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A74688 Vox Dei & hominis. God's call from heaven ecchoed [sic] by mans answer from earth. Or a survey of effectual calling. In the [brace] explication of its nature. Distribution of it into its parts. Illustration of it by its properties. Confirmation of it by reasons. Application of it by uses. Being the substance of several sermons delivered to the people of Heveningham, in Suffolk. / By J. Votier, minister of the gospel.; Vox Dei et hominis Votier, J. (James), b. 1622. 1658 (1658) Wing V709; Thomason E1756_1; ESTC R209691 204,151 359

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the seeds plant the slips of grace There is a latter spring but that is not so good In youth are the white houres the Golden seasons Marriages are most in younger time so are Spiritual Contracts with Jesus Christ David was good when young Daniel a young 1 Sam. 17. 23. Dan. 1. 3. 4. 1 Tim. 4. 12. 1 Sam. 2. 18. 1 Kings 4. 3 13. 2 Kings 22. 1 2. Discipulum minimum Christus amavit psurimum Eccles 3. begin Psal 92. ●3 1 Pet. 2. 5. Nullum tempus occurrit Regi Prophet Timothy a young Preacher Samuel began with God betimes Abijah good when a Child so was Jofiah John the youngest of Christs disciples and most beloved for he leaned on Christs bosome There is a season for every thing under the Sun saith Solomon then certainly for grace and Soul-affaires there is a time to be Spiritually born to be planted in the house of the Lord to kill the heart of sin to heal the hurt of the Soul to be built up a Spiritual house to lament for sin to laugh in a sence of Gods love to embrace Christ and refrain from embracing sin to love vertue to hate vice It is true as no place so no time can prescribe against the King of Heaven and Earth yet in this season doth the Spirit usually breed and bring forth its young This is Gods more common order which he can alter when he pleaseth and this time he seemeth to take for these reasons 1. The excellency of firstlings 2. The probability of a change 3. The necessity of service 1. The excellence of firstlings The Lord doth S. 3 this that he may have the first Fruits in which he delighteth First fruits are savoury meat such as the Soul of the Lord loves the first of our Estate our health the first of the day the first of Prov. 3. 9. the week the first of our life the first in regard of time in regard of dignity is to be the Lords In the time of the Law the Lord challenged the Exod. 34. 19 20 23. first of men of Beasts of the Fruits of the Earth How welcome is the Primerose to us because it cometh forth early ye creamy mornings and not the flotten afternoons are of great price we are loath to take into our services of those that have been worn up in others imployments and will the Lord think we accept of our drie bones when the Devil hath sucked R. Jun. out the Marrow as one saith wittily and yet this is the way of the world the common course The first and best not last and worst is to be given to God The morning rather than the evening the Spring rather than autumne Monday rather than Saturday our flourishing rather than our fading dayes are to be devoted to the Lord and such Sacrifices smel sweet in his nostrils The Lord loveth to be served in the first place to have the chief of our strength the choice of our ability The Lord 1 Cor. 7. 36. looketh upon it as uncomely behaviour to himself that we passe the flower of our age and never seek for Marriage with himself It is dearly delightful so purely pleasing to begin with wisedom when we begin with the world that a gracious promise is made to it I love them that love me and they that seek me early shall find me Prov. 8. 17. An early new heart is a rich Pearl timely grace finds great grace in the eyes of the Lord. God calleth and careth for early Piety the Blossomes Buds Fruit of Godlinesse in younger years is grateful to him a young man or woman green all over and putting forth the tender shoots of grace is Jehovah's darling a youth Saint or a Saint youth is the Benjamin the Son of the right hand of the most high his dearest Joseph as the apple of his eye written in his heart and wrought on the palmes of his hand by the engravings of love such indeed are his chosen his choice ones his loved his loving his lovely ones Thus then you see God is in love with early goodnesse to give grace at all times lieth in his hand to receive grace betimes lodgeth in his heart 2. The probability of a change This is the S. 4 second reason Young ones are more likely to be wrought upon grace in youth is most like to be grace in truth soon grace is likest to prove sound grace and early goodnesse hath a probability Quo semel est imbuta testa c. 2 Kings 22. 19. to become ever goodnesse the twigs of youth are more tender when the grown boughes of age are more tough young ones are more plain and simple when old ones are more plicated and subtle The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked who can know it Jer. 17. 9. These words are a fit measure for the hearts of all for young hearts and old hearts are hard and naught but yet the older they grow the worse they grow and the more unlikely to be mended as the expression of the Holy-ghost doth warrant Can the Aethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots Then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil Jer. 13. 23. It is true the spirit of God knoweth the things of a man as well as his own spirit yea more of man than man doth of himself and hath line and lead wherewith it can sound and reach the profundity Jer. 17. 10. of wickedness and hath a clue wherewith it can find a way into the midst of the intricate labyrinth of mans deceitful heart notwithstanding all the windings and turnings that are in it The Lord hath a fountain wherein he can wash Black-moors white he hath soap and nitre wherein he can take out spots of the deepest stain yet aged inveterate customary sinners contract more rust more filth which calls for more rubbing more filing A tree long rooted may be pulled up yet with more ado than a plant of a years growth As Mr. Bridg. a godly Man illustrates this by Christs raising to life several that were temporally dead as Jairus his daughter to which sinners of the Matth. 9. 25. Luke 7. 14. lower form may be resembled and the widdows son of Naim who was carried forth to be buried to whom may be resembled such sinners as have broken out into more notorious wickednesse and have stood in the way of the ungodly and Lazarus who was laid John 11. 41 42. 43. in his grave and nigh unto stinking to whom may be resembled great sinners that have continued in their sins a great while all these Christ raiseth up one as well as other but with various dispensations the first with a touch of his hand the second with a work and a word a touch and a call the third and the last in a more solemn manner first speaking to his living father then to his livelesse friend and that not with a low but
a loud voice As our Saviour saith in another case this kind goeth not out but by fasting and prayer Matth. 17. 21. the like may we say of sins riveted by custome and time they may be loosed but with much a do the Ice of a months freezing may be broken as well as the Ice of a nights freezing though with more knocks Many shifts and evasions do people find for themselves by continuance of time whereby they keep sin in and grace out by use sin groweth strong sense of sin weak and their hearts little affected with the word being like the people that dwell by the water falls of Nilus who regard not the great noise thereof whereas it is troublesome to strangers so they being accustomed to the sound of the word little regard it 3. Necessity of service Therefore doth S. 5 God use to convert mostly in the spring for all that are sanctified in conversion are to serve him in their conversation Those that are called are called not to loyter but to labour not to be truantly but trusty not to play in the open field of the world but to ply his work in the walled vineyard of his Church not to sit with folded hands in our bosomes but to run the way of his commandments Much there is for a Christian to do for God for himself for his relations for his neighbours for Gods praise for his own and others peace for the illustration of Gods glory for the salvation of his own and others Ars longa vita brevis souls and the time of people upon earth at longest is but short at most is but little and if they begin not betimes what can they do a long journey from earth to heaven we had need take the morning and set out by Sun a great deal of business to do and it must be done in the day of this life we had need then be stirring very early the good housholder which may well be an emblem of Gods calling sinners is said to go out early in the morning to hire labourers into his vineyard Matth. 20. 1. As the whole man so the whole time doth the Lord require as our spirits soul and body so our youth middle and old age death often comes sooner than old age and if nothing be done before nothing can be done after Much work and many works hath a Christian to do There is the fostering of faith the renewing repentance subduing of sin conquering corruption guarding his grace fearing his falling watching his walking studying the Scriptures perusing the promises conversing with converts admonishing acquaintance defying the Divel growing in grace and in all glorifying his God and as the Apostle saith in another case 2 Cor. 2. 16. Who is sufficient for these things so may we in this What time is sufficient for these things Besides in youth there is bodily strength for the task of duties for the body as well as the soul is to be and do for God and spiritual services take a tincture from the bodies temper Though the spirit be willing yet the lesse will be done if the flesh be weak fervent prayer frequent meditation of God his works his word of it self its ways its wants solemn fastings whether publike or private much reading often hearing self examining for which and many more is requisite the vigor of the souls powers the vivasity Meus sanein corpore sano of the bodies parts which in age do age lurk and languish grow feeble and faint the former whereof are evacuated in regard of spirits the latter enervated in regard of strength CHAP. XI X. The means whereby the Lord doth effectually call IN the next place we are to speak of those ways and means which the Lord maketh use of for the calling home wandring creatures lost sheep to himself and they are either of a lower or of an higher form Of the lower form 1. Works Of the lower form 2. Word Of the higher form The Spirit 1. By works The Lord many times makes common works and ordinary providences S. 1 to be especial instruments of grace All things are in Gods hands and those things that are of an inferiour nature can he so blesse and dispose that thereby they shall be suited for the attaining of highest ends Now those providences which the Lord hath used this way and countenanceth in reference to this work are these seven following which carry Scripture authority at their backs 1. By providing yoke-fellows the Lord S. 2 makes temporal marriages sometimes means of spiritual and in this regard it may be well said that matches are made in heaven when for heaven marrying proves to many a making to all eternity sometimes a man when he hath prevailed with a woman afterwards woes and wins her for Christ and many a woman that takes her husband much with her person takes him more with her piety How doth the wisedom and goodnesse of God much appear in this he brings those together that were most unthought of most unlikely he bringeth those together that were farthest distant from each other thus he makes grace out of nature as it were and a spiritual union to grow upon a fleshly conjunction by means of making one flesh he sometimes makes one spirit and doth not the Apostle use this as a reason why he would have the Corinthians not to leave but to shew love to their unbelieving yoke-fellows For what knowest thou O wife whether thou shalt save thy husband or how knowest thou O man whether thou shalt save thy wife 1 Cor. 7. 16. And doth not Peter counsel wives to be in subjection to their own husbands and to what end is it Why That if any obey not the word they also may without the word be wonne by the conversation of the wives 1 Pet. 3. 1. Many an one may say to their yoke fellows in some sort as David 1 Sam. 25. 32 c. to Abigail Blessed be the Lord God of Israel which gave me such an Husband such a Wife and blessed be thy advice my dear heart and blessed be thou which hast told me of my sin admonished me of my State and so hast kept me from Iniquity for in very deed had it not been for thee under the Lord I had perished in my transgressions though there may be carnal love and a peaceable life between yoke-fellows yet no well-bottomed affection if there be not mutual care for each others Eternal welfare They should seek by exhortation and conversation by counsels and commerce by prayer by pattern to bring each other into the bosome of Christ within the bounds of the Covenant The Apostle condemnes and blames the weaknesse of the Galatians That having begun in the Spirit sought to be made perfect by the Flesh We may congratulate and blesse the Gal. 3. 3. wisedom of God that causeth that which is begun in the Flesh to end in the Spirit Sometime a good Husband makes a good Wife and
