruit of his doings Jer. 32.19 Prov. 5.21 There is no blind-folding of the Eye of God's Omniscience And as he sees the most secret Sins so when at last he shall turn the way of the wicked upside down he will lay all open to the view of the whole World There is nothing secret which shall not be revealed nothing hid which shall not be made known Your secret Sins will one day find you out and will come out at last But he that truly forsakes Sin dares not allow of Sin in secret Yea he is for mortifying his most inward corruptions He
Reverence and for Piety and Religion too And as we are required to serve the Lord in fear Psal 2.11 Deut. 6.13 So we cannot serve him acceptably without it Heb. 12.28 Let us have Grace whereby we may serve God acceptably with Reverence and godly Fear And as it is a great duty so it is our safety and security In the Fear of the Lord is strong confidence The more we fear God the less we need to fear Creatures Men or Devils The Fear of the Lord is a fountain of life to depart from the snares of death The Fear of the Lord is a treasure And he that hath it shall abide satisfied He shall not be visited with evil There is no want to them that fear him And no evil shall befal them Surely it shall be well with them that fear God Blessed is the Man that feareth the Lord. This Fear is oft put for the whole condition of the Covenant in the Old Testament as the word Faith is oft used in the New But before I come to the trial of our Fear there is an Objection or two to be removed Object 1. Is it not Man 's greatest and highest duty to love God and can we both love and fear him Does not the Apostle John say 1 Joh. 4.18 There is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear Answ 1. It must be noted that we are oft expressly required in the Word both to love and fear the Lord therefore certainly they are not opposites That one Text is sufficient to prove that they well agree Deut. 10.12 And now Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God to walk in all his ways and to love him Yea take this along with you if we do not love God above all and fear him above all he is not our God Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord of Hosts himself and let him be your fear and let him be your dread 2. That Text of the Apostle John many understand of the love of God to us Calvin Heming Danae apprehended by us expelling fear that is fear of the day of judgment of condemnation As he had said in the verse foregoing vers 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In this love is or hath been perfected with us that we may have boldness in the day of Judgment If it be objected that the faithful are not yet without all fear in this respect It is answered Metus verè pellitur quia fidei locum cedit c. Fear may be said to be cast out because it is giving ground to Faith And though it may disquiet it does not confound us It is not prevalent as before Here consult Rom. 8.15 3. Yet I confess I am not so well satisfied with that sense which seems to be forced and does not so well agree with what follows He that feareth is not made perfect in love Therefore understanding the Apostle to speak of our love as other good Expositors take the words and seems to be the plain sense yet we are to distinguish of love and also of fear Love may be said to be perfect either for kinds or for degrees It may be called pefect love Beza Danae Esti Piscat when it is true and sincere and not only when it is consummate Again Fear is manifold and of divers kinds 1. There is a Natural fear which is a passion of the soul implanted by God whereby we naturally abhor and flee from what is destructive or grievous and hurtful to our natures This in it self is neither good nor evil in a moral sense It is not morally good for it is also found in Brutes in irrational Creatures that are not capable of moral goodness Neither is it morally evil For God is the Author of it as of our Natures but he is not the Author of Sin or moral evil Even Jesus Christ himself taking Mans Nature on him was not made without fear Mar. 14.33 Heb. 5.7 But this pure natural fear is good Physically it is greatly useful and very necessary for the Creatures preservation It is a guard to our lives a means to keep us off from rocks of danger Which is the ground of the Latine Proverb Timidi Mater non flet 2. There is a Carnal fear Fear out of its wits The excess of natural fear Such a fear as we read of Prov. 29.25 The fear of Man bringeth a snare which is there opposed to trust in the Lord. An undue or excessive fear of Creatures or outward evils A fearing where no fear is a fearing without just ground or a fearing Creatures more than they are to be feared a fearing without due bounds We may fear Men as the rod of God's anger but we must fear God more He holds the rod in his hand and it is not to be feared but with respect to him that holds it that hath the command and dispose of it Mat. 10.28 Though Christ as he was Man had a natural reluctancy to suffering yet he had no base carnal fear upon him Joh. 19.11 To Pilate boasting of his power Knowest thou not that I have power to crucify thee c. He answereth Thou couldst have no power at all against me except it were given thee from above Carnal fear is not from meer nature but from the corruption of nature and is sinful in it self attributing too much to Creatures and detracting derogating from the power dominion and over-ruling providence of God and is further a cause of much sin as we may see in Peter when through this Fear he denied his Lord and Master It is a great impediment to Grace an hindrance of Duty it quite unbingeth and sadly distracteth the Mind and Spirit where it prevails 3. There is a servile or slavish Fear Timor poenae non culpae A fear of punishment only not of offending or a fear to offend only with respect to the punishment This is the property of Slaves It 's true the wrath and sword of the Civil Magistrate is to be feared Rom. 13.4 Then much more are we to fear the Wrath of God his Judgments As Psal 119.120 My flesh trembleth for fear of thee I am afraid of thy Judgments But this is far short of the duty of Fear that we owe to God He is not only to be feared in this respect Nay this Fear is no further good than it leads unto and helps forward an holy filial Fear of God As the Needle draws the Thread after it as Austine has the comparison But as a Natural fear agrees to all Men a meer servile fear is proper to wicked Men. And yet we cannot blame them for fearing such an angry Judge and incensed Majesty or trembling at such punishment as Hell-torments but that their fear of God is separated from all true love to God and that notwithstanding their fear of punishment they have still a love to their sins that it is a torment to them to think of being restrained