one is a new creature goeth beyond it by many degrees That is good in the positive and comparative but this in the superlative degree The Lord open your eyes that you may see the glory and beauty thereof A most blessed condition it must needs be that hath so many choice consequences a most excellent endowment that brings so great enjoyments no mean quality that hath so many immunities It is a great King that is attended by such a noble train a Royal Queen that is waited upon by so many maids of honour A whole Paradise of temporal felicity falleth short of a part in spiritual sanctity 10. The industry of youth If the Lord do S. 10 usually call in younger years then young people had need be very industrious to get grace They had need bestir themselves to make hay while their Sun shineth while they are naturally strong they had need labour to be spiritually strong in the Lord while the In juvenili aetate vigent corporis senjus visus acutior auditus Promptior qui in hac aetate se domant Deo se sociant praemium Joannis expectant blood runs fresh in their veines they had need plie the work of salvation and apply the word of sanctification let them strive for grace early and they are like to have grace in earnest If they do not sedulously improve their time they will hardly savingly approve the truth They should strive against sin oppose obstacles be conquering corruption defying the devil tooth and nail with might and main now or never now if ever as we use to say It is good policy to labour while one is young that they may get a stock against they be old If young men be sluggards and loath to put their hand to the plow it is just with God that they should beg in harvest and have nothing Prov. 20. 4. for though they call upon God afterwards yet it may be he will not hear them Now must they follow their pattern Jesus Prov. 1. 28. Christ and work the works of God who hath sent them into the world the night cometh when no man can work So that we may say John 9. 4. with the Psalmist Both young men and maidens old men and children let them praise the name of the Lord Psal 148. 12 13. Let them give glory to God by taking true shame John 7. 19. to themselves As Joshua saith to Achan advance his worth by the amendment of their works and raise his honour by the ruine of their sinful humours To see young people running striving labouring in spiritual things till they sweat again Oh what a precious sight is this how doth the Lord smile upon such in love and clap them on the back with encouraging promises They that seek me early shall find me Prov. 8. 17. and to him that asketh it shall be given and to those that knock it shall be opened Math. 7. 7. And to him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God Revel 2. 7. One accounted the King of Persia happy because while he was young he had attained to so great puissance They are really and eminently happy who attain to an estate of grace while they are young to be made new to have the strong holds of hell in the soul thrown down is a mercy that but few attain unto but to reach this under the conduct of the spirit in youth is an addition and augmentation of the mercy It is a sweet thing saith a precious man when God satisfieth young people with his mercy and that satisfaction abideth Master Burroughs Hos 2. 15. so as they rejoyce all the dayes of their life But carelesse youth is usually more active for sin than grace and that strength which they have from God by common bounty give to the devil in special service and sweat in gathering fading May flowers and adventure to the ditches brink to gather dasies to make a garland of vanity withall in the mean time neglecting to dig for Diamonds and Pearls to set in the Crown of Eternity Young people are for the most part loytering when they should be labouring playing when they should be praying singing when they should be sighing merry when they should be mourning youth must have its liberty they say and the greennesse of young years is with most a sufficient warrant of any exorbitancies whereas in many regards it is an aggravation of them But soul if thou improve Indigne transacta adolescentia odiosam efficit senectutem Fro●te capillata est post est occasio calva not thy young years thy golden age thy white houres thou maiest rue it to all eternity in the blacknesse of darknesse If you strive not now to enter in at the strait gate it is to be feard you will never do it in old age Time hath all forelocks no hinderlocks your time is hasting away and if once its back be turned there is no calling or returning it back again It is better to be Prometheus than Epimetheus after-wit is dearest but fore-wit is best 11. The miserie of sinful age If the Lord S. 11 usually call in souls betimes then to be old and yet in a natural condition is very sad Aged men and women have cause to be full of fear who are void of faith and to abound with sorrow who yet abide in their sins and to bemoan their woe who have not been moulded to Gods will To have a white silver head and a black iron heart is lamentable To age and grow old in the bed of sin is deplorable Long bed-ridden persons hardly get up again old sinners have continued in sin and though custom in sin may be removed yet with great difficulty They say there is no transplanting trees after seven years rooting it is too often true in this case Art thou drawing near to thy grave and yet didst never draw nigh to God Is thy glasse almost run and labouring with its latest sands Is thy time well-nigh spent and yet hast not run in the way of Gods commandements nor laboured for Heaven nor spent thy time in the best things Do thy years time and hours complain and say we have been spent in the service of the world and wickedness O doleful Prov. 16. 31. Canities tunc est venerabilis quando eagerit quae canitiem decent state to be lamented with tears of blood The hoary head I confesse is a crown of glory but then it must be found in the way of righteousness sin degrades them of their venerable dignity Such souls have cause to get alone into a corner and put their finger in their eye and lay their hand upon their heart and say what shall I do and what shall become of me Caesar wept to see Alexanders statue who had done so much and conquered the greatest part of the world and was but young when himself had done
good Heart when they have a bad hand a right inside though a wrong outside to be fair within though foul without to have great Faith in the inward Man though grosse faults in the outward Man but grace cannot be hid it will discover it's self if fire be within heat will be without if the Heart live the Pulse will beat These are the Steps of the Jacobs Ladder whereby God descendeth into the Heart from the height of Predestination and causeth the Heart to ascend to himself from the depth of a natural and sinful condition and most blessed are the Soules that by the hand of grace are led thus far towards glory But I would not Soules should be troubled if their capacities cannot apprehend these workings in themselves in this order that is laid down but if they can find them in their own Hearts in truth though they cannot discern this order let them blesse God who hath thus blessed them with Spiritual blessings Nor do I lay down these things peremptorily as if there could not be a better and righter disposing them by transposition addition or subtraction but onely I humbly conceive according to that measure of light the Lord hath vouchsafed me who am lesse than the least of all his mercies that the will of God in his word the way of God in his works I mean of effectual calling and experience of precious Saints and chosen Vessels will own and say Amen to these things and now O blessed Spirit come down into the Hearts of the Readers of these lines and work these things in the Hearts of such of them as are strangers from the Covenants of promise CHAP. VIII VII The Concomitants Effects Consequences of Effectual calling 1. LIfe The first thing that followeth upon S. 1 Effectual calling is Life thereby a Man or Woman is made alive Spiritually This my Luke 15. 24. Son was dead but is now alive saith the Father of the Prodigal how excellent and desirable is natural life to us so that we are loth to part with it as one said when his Physitian brought him the message of death Oh let me live though it be but the life of a Toad under a Sill If the life of nature be so sweet how much sweeter then is the life of grace natural inspirations have their expirations but Spiritual breath can never be totally stopped the Earthly life may be terminated but the Spiritual cannot a life of vegetation which Plants have is something a life of sence which Beasts have is more a life of reason which Men have transcendeth the other but a life of grace which Saints have transcends them all A living Dog Eccles 9. 4. is better than a dead Lion A Flie because it hath life is more excellent than the glorious and shining body of the Sun when good old Jacob heard news of his Joseph it was a comforting cordial to him and reviving of his Spirits It is enough Joseph my Son is yet alive So Gen. 45. 28. saith a gracious Heart The Lines are fallen to me in pleasant places I have a goodly Heritage I am alive through the quickening grace of Ephes 2. 1. God pleasures sin world vanity away be gone it is enough I have enough Oh blessed be the Lord that hath redeemed me from the grave I was alive once in thought I am alive now in truth I was alive to my own seeming I am alive to my Souls saving sin lived and I was dead sin is dead and I am alive there is joy at Mans coming into the world sorrow at his going out so delightful is life so dolorous are the thoughts of death those that are effectually called are born never to die and how can they be but alive who come to Christ who is life it self as he is the true light to enlighten so the true life to enliven the Soul if the touch of dead Elisha's bones could make 2 Kings 13. 21. alive how much more then the touch of a living Christ All Saints are as the Children of light so of life Christ said Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life John 5. 40. Then those that come to him have life from him He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life John 3. 36. He hath that life begun which shall be ever God hath breathed the breath of life into such they then must needs be living Souls Such live a noble Heavenly compleat raised life we may say of such as David Lord thou hast made them little lower than the Angels and hast crowned them with glory and honour Psal 8. 5. Natures life is not Non est res magna vivere Sen. to be compared with this The voice of Christ is quickening for he saith the houre is coming and now is when the dead shal hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Christ hath called and caused thee to hear and thou doest live to be in the Land of the Spiritually living is no small matter 2. Liberty All that are effectually called S. 2 have this effect of their calling that they are set at liberty Liberty is that we all crave liberty is that which onely Saints have It is every ones Prayer onely the Saints priviledge not a liberty to sin do I speak of but a liberty from sin not a liberty from good but to good Conscientia libera inquantum liberata à peccato such onely have the true liberty of conscience which many misse of while they muse on it to do what we would is not Freedom but servitude to do what God would is the Freedom that belongs to the Citizens of the Heavenly corporation the City of God the Church of God a natural Man is a Vassal a Slave to the tyranny of his lusts and sin but a Saint is free from sin from the penalty and from the power of it from it 's Domination though not it's Inhabitation free from it in affection Med. Ames lib. 1. cap. 27. Thes 21. v. though not in Action free from Hell also though not from the desert yet from the death of Hell free from the Law in regard of justification though not in regard of sanctification free from the condemnation though not from the commination of the Law and can it be otherwise with them who are in Christ he makes all his Free-men Free-women If the Son shall make you free ye shall be free indeed John 8. 36. This Freedom is of an excellent nature one told a certain people once that if they knew what a Jewel liberty were they would not part with it for all the Riches of Persia what a Pearl then is this liberty Now may a Man or Woman say as they in Psal 124. 7. Our Soul is escaped as a Bird out of the snare of the Fowlers the snare is broken and we are escaped How glad is a converted Man or Woman with Joseph that they are out
otiosus est sermo Doctoris the other as the Agent the one as Organical the other as Authentical as Christ said to his Disciples John 15. 5. so may the Spirit say to providences and the word without me ye can do nothing These wheeles would never go if the Spirit did not drive them these sailes would never fill if that did not blow hard these means would be but as dead carcasses if that did not enliven them Words Frustrà foris verba nostra streperent si internum magisterium S. S. deesset Ephes 6. 17. Ps ●27 1. would be but wind without the Spirits working If the word be not in the Spirits hand it will never cut down the weeds of sin nor slay the Goliah of natural rebellion therefore is it called the sword of the Spirit If the Spirit joyn not it self to the chariot it will move heavily as if the wheeles were taken off Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it Unlesse the Spirit move upon the face of the Soul nothing will be brought to ripenesse and perfection As an Heathen could say when he had done some piece of eminent service It was not I that did this exploit but the Gods used me as an Instrument So may the fore-mentioned means say It is not we that have converted but the Spirit by us and may answer as Peter if we be examined of the good Acts 4. 9 10. that sinful Soules have received Be it known unto you all that by the power of the Spirit these Soules are alive this day If the Spirit do not prosper providences and work with the word the Soul can never be changed It is his proper work to give grace to grant holinesse and therefore is he called the Holy-ghost as is his name so is his nature and as his condition is so is his operation If the Spirit sit not at the stern the Minister shall plie the oar in vain Ministers may Act secondarily but the Spirit primarily they as choice subservients but the Spirit as chief superintendent they may carry on their work artificially as Servants but the Spirit architectonically as Master they may Preach out their hearts and if the Spirit doth not put out his hand Soules may go to Hell after all Now the Spirit helpeth and carrieth on this work by these actings The Spirit 1. Perswadeth 2. Fasteneth 3. Applieth 4. Examineth 5. Concludeth 6. Disquieteth 1. The first work of the Spirit is to perswade S. 14 the Soul to believe those things that are spoken Truths heard and not believed will take no place The word Preached did not profit them not being mixt with Faith in them that heard it Heb. 4. 2. The word was propounded to many yet profited but some taught to divers yet took but a few the word the same but not the work And the cause was as perswasion in the one so misperswasion or non-perswasion in the other If we be not perswaded of the sweet of a promise of the soure of a threatning of the reality of consolations pronounced of the certainty of comminations denounced of the verity of Doctrine commended and the necessity of duty commanded they may strike our ear but they will never reach the heart If one hear of a receit for the bodies good and believe not the contents thereof it will do them no good so it is in this case the Scripture is an whole Book of receits for our restitution of remedies for our maladies which we shall never follow if we believe not the vertue and use of them An unbelieving heart is like sandy Infidelitas sicut terra arenosa barren ground Now it is the work of the Spirit to perswade The belief of the misery of our Soules the mercy of a Saviour of the willingnesse and worthinesse of Christ in reference to redemption of the nature of sin and the need of Sanctity cannot be wrought in our Soules without the power of the Spirit We cannot perswade our selves the Minister cannot perswade us without the influx of the Holy-ghost We may go down into the Waters of the word and if the Spirit move not them and us we may come up again as leprous as ever we were Let the Minister informe soundly reprove sharply examine searchingly and exhort sweetly yet all is nothing unlesse the Spirit do something But the Spirit deals and treats with the Soul propounds delivers the truth of God answers objections silenceth queries infallibly demonstrates and by such strong Mediums proves it's Divine conclusions that the Soul is non-plus'd confuted hath nothing to say and is now so clearly convinced that unlesse it would deny principles and shut it's eyes against the light of Argument it must needs come over to the Spirits part and be of it's mind You that are effectually called what say you till the Spirit perswaded you could man prevail with you till you believed indeed the writings of the Prophets and Apostles and the sayings of Ministers from thence did you getany good till then was not allspoken as to the dead 2. It fasteneth In the next place the Spirit S. 15 fasteneth and fixed some word or providence upon the Soul which it cannot forget or shake off and causeth it like Mary to keep all these things and ponder them in their heart Some Luke 2. 19. general thoughts and sence of the word believed of providences experimented do light upon the Spirit of a man or woman but are soon scared away Now the Spirit cometh and holdeth these things to the heart the sound of the word cometh and goeth and the Lord in his providences passeth by us and we take little notice of him But the Spirit as the Master of the assemblies fasteneth something like a naile in a sure place and strikes the arrow into the side the Soul would put all away and thrust all out of doors by company mirth by letting in thoughts of vanity but the Spirit striveth against this stream and now the requiring repentance pressing piety reproving iniquity in general or such a sin in particular the threatning of fury promising favour such a passage or such a phrase in the Ministery of the word and for providences the visiting with sicknesse the lessening the estate the preserving from danger the saving from wrack or the like are so tied by the Spirit to the Soul that it cannot get loose from them and come so freely into it's thoughts that it cannot avoid acquaintance with them and now saith Oh such an expression of the Minister what means it by this providence what doth the Lord intend and where ever it is going whatever it is doing almost these things and thoughts do interveen the Soul cannot but revolve and turn them up and down in it's mind 3. It applieth The Spirit helpeth the Soul S. 16 to apply to it's self in particular what is spoken in the general We are all prone to excuse our selves and are like little Children
which is not till the next 2. Secondly in nature As the shooting of a Gun with a Bullet and the killing of any one thereby may be together in time at the same instant yet the shooting is before the slaughter in nature as the cause thereof These things I lay down as preparatives now briefly to the purpose The habits of faith and repentance are planted and set in the heart at one instant there is no difference of time there 2. Repentance from the tenour of the Law Am. med de vocat Thes 31 32 33 34. Buc. lae 30. goeth before justifying faith in time and I think in nature too 3. Gospel repentance followeth justifying faith in the act and dependeth upon it 4. Repentance viz. Gospel is usually first seen because one cannot well perswade himself that he is reconciled to God in Christ till he perceive he hath parted with his sins nor conclude he is pardoned till he saith he is purified nor that Christ and they be united till their souls sins be divided nor that they have put on Christ till they have put off their sins 4. Ob. In the next place the question shall 4. Ob. be whether conversion or effectual calling be S. 4 by the Preaching of the Law or Gospel Sol. Master Burges shall answer this query Sol. Vindiciae legis Lect. 20. and unty this knot I shall give you the short notes of what he delivereth more largely 1. The Law could not work to regeneration were it not for the promises of the Gospel the question is not whether conversion be vi legis by the power of the law but whether it may be cum lege with the preaching of the Law 2. Howsoever the Law may be blest to conversion yet the matter of it cannot be the ground of our justification and adoption 3. The Word of God as it is read or preached worketh no further than objectively to the conversion of a man if considered in it self 4. Whatsoever good effects or benefits are conveyed to the soul by the preaching of the Law or the Gospel it s efficiently from Gods Spirit Thus far this worthy man It is unsafe to exclude the Law though we Am. de voc cap. 26. Thes 12. v. conclude the Gospel is the chief Between the hammer of the Law and the cushion of the Gospel is a flinty heart most like to be broken by the hand of the Spirit we may suppose the Lord speaking in this case as in Zech. Not by might nor by power but by my Spirit saith the Lord 4. Zech. 6. v. The Spirit is the supreme chief Though they be different in their constitution yet they agree in one as to the work of conversion They are all good though in several respects We may well say precious Law more precious Gospel most precious Spirit if the spirit did not move them neither the upper nor nether milstone would turn as neither must be taken for pledge for they cannot work alone so joyntly and together they cannot act without the spirits assistance the Law sheweth the sore the Gospel the salve the one teacheth of sin the other of a Lex data est it gratia quaereretur Saviour the one sheweth the harming curse the other the healing crosse the one mans misery the other Gods mercy but it is the spirit that setteth home these things and openeth the eyes to see them anointing them with spiritual eye-salve the Law may be a preparative hut the Gospel is the power of God to salvation Rom. 1. 16. when the soul by the Law set only the spirit which is the master builder is driven to fear it is the more likely by the Gospel to be drawn to faith and when it seeth it is lost in it self it is thereby provoked to long for Christ the Law treateth of transgression condemneth our courses revealeth wrath thundreth threatnings but the Gospel propoundeth promises breatheth benedictions holdeth out happiness sheweth salvation whereby the spirit draws the heart to Christ CHAP. XIII XII A few plain and familiar reasons are to be given in IN the next place according to the propounded method I am to lay down some demonstrations of the doctrine and they are these ensuing which are as four pillars to support the point and a quaternion of mediums for the life-guard of the position formerly laid down and hitherto treated of 1. Conjunction of the means and end 2. Union to Christ 3. Distinction present and future 4. Application of the means Conjunction of the means and end the S. 1 Lord calls in to himself those whom he laid Rea. 1 out for himself for as he predestinated them to the end viz. happiness so also to the means In rebus quas Deus vult ordo quidam concipitur prius vult finem quam media Ames Med. cap. 7. Thes 40. 51. Ordinatio primum finis deinde mediorum Pol. Synt. lib. 4. c. 6. Non causa regnandi sed via ad regnum viz. holiness the means and the end lying in the same womb of predestination there is a concatenation of them in Gods counsel a twisting of them together in Gods thoughts and when he decrees the one he determines the other In the book of his eternal thoughts with the pen of his certain decree the Lord first sets down the matter of his intention then the means of the execution In the certain register of his thoughts in reference to his peculiar people he first enters his will and then enrols his work Their inheritance shall be glory and the way to it shall be grace for though holiness be not the cause yet it is the cause-way to Heaven who so looks into the way of erfectual calling shall find it a beaten road to Heaven and may perceive in it the prints of the feet of Abraham Isaac Jacob David Samuel and the rest of the spiritual travellers in their journey to the Holy-land thē Lord intends to bring his people into Canaan and with all hath laid out the way and means he intends to bring them into the Heavenly City by the narrow gate of converting grace If it be a part of the wisedom of the children of this generation to think of the means together with the end shall we dare to think that the Father of Light the All-wise God hath not his counsels richly damasked with sapience prudence intelligence beyond the rule of the actions the reach of the conceptions of man I think we may safely say that the Lord hath not determined for ought that we can find in his word that any should commence and take the degree of a glorified Saint in Heaven without undergoing the task and services that belong to Christs school on earth The Apostle telleth the Ephesians that God had before ordained the path of holiness for them to walk in 2 Ephes 10. v. God hath but one way to Heaven wherein all must walk that would come thither supporting themselves
whom Samuel took to be the chosen of the Lord because he was well complexioned and tall statured but the Lord tells him that was none of the man and so the like for Abinadab and Shammah till at last David comes and he it is that the Lord intends to preferre to the Kingdom So souls hear there is a work must passe on them or no glory Now they bring out all before the Lord sorrow for sin confession of sin some endeavours and partial amendment and profession for Christ but it is none of all these It is little David said the Lord a through change that I will own true conversation that I will crown many through ignorance take the Leah of superficial repentance instead of the beautiful Rachel of solid and serious returning They are much mistaken who think the sandy foundation of every sorrow able enough to bear the superstructure of the new Jerusalem They that look upon repentance onely in the community as sorrow and not in the special notion as renovation may run wild and misse their way at first setting out To sorrow for sin and not separate from it to mourn for it and not to get some good mastery over it though the spirits help to lament it and not to loath it is not effectuall calling To have a sense of sin and not a sight of a Saviour To feel the curse and have no faith in Christ is not the change we are speaking of we must distinguish between a carnal rupture a legal despondency of spirit and a true spiritual humiliation and debasement of spirit which centers the soul upon a forsaken God one may take many steps yet if they come not so near as to touch the golden Scepter all is nothing 8. The benignity of God If God be thus S. 8 bountiful to his people here what will he be to them hereafter If those that are Predestinated to life be effectually called now they are on earth what shall be done to them when they come to be possessed of Heaven If he give them effectual calling at this distance cum omnibus pertinentiis with all the appendixes and appurtenances thereof what will he give them when they come into his immediate presence Surely if now they be as walls and doors in his spiritual building then he will build upon them Palaces of silver and Cantic 8. 9. enclose them with boards of Cedar Indeed the comparison is not to be made between here and there now and then If Incomparabiliter superna civitas clara est such things in the way what shall they have when they come to their heavenly Countrey If effectual calling while they be sublunarians then surely an everlasting Crown when they shall be suprasolists If so much while they are in cottages of clay then much more when they come to the place of glory If the first-fruits be an handful headful and heartful what will the crop and harvest be If the earnest amount to thus much what do you think the total sum will be Effectual calling is a glimmering of future glory the dawning of the eternal day and what is the morning to the noon the twilight to the midday splendour It is most true what the Scripture saith that the heart of man cannot conceive what the Lord hath treasured and laid up for his people 1 Cor. 2. 9. and to this purpose speaketh St. John Beloved now we are the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 John 3. 2. Now there is near relation then there shall be much assimilation here is mutual love there shall be great likenesse If God here bring them into the suburbs then surely hereafter into the heart of the City If so much now while they are in the valley of tears then much more when they come to the mount of joy If this be done for them while they are in their non-age what then shall be done for them when they come unto a perfect man unto Ephes 4. 13. the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ 9. The excellency of effectual calling Is S. 9 effectual calling such a work and are the effects of it such as we have heard then it is one of the most excellent things in the world next to Christ and Heaven there is no better thing that God gives to his people That makes the Apostle Paul to give thanks to God for it in Colos 1. 12 13 14. Put the best of the things of the world into the scales with it and it will weigh them all down Set them all by this and this will be higher than they by the head and shoulders It is good for the body advantagious to the soul the blessing of both It is good for this life for another life never out of date ever useful Godliness Poenitentia est medicamentum pulveris spes salutis is profitable unto all things having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Tim. 4. 8. There is nothing in the world hath so many commodities as it hath It is health from sickness life from death liberty pardon sonship fellowship perseverance Qui per poenitentiam peccata diluit angelicae felicitatis consors in aeternum erit glory are the virgin-companions that follow effectual calling We may truly say of it that it is more precious than Rubies and the merchandise thereof better than the marchandise of silver and the gain thereof than fine gold Prov. 3. 14. 15. It makes a King of a begger a friend of a foe a righteous one of a rebellious one a godly man of a godless man a saint of a sinner and those that are thus qualified have an excellency above others The righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Prov. 12. 26. He or she that hath this need not care what else they want It is the sottish ignorance that makes the world tread under feet this Jewel There are but few Crowns adorned with this Diamond These waters of Jordan though contemned yet are better than Abana and Pharpar rivers of Damascus 2 Kings 5. 12. Think and think as often as you will yet you will find nothing to match or equal effectual calling many think they have all when their will is fulfilled but they have nothing till their will be changed many say all is well if they have what they would but all is ill till they have what they should To say one is wise rich strong beautiful parted is much but to say one is gracious holy renewed in their affections reformed in their actions is a great deal more Nay further to say one is prudent sober honest moral courteous is something but to say they are godly far surpasseth Nay to rise higher to say one maketh a good shew is religious outvieth the rest yet to say
the head of enlivening the heart It is as the Sun in the Hemisphere of the soul without which a man or woman is in the land of darknesse such is the vertue and value thereof that Luther said one leaf of the Bible was worth the whole world it is the honour of a Nation the happinesse of a people to have it it is a blessing that proceeds from signal love and distinguishing favour He sheweth his word unto Jacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel He hath not dealt so with any Nation and as for his judgements they have not known them Psal 147. 19 20. The Bible is the Book of Books the Scripture is the King of writings which made Charles the great to crown it with his own Crown it is of such worth that it is a shame for a Christian not to be well read in the writings seen in the sayings versed in the verses Catechized in the chapters and perfect in the pages of that Book One asked a Schoolmaster whether he had Homer's Iliads and for his negative answer took him a box on the ear and went his way Do not they then deserve to be ratled with reproof condemned by censures that are weary of the word that slight the Scriptures that trample the Testaments under their feet I am loth to leave it upon record that this age hath produced such Caterpillars It is a sin I think not to be mentioned without mourning such consider not that where there is no vision the people must needs perish Prov. 29. 18. O let not the esteeme of Gods word die and wither in our hearts It is a golden treasure though it be but in earthen Vessels it is most dainty fare though not sauced with the enticing words of mans wisedom what though it be not written so as to please sinful fancy let it suffice it is so written as to procure saving Faith It is eminent for beauty transcendent for splendour to those that have their eyes opened A word fitly spoken is like Apples of Coecus no● judicat de coloribus gold in Pictures of silver Prov. 25. 11. All the words of God are fitly spoken and as they said truely Never man spake like this man John 7. 46. So may we both truely and justly say in this ease Never any spake as God speaks in his word that must needs be excellent which teacheth of God traineth the soul tutoreth the affections that must needs shine with a peculiar lustre which the spirit as superiour Agent makes use of as an inferiour instrument to condemn vanity convince of folly to confound sin and to convert the soul 14. The necessity of hearing Then carnal S. 14 people must hear the word since it is a means of calling and conversion It is a pernicious principle that teacheth that wicked men may not do bona good things because they cannot do them bene well It is true God loves adverbes better than verbes the manner of doing rather than the matter yet the matter rather than nothing at all and though it be bad not to do that we do well yet it is worse to leave our duty wholly undone It is but doleful doctrine to exclude people from the means of grace because they have not grace The wicked are condemned in Scripture for not calling upon and worshipping Psa 14. 4. Jer. 10. 25. Verbum Dei praedicandum est ut audiens credat Rom. 10. 17. the Lord If the word be the means of life then the dead in sin must wait upon it If the Ministers be Christs ushers then those that would learn must come and sit at their feet Faith cometh by hearing then they must come to hear that they may have faith Peter preached to wicked ones to the crucifiers of Christ Acts. 2. 22 23. c. if it were lawful for him to hold out the word it was lawful for them to hear it If lawful for him to preach to them then lawful for them to be present Let them then hear the word and hear it with fear and trembling however let them hear it Though they come to work yet God may new mould them though they come for custom yet God may convert them Though their intentions be sinful yet Gods execution may be sanctifying some ordinances are for all others onlie for some The Sacraments are Gods visible the Scriptures his audible word Though the wicked are to be debarred the one yet not to be deprived of the other Though they may not be Communicants at the table yet let them have communion with the Pulpit though they be shut out of the chancel yet let them not be shut out of the Church Though the presence chamber be kept with lock and key yet let the Court gate be set wide open Though they may not handle the body of the Lord yet let them hear the word of the Lord. CHAP. III. II. Vse for Terrour THis doctrine in the next place speaks woe S. 1 and condemnation with a loud voice to those that are not effectually called it dischargeth a volley of shot thundreth an whole peal of ordnance in the faces of those that are unchanged like pictures that are made to look everie way as it smileth upon the godly as you shall hear afterwards so it frowneth looketh 1 Kings 22. 8. louringlie upon the ungodly And as Ahab said of Micaiah touchilie so may we say of this doctrine trulie in reference to wicked men that it doth not prophesie good concerning them but evil Doth the Lord effectuallie call whom hee did predestinate then you who yet are not called have cause to wax pale and to be filled with tremblings of spirit It is like the hand writing upon the wall and may loose your joints and cause your knees to smite one against the other and that upon these accounts and the consideration of these ensuing particulars 1. Such cannot yet conclude that they S. 2 are predestinate they have no ground nor foundation whereupon such conclusions may stay themselves where the deluge of sin rests still upon the spirit and ways of a man or woman thoughts of predestination can find no rest for the sole of their feet but must either return and die in the rest of fond imagination or else flutter up and down till for want of being feathered by grace they fall and perish in the inundation of unrighteousnesse Such deserve to be hist at in the Schools of the Saints who make a flourish with such conclusions and are not able to produce the premises The Scripture giveth no warrant thus to conclude for Peter joyneth election and sanctification together where he saith Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience c. 1 Pet. 1. 2. or to sanctification rather What Bez. in loc though you have civilitie and outward conformity is that firm ground fitting for thee to anchor upon with determinations of thine election
which such Quis mortem temporalem metuat cui aeterna vita promittitur cannot do as we have shewed in the former head If spirituals be absent temporals will prove but miserable comforters Though now you hold up your heads and blank at nothing and you laugh at the shaking of the spears and account darts as stubble yet in your moneth Job 41. 29. when you come to be gravid and go bigge with the sorrow of languishing sicknesses and fear of approaching death you will change your tone and sing another song if you be not as bad or worse than the Devil for he hath such a sence of his condition that it makes him to tremble Thus you see what a dreadful condition all are in that are not effectually called no comfort present or future none in life or in death none in earthly and common none in Heavenly and spiritual good things They may well have their name changed Jer. 20. 3. and be called Magor-Missabib fear round about for there is just cause they should be a terrour to themselves CHAP. IV. III. Vse For reprehension IN the next place this Doctrine reads a Juniper S. 1 Lecture to such as look not after this work of effectual calling and sharply chideth those that have opposed and stood out against the cals of God have you lived in the bosome of the Church all this while and are not yet in the bosome of Christ are there so many witnesses of Gods calling and no evidence of your answer Hath God called to you to awake and are your eyes together still hath he called to you to arise and do you still rest upon the couch of iniquitie Hath the Lord stretched out his hands and thou not regarded Hast thou turned the deaf eare to his voice Hast thou snibbed the spirit muzzelled the mouth of truth bruised the buds of grace stopped the stirrings murdered the motions to holinesse thou deservest to be lashed with reproof till thine eye weep and thy sides bleed You have heard before now that whom the Lord predestinateth them he calleth and you are never sollicitous Omnes sumus in minimis cauti in maximis negligentes about it You have had no serious thoughts about it nay you have done what in you lieth to hinder this work in your selves and others You have not praied nor endeavoured for it the desire of your soul hath not gone out with earnest longings for this work nay shut not up the Book do not go your wayes but stand still till you have gone through this use bear your chiding patiently and let your eare hearken to the reproof of life Prov. 15. 31. that you may abide among the wise If you turn your back and stop your ear there is no hope for you nay hath not grace been a grievance pietie needlesse precisenesse the new birth a burden duty a disparagement in your conceit and estimation Have you spent all your dayes in Gospel places and under Gospel means and yet are unchanged still why do you resist the Holy Ghost Do you not know that in thus doing you forsake your own mercies sin against your soul Do you think you were born a Saint and need no regeneration alas you are mistaken for with David you were shapen in iniquity and in sin did your Mother conceive you You must be born Ps 51. 5. Nullus vitam in qua natus est bene finiet nisi renatus antequam finiatur again as well as born or you will never do well Or do you think it is enough to be a Christian in the general so are the Papists or that it is enough to be a Protestant so are many that live in known and open sins or that it is enough to be civil or outwardly religious so are many who yet deny the power Truely the foulnesse of your waies declares the 2 Tim. 2. 5. folly of your thoughts and your conversations will shew that there are such cogitations within what hast passed all this time in the world and yet never passed the streights of the new birth Have so many years gone over your head and the work of grace never come upon your heart Oh that you would be heartily ashamed of this Are you not at one time or other convinced that your condition is not good towards God and that you are not in an estate of grace Though you keep your head above water and cherish some raw hopes of your good plight and that you shall be saved arising either from love to your self as if that must needs be which you could wish or from presumption that the generalitie shall be saved and are in condition good enough or from ignorance taking that to be grace which is not and thinking that repentance may be had when you list and think you have most need of it at the last when death comes Yet upon more serious thoughts you have misgivings of spirit that all is not well which makes such thoughts unwelcome guests to you and for all your bravadoes yet you never yet durst adventure upon the work of examination or view your self by Scripture light for fear the issue and result should not correspond to your present hopes and thoughts Is it nothing to be in such a condition wherein thou hast no truth of grace as thou art who never wast converted and changed Is it nothing to have the Lord bring his action against thee for standing out against him and to threaten to execute the Law of retaliation upon thee and to pay thee in thine own coyn as he doth when he saith Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded but ye have set at naught all my counsel and would none of my reproof I also will laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear cometh Prov. 1. 24 25 26. This is a dreadfull hearing every word hath its weight what shall the Lord call and sinners not come shall he reprove and they refuse shall he offer and they oppose he counsel and they contemn shall the great God be thus condescending and wilt thou be no more corresponding It will be a vain plea to say thou canst not effectually call thy self such excuses and defences Causa patrocinio non bona major erit will increase and not decrease thy fault For you can oppose and with a stiff-neck resist the grace of God You have not heard nor read nor kept Godly company c. as you might besides God hath made a gracious promise of giving his spirit and this spirit hath Prov. 1. 23. come and you have given it churlish use and frowned it out of doores Is it nothing to hear the Lord thundring against thee as he did against his old people the Jews And now because ye have done all these works saith the Lord and I spake unto you rising up early and speaking but ye heard not and I called you but
but thou hast refused to walk in them I have written to you the great things of my Law but hitherto they have been accounted Hos 8. 12. as a strang thinge by you The Lord hath called you first in one place and then in another First by one Minister Friend and Book and then by another Hath sent many Epistles and Letters subscribed by his own hand sealed with his own Ring by his appointed Posts and Messengers and yet all will not do no answer is returned my unworthy self have divers years called you in the name of the Lord and this poor Book the meanest in the Library of Divine writings speaks to you to this purpose let not all these bear witnesse against thee so shalt thou not be judged with a witnesse Hath wisedome prepared all things and sent forth her Maidens several times to Prov. 9. 1 2. summon thee in and yet wilt not thou come but remain in the tent of thy folly Verily Friends this is a Lamentation and there is reason it should be for a Lamentation If you call your Child or Servant often to come to you and they move not how doth it trouble you How do you think the Lord will take it at your hands that come not after so many sendings for You have often heard of Christ and repentance but yet you will not accept of the one nor act the other You have often been intreated to close with Gods will and you would never yet enter upon his waies You can denie none of this that I say Your conscience tells you the same what not changed after all this what a wretched creature art thou that makest not the Lord welcome after all his journeies from Heaven to thee Had you had but one call it had been a great evil to have slighted it but when you have had so many how great must your contempt needs be For the Lord to send Servant after Servant to require repentance to call to conversion and you to return no sutable Fruits to give no demonstratious of ought but barrenesse is a sin of no inferiour nature What is that whereby the Lord in Scripture doth so aggravate the stubbornesse and sin of his people and doth leave and give them up into the hands of miserie and punishment for is it not this because 2 Chron. 36. 15 16. he hath spoken so often and they regarded not The Lord hath but whispered to some so that they have not understood his voice fullie to others he hath called but hath as soon turned his back upon them as they upon him and hath not returned to make any more offers but with thee it is far otherwise the Lord hath spoken to thee with a more clear and distinct voice and though thou hast run from him yet he hath run after thee and hath not ceased to call upon thee and to bespeak thine heart for himself but this hath he done daie after daie week after week and yet thou continuest in thy contradiction and perseverest in the perversenesse of thy rebellious heart 2. In regard of the variety of the agent The S. 4 Lord hath come to you in several shapes the manner of his calling hath been divers He inviteth Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden Matth. 11. 21. He commandeth This is his Commandement that we should believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ 1 John 3. 23. He wooeth and intreateth We pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. He threatneth Every Tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen down and cast into the fire Matth. 3. 10. He wisheth O that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my Commandements alwayes Deut. 5. 29. He chideth and expostulateth Why will ye die O house of Israel Ezek. 18. 30 31 32. He promiseth Whosoever believeth in Christ shall not perish but have everlasting life John 3. 19. The Lord doth as I may so say turn every stone and trie conclusions for the turning Quid est cor durum ipsum est quod nec compunctione scinditur nec pietate mollitur nec movetur precibus minis non cedit c. and conversion of thy stonie heart and varieth the manner of such dispensations on purpose to accommodate himself to us seeking our good and yet thy froward waieward spirit doth not regard He hath come as I may say in a several dresse and habit and yet thou hast not been taken with him The Lord hath come with a loud and with a low voice with melting mildnesse and with terrifying threats with pure Commands and with a precious Covenant with cordial invitations and with confounding comminations But you have not been allured by favours nor scared by frowns You have not been wonne by wooing nor converted by counselling It is strange and sad that you are so stubborn that you will not be drawn with the Silken cords and Golden bands of promises so stout that the discharge of God's Canon threatning doth not make you stoop so rebellious that the Authoritie of God's Command doth not awe thee so stiffe that his angrie chiding doth not make thee bend The Lord hath hung out his white Flag first and then his black Flag and yet thou dost not resign nor give up the Castle of thine heart to him He hath piped unto thee but thou hast not danced he hath mourned but Matth. 11. 17. thou hast not lamented If his Messengers tell thee of thy lost condition and dreadful condemnation then thou art readie to say he hath a Devil and Preacheth nothing but Hell If he tell thee of the grace of God in Christ and the freenesse of salvation then thou art readie to presume and goest on securelie in thy sins saying it shall be well with thee though thou adde drunkenesse unto thirst John Baptist and Christ both have come The Deut. 29. 19. Lord hath thundred from Sinai and breathed from mount Sion and yet you cavil and Nunquam deest impiis reprobis quod calumnientur have something to object against your own souls The Lord hath come to you like a Lion and like a Lamb he hath come to thee like a man of War and like a Friend in Peace he hath come with his drawn Sword in indignatition and his Royal Scepter of reconciliation he hath come with his rod of Iron and that of Gold too He hath called thee in a tempest and in a calm He hath used fair means and foul what are you so crosse that nothing shall please you Is your mouth so out of tast that nothing can be well relished with thee Are you so averse that you will shunne God in all these wayes and pathes wherein he comes to meet with you Shall neither sweet nor soure things have operation upon you Doth not the blustring storm make you seek a Sanctuarie Do not the warm Sun-beams melt and
Oh it is a blessed thing Auris bona est quae libenter audit utilia to have the ability and act of hearing that which is good Blessed are your eyes for they see and your ears for they hear Math. 13. 16. It is thy duty to hear much but not thy deed thy part but not thy practice He that hath ears to hear let him hear what the spirit saith to the Churches Revel 2. 7. and blessed is he that readeth and they that hear the words of this Prophecy But you come not at the word Verba Dei quae aure percipitis mente retinete or if you hear it outwardly yet you care not for holding it inwardly you had need never be out of Christs School never make any play dayes all dayes in the week had need be hearing dayes with thee you had need lay your eare close and catch all and not let any fall besides you but thou wilt purposly avoid the Church or meeting place thou wilt not come nigh the door of that house for weekly lectures thou neglectest them for Sabbath day Sermons thou art hardly drawn to them for good company thou carest not for coming amongst them and to hear their discourses of heavenly matters Thou art willing thine ears should be as wickets to let in wicked talk but art loath to open them as gates to let in worthy truths do you think you shall have any excuse who have been intrusted with such a talent as this is Shall you bee allowed to pleade with your tongue who have refused to hear with your ear Have you forgotten what the spirit saith He that turneth away his ear from hearing the Law even his prayer shall be abomination Pro. 28. 9. 3. Many will say they have no time which S. 8 is a poor excuse but it seems they think a bad one is better then none at all Have you time for the world and have you none for the word You can find time for that which you would and can you find no time for that which you should You have time for the body but it seems none for your book You Nemo vestrum parvi aestimet tempus quod in verbis consumitur otiosis have time for vain words and have you none for vertuous works God hath given you time for good duties and if you give it away to the Devil and sin will it be a currant excuse to say you had none You have time to riot but none to read you have time to hunt but none to hear say you have much ado to struggle with poverty and your day labour drinks up your time yet you find some hours to wast and spend impertinently Oh if you did but lay out that time in spiritual industry which you loyter away in sinful idlenesse how much might your soul be advantaged yet say you had no vacant time a wise man or woman Ephes 5. 16. would redeem and purchase some time out of the hand of bodily affaires and bestow it upon soul-concernments and would provide for the life of his spirit though with some losse to his flesh and yet be a gainer but say that in ordinary dayes an hours absence from the world which I will not which must not be granted to be present with God could not be dispensed with all and thy condition so hard-hearted that thou couldest not borrow a few sands of it yet thou hast the Sabbath-day free for this very end and purpose which is to be spent wholly for thine eternal good wherein thou art wholly to mind and look after grace and Heaven and if oni this day thou hadst but studied hard thou mghtest have been none of the meanest Scholars in the School of Christ Thou maiest not do the worlds works on this day and yet rather than thou wilt do ought for thy soul thou wilt trifle and truant away this golden season most wretchedly It is a great burden to thee to give a few hours attendance in publike assemblies How many vain words worldly yea wicked works passe from thee on that day The Sabbath is so irkesome to thee that thine heart many times saith as they When will the new Moon be gone that we may sell corn and the Sabbath that we may set forth wheate Amos 8. 5. You should have pleaded hard with the Lord on these dayes for grace and you have played it away You should have been searching the Scriptures which testifie of Christ and so might have attained John 5. 39. eternal life You should have been in your closet pouring out your soul before the Lord You should have been questioning your heart and laying the line to your life when alas many such dayes have passed over thine head and if thou cast up thine accounts thou wilt find there hath been nothing done for thy poor soul Thou knowest no more of Sabbath Sabbatum asinorum almost than the Oxe and the Asse that resteth from his labour Thou maiest not work on this day and yet thou wilt not mind thy soul Thou maiest not trade in the world and yet thou wilt not traffick to Heaven Oh will it not be terrible to think that thou hast had so many Subbaths and yet hast no sanctity that thou hast had so many hallowed daies and yet hast no holinesse That thou hadst rather sleep and passe away these daies with oscitancy and carelessenesse than strive to enter in at the streight gate of grace Thus this opponent is answered and this excuse if weighed in the sanctuarie ballances will be found too light Thou hast had time more than thou hast known what to do withall 4. Many would plead for themselves that S. 9 they have but weak wits and are but of small and mean understanding and they cannot sound the bottome of things that they read and hear their brains are so shallow that such things are riddles to them but yet they think they are crafty and witty enough in other things There are indeed problemes and hard Pascimur apertis exe●cemur obscuris questions in the word to pose the Schollers of the higher forme and there are easie things for those of lower capacities there are shallows where the Lamb may passe and depths for the Elephant to swim in The material fundamental things that are of absolute and indispensable necessity to salvation are written in such legible characters as it were that he that runs may read them They are all plain to him that understands to him that gives himself Prov 8. ● to knowledge They are printed with such a great letter that weak eyes may read them besides the Ministers of the word are the Captaines and chief of your forme whom God hath appointed to construe your part to you and to Job 33. 23. be interpreters to you of his mind and will They speak plain to you and stand over you and point you to every letter and word as it were with a fescue For precept
maiest recount many dealings of the Lord to thee in a more than usual manner and yet thou hast not set thy self to delight in him and his wayes Have none of his providences prevailed with you none of his mercies melted and moved you Innumerable have been the Lord's gracious eminent dealings towards you which are set off with the greater glory and splendour by the foil of some precedent or intermixed Psa 51. 8. Quam dives es in mise●icordia quam magnificus in justitia quam munificus in gratiâ Domine Deus noster non est qui similis sit tibi adversity or casualty your desperate wound was cured your broken bones God hath caused to rejoyce your poysoning hath been prevented the snare that was laid for you the Lord hath broken the time would fail to enumerate all so that thou maiest say How excellent is thy loving kindnesse O God Psal 36. 7. But O the sadnesse for all these thou hast gone on in thy sins and rebellions against God and hast not cared for a change from sin to grace thou hast slighted the Lord's sayings notwithstanding these his doings and hast contemned his calls notwithstanding these his carriages towards thee Ah soul is this 2 Sam. 16. 17. thy kindnesse to thy Friend What doest thou still stand out against the Lord and build Bulwarks against the most high This was the great sin of the Israelites anciently towards the Lord that they came not into him who had done so much for them They soon forgat God Psal 106. 21. their Saviour Doth not a Parent take it sadly when after all he seeth no amendment in the Child The Lord was angry with Salomon because his heart was turned from the God of Israel 1 Kings 11. 9. who had appeared to him twice How many times hath the Lord appeared to you and yet you have never appeared for him Have the paths of the Lord to thee been mercy and truth and yet hast not cared for his Christ his Covenant The Lord may say complainingly of thee as David of Nabal Surely in vain I Matt. 25. 10. 1 Sam. 25. 21. have kept all that this fellow hath in the Wildernesse so that nothing was missed of all that pertained to him and he hath requited me evil for good I have done thus and thus for this man or woman and yet I perceive nothing but stubbornesse and stoutnesse in them towards me Hast thou had so many word-calls and so many work-calls and yet hath no saving work passed upon thy soul Have there been such goings of the Lord to thee and yet no goings of thy soul to the Lord by Christ Do all these deeds of God bring thee to no duty for God Have they not made thee sit down and reflect upon thine own heart and say what shall I go on in my opposition against my portion and presevere against my rock and refuge against my Friend and Father Doest thou thus requite the Lord O foolish soul and unwise Is Dcut 32. 61. not he thy Father that hath bought thee hath he not made thee and established thee This Quo liberalius nobiscum agit Deus eo magis accendi decet pietatis studium in cordibus nostris Calv. in loc makes your condition sad and aggravates your rejecting the offers of grace more and more for our hearts should be tinded and fired at the beams of God's bounty and the fannings of his favours should blow that fire up to a flame The Lord hath sought by these to gain you and yet you have refused to give him your heart If you search all your common places I think you will not find an Argument whereby you may plead for your self 4. The lenitude of the spirit Adde to these S. 13 the actions of the spirit That hath gently striven but you have not been stirred that hath called but you have not answered Oh the Ad faciendum bonum quid in nobis bonus Spiritus operatur monet movet docet sweet gales that that hath breathed upon you which would have carried you into the haven of Christ's bosome into the creek of an estate of grace But you with the perversenesse of your will have rowed hard against the wind that you might not be born down by the sweet impulses thereof That hath taken you by the hand and hath said Come go along with me and I will shew you the Father it hath in love laid hold upon thee to lead thee to Christ but thou hast pulled away the shoulder It hath got thee into the ship and would have launched forth into the deep and have carried thee over to the other side to the land of promise but thou hast skipped out and made away from it O the renitencies and reluctancies of thy spirit against the reducing and reverting acts of the spirit It hath admonished and advised moved and minded taught and tutoured Monet memoriam movet voluntatem docet rationem Isa 30. 21 thee but thou hast not learned when thou hast been ready to turn aside to the right hand or to the left thou hast heard the spirit speaking a word behind thee saying This is the way walk in it When thou hast been ready to stretch forth thine hand to unrighteousnesse thou hast heard that saying Oh do not this abominable thing that I hate But thou hast not Jer. 44. 4. obeyed the voice thereof Though the Lord saith to thee as he said to Abraham in all that Sarah hath said unto thee hearken unto her Gen. 21. 12 voice so in all that the spirit saith unto thee hearken unto its voice The Poets tell of one Orpheus who was so cunning a player on the Harp that by his excellent Musick he drew after him wild Beasts Woods and Mountains and by the same recovered his Wife out of Hell The spirit hath made to thee the Musick of the spheares and plaid deliciously upon the strings of holy writings to allure but thou hast been more wild than the Beasts of the Woods more immoveable than the mountains and hast refused to follow its delightful harmony nay hast been unwilling to come out of the fire of Hell to be drawn out of the Hell of thy natural condition by the allurement of its choicest tunes and raised straines Sin hath taken you by one hand and the spirit by the other to draw you from sin to it self but you have scowled upon the spirit when you smiled upon sin The spirit hath shewed thee O man what is good Mie 6. 8. and what the Lord doth require of thee even to do justly and love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God But thy endeavours have not been suitable to the spirit's discoveries The spirit hath made to you revelations of God's will and yet there hath followed thereupon no reformation of your wayes Nay the spirit hath gone so far with you that it hath convinced you of thus much that you should
be better than you are and yet for all this you are the same man and woman It hath convinced you of Christ's readinesse to espouse you and yet you have not been willing to give your sins a Bill of divorcement and to put them away it hath made conscience its deputy your bosome Friend that knows you well and should have great interest in you Conscientia est cordis scientia and hath set it on work to speak to and to deal with you but all will not do The spirit hath visited you every day upon this account and hath spoken to you enticing words and intreated you not to be so unruly like an Heifer unaccustomed to the yoke and hath said come soul hearken to the voice of God obey the call of Christ you do not know how much it may be for your good why will you not be gracious and holy Do you not know that to be Godly is to be Godlike The great God that can grind you to powder the good God that can save your soul calls upon you invites you and will you say nay The spirit hath opened the Lord's love Letters and read them to you and descanted upon them but you regard not To sin against such shinings of the spirit is no small matter affronts offered to the spirit will sit heavy upon the soul when time shall be Hath the Dove come and have not you Spiritus Jesus spiritus bonus Sanctus rectus c. Isai 63. 10. opened the window to let it in Hath the holy good pure spirit of Jesus Christ thus parlyed with you and do you stand out against its sweet assaults This is to vex and rebel against the spirit which is a great provocation to the Lord and aggravation of thy sin whereby thou doest incurre his displeasure procure thy destruction 5. The Longitude of your life The thred S. 14 of your life hath been spun out to a great length you have lived many a year in the world you have lived to see your glasse run and turned up again when others have died before their glasse hath been half run The day of your life hath been not a Winter's but a Summer's day You have followed many of your relations and acquaintance to the grave who have been younger than you but you live still The Lord hath made you a long lease and it is not yet expired He hath cut down some assoon as they have budded and blossomed but he letteth you stand still He hath stopped the breath of some soon after he hath given it them but thy breath is still in thy nostrils Thy radical heat is not put out thy radical moisture is not yet dried up He hath caused thy Sun to stand still in the Firmament and hath kept it from going down at noon day he hath lengthened thy time from the spring of youth to the autumne of ripe and mature years And yet thou hast brought forth no clusters of Grapes no ripe fruit It was the aggravation of Jezebel's sin that the Lord gave her space to repent of her fornication and she repented not Revel 2. 21. It is sad that thy Virtutes faciunt dies bones dayes have been great but not good that thy dayes have been many and thy grace but mean Thou hast through the Lord's clemency renewed thy youth as the Eagle but though the Lord hath been calling thy heart is not renewed The Lord hath added years to thy daies as he did to Hezekiah but thou hast 2 Kings 20. 6. not yet added sanctity to thy civility nor piety in the power to thy profession in the forme Thou art well stricken in years but thou hast never yet fully stricken a Covenant with the Lord. Thou art entred a great way into the scores but wouldest never yet enter cordially into the School of Christ The Lord hath cut off many in their sins while they have been acting unrighteousnesse as the drunkard that said he should never die yet fell down a pair of staires presently and died while you have escaped and your life hath been given you for a prey and yet all this while you have gotten no grace You have seen of the fruit of your body it may be to the third generation and yet the Lord hath seen no fruits of grace from your soul you have been fruitful according to the flesh but barren according to the spirit You have lived so long as to have an hoary head but not so long as to have an holy heart Hath the Lord lengthened out your daies to a longer date than the daies of many of your stock and Family and yet are you without grace Are you ancient in years and yet have not come in to the ancient of dayes Is invaluable time of no value with you Is it nothing think you to live thirty fourty fifty Nihil pretiosius tempore heu nil hodiè eo vilius invenitur nay sixty yea almost four-score years without a change without conversion after so many callings The Lord giveth you time to turn in and will not you turn in time The Lord deferres as doomes-day so death's-day out of long suffering because he is not willing that thou shouldest perish but that thou shouldest 2 Pet. 3. 9 come to repentance Hast thou stood all this while in the Lord's orchard and is not the time of Figs yet with thee What will Christ say when he comes finds nothing but leaves on thee at these years Age and years aggravate Mark 11. 13 14. failings of infirmity because such should have more discretion much more then the fault of impenitency because they should have had true contrition It is not because others are worse then you that while they after a little time have withered in the grave you for a long time have walked on the Earth but it is that you might be better then they It is not because you shall not die to nature but it is because he would have you live to grace and yet are you dead while living no life nor love to this day Ah poor soul is it not a very great evil that the Lord hath been laying siege to thine heart these thirty fourty fifty years or more and yet thou hast stood up and stouted it out against him that thou hast so long been called by him and yet thy deaf vile heart hath not hearkned to him nor closed with him length of time overcomes many things but thou hast been little Nihil est quod longinquitas temporis efficere non possit the better for thy long time There hath been an extension of thy daies but no intension of thy desires a lengthening of thy season but no loathing of thy sins 6. The latitude of your comforts Your S. 15 daies have had breadth as well as length Your daies have been fair not foul clear not cloudy delightful with Sun-shine not darkned with sadnesse some have had a continued but not a
comfortable life some have lived many years and may say with David My life is spent with griefe and my years with sighing Psal 31. 10. Have lived all their daies and it may be not seen the Sun when it may be it was never hid from thee The Lord hath watered your Praesentis vitae prosperitas aliquando idcirco datur ut ad meliorem vitam provocet long life with the showers of comfort that it hath flourished and yet for all this you have not been found in his wayes others have been streightned by poverty when you have been enlarged by plenty others have been overwhelmed with misery when you have been over-flowed with mercy the condition of others hath been very sickly while your constitution hath been very healthy You have hardly had a day of sicknesse while others have had dayes of nothing but languishing sorrow others have been made with Job To possesse moneths of vanity and wearisome nights are appointed to them that when they lie down they say When shall I arise and the night be gone and I am full of tossings to and fro untill the dawning of the day But thou hast had Job 7. 3 4. moneths of liberty and years of prosperity and yet with the Halcyon thou hast not bred in such calm weather nor blossomed as the Rose in this warm Sun-shine The Lord hath hedged thee in with his favour and compassed thee about with fatnesse and yet thou hast not been his servant You have not felt of the calamities nor hardly tasted of the inconveniencies that others have drank bitter draughts of and yet you are never the nearer compliance with the Lord Have you known of nothing but prosperity almost and yet will you know nothing of true piety Hath that driven you from God that should have drawn you to God Hath your habitation stood toward the Sun and yet hath not your heart stood toward Zion You have enjoyed a Paradise of contentment not but that you have met with Deus felicitatibus terrenis amaritudines miscet some crosses for that is a very clear day wherein there comes no cloud between the Sun and our sight But in comparison of others you have lived as it were in Eden and yet have you not hearkened to the voice of the Lord walking in the midst of the Garden in the cool of the day Have you had such a circumfluence of outward peace and no circumcision of your inward parts Sicknesse is a burden you say and that hindreth and maketh you unfit for any good and it seems health doth not further you in spiritual things Want is a woeful thing you say and distracts you that you cannot look after grace and it seems wealth doth the same too as you order the matter Hath not your tranquillity I say your aged tranquillity invited you to hearken to the calls of Heaven Hath the Lord cut the wings of prosperity that it might not flie from you all your dayes and have you clipped or clogged the wings of your affections and desires that you might not flie into the bosome of Christ Hath the Lord caused peace and priviledges comfort and temporal contentments to be your houshold guesse and to lodge with you all night and yet will you refuse to make the Lord Christ welcome to your heart hath the Lord enlarged thy borders and filled thee with the flower of wheat and yet hath not thine eare been open to his call Hath the candle of the Lord shined upon thine head all thy daies Hast thou washed thy steps with butter and hath the Job 29. 3. 6. rock powred thee out Rivers of Oyl And yet hath not thy light shined before men in good Matth. 5. 16. works Hast not thou been willing to be washed in the laver of regeneration Hath not thy Tit. 3. 5. rocky spirit powred out rivers of teares for thy sins Thine head hath been crowned with Rose buds all thy daies but thou hast not been willing that thy heart should be crowned with grace Upon all these considerations you cannot are not able to say that you are not guilty but must rather say you are notoriously guilty after all these means not to be mended after all these allurements not to be altered to make sturdy opposition when thou hast no sufficient objections maketh your sin great and grievous and raiseth it beyond the ordinary pitch To contemne grace after all God's countenancings to continue in rebellion after so many calls to repentance doth exceedingly aggravate your fault 2. Administring causes In the next place S. 16 let us inquire into the cause of these carriages for it may seem a wonder that any should neglect so great a work there must be something more then ordinary in it that overtures of grace should be so overly dealt withal If we search we shall find there is a root of bitternesse that produceth this fruit and if we find the cause there is some hopes of a cure for who having found the causes would not if in their right minds have them pulled Sublatâ causâ tollitur effectus up by the roots and if the foundation fall the building cannot stand Now the causes why people no more mind and look after effectual calling then they do are these 1. Not right apprehensions 1. Of the nature of calling calling 2. Of the need of 3. Of the number of the called 2. False suppositions 1. Of their condition 2. Of God's compassion 3. Sinful procrastination 4. Worldly prosecution 5. Want of intention 6. Others conversation 7. Wilful ignoration 1. Not right apprehensions People have S. 17 not those clear thoughts of things as they should have An errour in Theory must needs produce an errour in practicks An errour in the head will soon bring an errour into the heart Wrong apprehensions are not like to have right actions The understanding is the leading faculty and if that be out of frame no wonder if the rest move not in their spheare As our judgements are of things so are our indeavours about them more or lesse We shall begin with the first thing where about their apprehensions are not right 1. Of the nature of effectual calling Here S. 18 they are out and quite besides the cushion The most of people are in an errour concerning this thing and the most that they have are some scattered notions but no distinct and special conceptions of it some common thoughts but not the centain truth They may happily understand it according to the Letter though many come not thus far but not according to the spirit they take it to be that which it is not but they take it not to be that which it is Nicodemus though John 3. 4. a chief man yet was but a Child in this thing That which was spoken spiritually he understood carnally Christ laid before him that which was right and he looks upon it as a riddle yea as ridiculous The most useful
utimur quam amicitia of it more then the Heathen Oratour said of friendship water fire and aire are needful but this more Friendship and amity with God is most necessary yea it is before meat and drink for we may live here without them as Christ saith Man liveth not by bread alone Mat. 4. 4. Sensus est homines non vivere ex solis causis physicis quum Deus non sit illis adstrictus Bez. in loc but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God For God is not tied up to natural causes but we cannot live hereafter without this for without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. Heb. 12. 14. It is one of the first steps of that Ladder which reacheth to Heaven and unlesse here thou first set footing there is no climbing the tree of life If you cannot produce new hearts my dear Friend and Christian Reader you shall never possesse the new Heavens If you have not this work upon your souls you can neither do nor have that which a Saint should do and have You cannot live to God nor upon God nor with God unlesse you live from God what though it do not purchase Heaven yet it prepares for it what though Heaven be not the deserved wages of grace yet grace is the desireable way to Heaven Oh sad it is that you should not know the need of it Tiberius Caesar said it was a shame that men of sixty years of age should reach out their hand to the Physitian to have their pulse felt because they should not be ignorant of the temper of their body themselves what a shame is it for men and women to live many years in the School of Christ and to know so little of the need of grace which is there constantly preached and pressed what Ignorantia sui initium omnis peccati a shame for men and women of yeers to have so little cognizanee of their own condition so little acquaintance with their own estate so little knowledge of their souls concernments as not rightly to apprehend the need of a change where almost is the man or woman that is truly sensible of the need of a new nature How hard a work is it to convince them thereof to work it into their heads to sink it into their hearts Did any that were bodily sick look after Christ when he was on earth for a cure but those that perceived their need thereof and we are soon brought to a sense of temporal miseries and by that to a sight of the need of a medicine but in spirituals through stupefaction we feel no pains and hence it is we care for no plaister or if people have some sense of the need of this work yet it is so faint and slighty that it makes them not fervent in seeking after and suing for it They have superficial thoughts that the thing may be good and commendable and it is well for them that are in such an estate but as for permanent and powerful thoughts thereof they have none They have not such thoughts as the Apostle had in another case of great moment A necessity is laid upon me yea and wo be unto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9. 16. So they cannot say a necessity is laid upon my soul yea and wo be unto me if I be not effectually called Soul thou dost not consider that without this Benjamin this child of God's right hand thou canst never see his face and that unlesse thou be regenerated and born again thou canst not enter into the Kingdom John 3. 3. of God that without the life of grace you have none of the love of God you consider not that it had been good for you not to have been born as Christ said of Judas if thou be not reborn to good that without this evidence you can have no inheritance without this wedding garment no acceptance If here you have not the communication of the Spirit 's grace you cannot have hereafter the participation of its glory if the whole world should be laid down as a pawn for you it would not prevail The Angels in Heaven that are without spot cannot stead you without this Ah if you did but know how needful it were you would grieve in spirit you would long and labour you would sigh and seek for it and find no rest in your spirit neither day nor night till God had turned your night into day you sin into sanctity you would never be quiet till you were spiritually quickned and would find no true contentation Corporis conversio si sola fuerit erit nulla in your mind till you had a total renovation of the whole man yea you would say Lord give me grace a new nature at what rate soever though it cost me all I have Thou mayst buy gold too dear but thou canst not buy grace too dear you would give all that you might have this gift bestowed upon you you would be importunate with the Lord and take no nay till you were called home into his bosome if you did but know the necessity of this work 3. Of the number of the called This is the S. 20 third thing whereabout peoples apprehensions are not right namely the number of the called those that are outwardly called indeed are numerous but those that are inwardly called are soon numbred People think that profession of Christianity and profession of Christ are of equal extent they think that all that have the word of grace in their eare have the work of grace on their heart that all are Israel that are of Israel that all that have the name of a Christian have the nature Rev. 3. 1. too not considering that the visible Church is lesse then Christendom and the invisible than the visible like a lesse circle in a greater Multi dicuntur esse in domo qui non sunt de domo There are many in the house of God who yet are not of the house It is day with many who yet did never see the sun up There are many that hear the voice of God but there are but few that obey it which made Isaiah to complain and say Who hath believed our report and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed Isa 53. 1. And S. John also saith The whole world lieth in wickednesse 1 John 5. 19. There are but a few that are up and doing the work of the Lord the most lie still in the bed of sin there are but a few that have got open their eyes and are awake the most are fast asleep on the couch of security There are but a few that have cast off the works of darknesse and put on the armour of light the most are in the region of darkness and shadow of death bordering on the confines of that Countrey which is Terra del fogo a land of nothing but fire and smoak There are but a few
seek to be made good As ever you desire to be made a living Saint so see your selfe to be a lost sinner but the wretched world love and Joh. 3. 19. live in darkness and rather then they will have a true reflextion of their condition they either draw the curtain before the glass or put their hand before their eyes and so farre hath the God of this world infatuated them that they will draw up such conclusions to Conscientia est codex in quo quotidiana peccata conscribuntur which neither conscience if suffered to speak nor Scripture will give consent If you did but search consciences record and Scriptures testimonie sure you could not be of that perswasion whereof you are 2. Of Gods compassion people think that the S. 23 Divine being is all mercie and no justice and that by his mercy they shall be preserved from damnation though through wilfulness they persevere in their abominations This is the last refuge that they betake themselves to and the universal remedie and plaister that they think Vltimum refugium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be healed by It is true the mercy of God is the sovereign salve for the sores of our souls but it must be rightly spread and applied It is the onely balm of Gilead but it must be rightly used Gods mercy is sanctifying as well as saving renewing as well as redeeming delivering from the power as well as from the penalty of sin from the way as well as from the wages of sin and those that have not the first effect thereof cannot expect the latter If it bring not to repentance for sin it will never bring to acceptance in a Saviour The Author Rom. 2. 4. to the Hebrews speaking of mercy of the highest strain even that which comes to souls in the blood of Christ which though it be the pillar and basis of Gods kingdom yet he doth not infer that therfore be we what we will we shall shall be saved but this that we must have grace Heb. 12. 24. 28 29. whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly feare or otherwise he will be a consuming fire notwithstanding this eminent demonstration of his mercy The Lord saveth none in their sins but saved from your sins you may be To fancie such mercy is but In omni opere Dei est misericordia et justitia to fall down to an Idol for mercy and justice meet together the rising of one attribute is not built upon the ruine of another God is full of pity thou thinkest that he will spare thee though thou be never so full of impietie and therefore you send not forth so much as one thought to look after grace He that made you will not damn you he that formed you will not confound you for your sinnes you think Doe but consult that startling place in Esay It is a people of no understanding therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them and he that formed them will shew them no favour Esa 27. 11. Gods mercie you see will not advance you to happinesse if you live and die without holiness By such thoughts you make mercy a means to sink you which otherwise might be a means to save you what is this but to turn the grace of God into wantonness Be not deceived God will not be mocked the Lords mercy glorifieth in heaven onely those whom he sanctifieth on earth Though God be mercifull yet you will be miserable without grace presumption of Gods favour without a change on your heart will prove the confusion of your face and if because of his compassion you disobey the call of his Spirit you are like to meet with nothing but condemnation let mercie be a motive to draw you to contrition and not a means to drown you in perdition Every one though their hearts be fraughted with nothing but sin yet they would cast anchor in the mercy of God that they might be saved from tormenting tempests and so long as they think they shall have glory let who so will look after grace if they may be saved through Gods mercy what need they care for Christs Spirit but soul know thus much that though Gods mercy have neither bottom nor bank yet it will not benefit you in reference to glory if you come into and goe out of the world a sinfull wretch Those that confide in Gods mercy against Gods method are like to have a sad come off when it comes to the upshot 3. Sinful procrastinations This is another cause of peoples being without and not looking S. 24 after effectual calling because they defer and put it off to the time to come hereafter they think will be time enough though it be Qui non est hodiè cras minus aptus erit high time at present not considering that duration in sin brings obduration of heart in temporals people are altogether upon the speed and in spirituals altogether upon the slack It is an usual thing for people at 20 to put off repentance and the serious minding of their souls to 30 and when they are come to 30 to crave yet a further day and that the businesse may lie still till 40 and so putting off from one time to another from the Spring to Autumn from the flower to the fall of our age the work is undone for gray heads can find excuses as well as green heads for when they grow old then their senses sinke their memories grow mean their understandings decay and now it is no time for such things even as Thales who when his mother asked Plutarch him in his younger years why he did not marry answered He was too young and after in his elder years she putting the same question to him answered He was too old So the Lord by his Ministers and Spirit asketh people when they will marry be espoused to Jesus Christ they say It is too soon they have good desires to Christ but they would stay yet a while the Lord in patience waits and comes to them with the same query afterwards and then they say It is too late nature is decayed their spirits are spent but they will wish well and they would have God accept of that most put of all to the last and yet then they are as unfit and unwilling as ever and God in justice rejects them who injuriously refused him People are like little children who loathe to have their play spoiled or hindred by wet weather say Rain rain go away come again another day Sinners have sometimes convictions that they begin to melt and be sorrowful and the heavenly doctrine falls upon them in such drops that it begins to wet them to damp their sport to dull their joy and they bid it go away and if it come in old age it shall be welcome and put away the messages of God the calls of the spirit and say as Felix to Paul
to heaven If with your will you be carried down the stream against your will you shall at length fall down into the bottomlesse lake one precept from heaven should be of more force with us than all the patterns we meet with on earth If others damn themselves that is no sufficient warrant for us to do so too Those that are most wise for temporals are many times most fools for spirituals and though one would be willing to take their counsel for the one yet loath to follow their course for the other If we would set our watch let us take the direction of a true Sun-dial and not of others ill-paced watches If all the world should turn their backs on God yet it were thy duty though thou hadst no partner to set thy face toward the new Jerusalem It will be no diminution of sin or mitigation of sorrow that we have partners and confederates if you do as others do you must expect to fare as others fare others Exempla bonae vitae a Christo ab ejus actibus assumere debemus manners must not be our model unlesse they follow Christ and Christ's rule our hearts and lives must be printed not according to the copy of others works but according to the original of the word we must draw the picture of goodnesse not according to the rough draught of other mens ways but according to the exact plat-form of God's will Those that will swim with the world must accuse themselves if they sink with the world To pin our faith upon other mens sleeves is to pinion our wings and hinder us in our flight to heaven Whatever ye do saith Joshua Josh 24. 15. Yet I and mine house will serve the Lord. Though others be loose in their conversation yet we should be fixed in our resolutions Though others forsake God yet let not us forget our souls Other mens practises are too weak a bottom for us to venture our lives in in our voyage through the sea of this world to the holy land It is ill following of others unless we see they be in the way to grace and glory Though we see not others panting after the grace of God in Christ yet let us be pressing forward toward the mark for the price of the Phil. 3. 14. high calling of God in Christ Jesus Let their wisedom be what it will in other things yet here their policy usually fails Though they be never so much above us yet let it be no motive to make us contented without grace Though they satisfie themselves with external yet let us seek for effectual calling Though they fancy all will be well yet dear friend do thou fear all will be a woe without a work of grace 7. Wilful ignoration This is the last cause S. 28 in order that I shall speak to of peoples neglecting and not looking after this work and I can term it no other then wilful ignorance because they have the means though not a due measure of knowledge People are unacquainted with the grounds of Religion which keeps them from the knowledge of their own condition Though the Sun be up yet it is night with many Towns Families and Persons In this light age how many are there that see but little Many are like the Jonah 4. 11. Ninevites that cannot discern between their right hand and their left Catechistical principles are good helps to piety they shew the fall of man and the favour of God the curse by the first Adam the cure by the second How sin came in and how it must be got out They are maps of heaven of earth they portray God and us shew what we are by nature what we must be by grace if ever we would come to glory without the knowledge of our selves as well as of God we shall never come to good which made those that had no other but the Moon-light of nature to direct them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to magnifie that sentence Know thy self Ignorance of our lost state maketh us proud in De ignorantia tui superbia venit spirit and pride doth barricado the soul against grace Those that know not the quality and penalty of sin that know not how all came to be overwhelmed with the deluge of sin and to have the weeds of natural pollution wrapt about their heads and hearts that all are heirs to Adam's sin as well as sorrow those that know not the manner nor means of grace that know not the nature of faith and repentance and their own need of them all which are taught in fundamental principles of Christianity are not like to meet with a change Those that have not learned exactly these elements will hardly be able to spell out a work of saving grace How many are there who have need to be taught the first principles of the Oracles of God and yet scorn so low a work as this but let them know that if they be not well versed in their A B C they will Heb. 5. 12. hardly prove good Schollers in Vertue 's School and if they be not well suckled with pure milk at first they are not like to prove thrifty babes of grace If the foundation be not laid the building is like to prove but a sorry one it were well therefore if catechising private and publike were more in use little knowledge of God and our selves unlesse we get this Horn-book by heart and into our hearts without sound principles no saving proficiency be not too hasty to flie before thou hast got the use of thy feet future works have great dependency upon first works Many soar to the clouds with notional conceptions who never yet cast off the clouts of their natural condition and all for want of being principled But despise not thou the day of small things Grace is a practical knowledge of the nature of faith and not speculative of notions in the fancy Were people better learned in these things it would make them more able to make a right construction of their own estate They are as a glasse to shew us our deformity which if we did see we would more long for conformity to God Pretences to Christianity are little worth where ignorance of fundamentals beareth the sway And thus I have laid before you several causes that keep people in their natural condition and keep them off from effectual calling let us pray Lord by the hand of thy powerful Spirit roll these stones from the mouth of the grave that thy poor creatures may rise to grace I come in the next place to the third general propounded 3. Astonishing consequences There are S. 29 such sad things that do and may follow upon the neglect and want of effectual calling which may startle an heart of stone which if you take down and sweat upon they may through the concurrence of the Spirit conduce to the expelling and working out your great carelessenesse and neglect in
for their parents goodnesse yet in the account of God grace in the parent will not stand for grace in the child It is a mercy that any of us are the off-spring of godly parents yet if we have not grace de proprio of our own we are yet uncalled 3. Living among religious people either in S. 6 Town or family is not effectual calling Many live without sanctity in the midst of Saints and in a land of uprightness deal unjustly Isa 26. 10. many dwell in the houses of the faithful who yet are not of the houshold of faith A scabbed sheep is a scabbed sheep though it pasture with the sound flock one may live in the tents of Shem and yet have Cham's temper one may live in a religious house and yet have a Non Hierosolymis fuisse sed Hierosolymis bene vixisse laudandum est wretched heart one may live in a godly family and yet be none of the family of God one may live with good company and yet have a bad conversation yet many think this is enough they think to flie to heaven with other mens wings People may live among godly neighbours and yet have no godly nature they may have good acquaintance and yet have no good acceptance with God for want of grace There may be co-habitation with those that are spiritual and yet no inhabitation of the spirit The Jebusite may Cum Hierosolymitanis habitat Jebusaeus dwell with the Jew in Jerusalem and yet be a Jebusite In Jacob's flock were black as well as white cattel In Peter's net bad as well as good fishes In Noah's Ark unclean as well as clean creatures There may be tares in the same field as well as true corn and tares still 4. A civil fair moral life is not grace nor S. 7 effectual calling There may be a guilded life and yet no golden heart Many Heathens have gone thus far who never learned the truth as it is in Jesus They were just in their way but they were not justified they were sober and serious but not sanctified One may have moral vertues without divine grace Splendida peccata moral goodnesse is but splendid sinfulnesse Paul was such before conversion Many are fair like the Moon but without heat Matth. 19. 19 20. There was a fine young man to outward appearance that had the letter but not the life good manners but wanted a gracious mind It is good to be so qualified but it falls short of the thing in question Many live justly lovingly prudently courteously who yet have no grace There may be a fair life without a life of faith civility without sanctity one may live according to common equity and not be led by the rule of special piety there may be moral vertue without and yet masterly vice within there may be a commendable carriage and yet no converting calling there are many gentle sweet tame natures that never learned lowness and humility in Christ's school People are most apt to mistake a Star for the Sun a pebble for a precious stone These things are something but they are not all there must be further steps before the soul can come at grace 5. Not to be so great sinners as others is not grace Many if they be not theeves drunkards nor unclean persons think they have grace enough whereas they sin not as others do it is from the goodnesse of their constitution rather than from the graciousnesse of their conscience But alas it is not privative but positive holinesse not comparative but absolute that God looks for People compare themselves with others measure themselves by Non est bonit as pessimis esse meliorem a false rule and hence they think they are ell-wide when they are not yard-wide a man of an indifferent stature set by a lower man seemeth tall but set by a taller is a dwarf because people are not so bad as they may be it doth not follow that therefore they are so good as they should be John Baptist saith in Matth. 3. 10. not the tree that bringeth forth bad fruit but that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down The Pharisee was Luke 18. 11 12. not a prophane sinner and yet he was not a pious Saint He is dead that dieth of his fair death as well as he that is chopt and cut in peices One may be dirty though they have not I●●scus inter caecos potest esse rex so great sprays upon them as others have One that is but blear-eyed is far before those that are blind yet he is in darknesse in comparison of those that have their perfect sight When we compare our selves with the best then we best see our own defects when we compare our selves with the worst then we think we have overplus To have a lesse degree of badnesse a greater degree of goodnesse than others falls much short of true grace thou art not it may be scandalously vitious and yet thou mayst not be savingly vertuous This is but the least part of goodnesse if thou hast no better evidence thou needst not open this at all If thou keep in this way and go no further thou wilt never be acquainted with God's work Oh delude not your selves with such shadows in stead of solid substances 6. To be a Christian outwardly is not effectual S. 9 calling There is a Christian in name and a Christian in nature one may have the garb of a Christian and yet want the grace of a Christian there may be the paint without the parts of a Christian the fashion without the frame Many there are that are of a Christian mind and yet have no mind to Christ that have a goodly profession but no godly conversation More are Christ's followers then are his friends and more will wear his Christianus nemo dicitur recte nisi qui Christo moribus prout valet coaequatur coat and colours than care for his commands they love his livery but they are loth to lead his life Paul distinguisheth of Jews into outward and inward Rom. 2. 28 29. and so may we of Christians Paul was a professor before conversion but not a right practicer Phil. 3. 5. Many Christians there are but but a few that are Christ's many Protestants but a few Puritans many are Christians by calling but few by changing yet most think they are comely enough if they have but this complexion and if they have but the habit of religion without they care not for the heart of it within they are all for the glosse not regarding the text and so they have but the outward facing they feel no cold for want of the inward lining Such are but the pictures of Christians and all that they have to commend them is nothing but the gay clothing of outward conformity 7. To be of a Church is not effectual calling S. 10 I speak of a Church in general Be of what Church thou wilt
reformation there may be a doing of something and yet no soundness there may be a forsaking of some sin and not of all sin many are better than Vitam uniuscujusque convers● inchoatio blanda permulcet aspera medietas probat plena post perfectio roborat Matth. 27. 3 4 5. they were and yet not so good as they should be they have their conversation something rectified and yet their conversion is not right they only are truly holy that are wholly turned there may be a facing to the right and not a facing to the right about there may be a vomiting up some filthiness and yet the stomack remain filthy still Judas brought back the 30. pieces of silver and threw them down in the Temple of God but brought not back his heart to lay it down at the feet of the God of the Temple So Pharaoh at last condescended Exod. 8. 25 28. to let the people of Israel go sacrifice in the wilderness nay further he gave them leave to take their little ones with them which he denied before and yet we cannot make out that Pharaoh was truly changed men may leave some of their sins and yet not Exod. 10. 8 24. love the God of Sion they may stop some wide gaps and yet their hearts not be currently fenced with grace Thus you see how much there is that is not pure gold how many there are who if they be weighed in right ballances will be found too light many steps one may take and never reach the mount of true grace All these will prove but like waxen wings that will melt with the Sun's heat they look well but they have no life in them they bear a goodly port but they are not the power of godliness those that have all these qualifications and no more at the most are but almost Christians how many come short of these things and yet these things come short of grace 2. Affirmatively Having shewed what is S. 27 not effectual calling now we come to shew what it is and that two ways 1. Relatively by way of opposition 2. Absolutely by way of position 1. Relatively we shall shew what it is in opposition to those things that are not it S. 28 1. And first in opposition to those things S. 29 that are of the first rank 2. And secondly in opposition to those things that are of the second rank 1. For things of the first rank some of them 1. Not gifts but grace and sanctity in heart S. 30 and life are effectual calling and signs thereof Bonum gratiae unius est majus bono naturae totius universi Aquin. not common but special and saving gifts an ounce of true holiness is worth pounds of eminent gifts not good gifts but the gift of good a little true humility in the heart is more worth than a great deal of knowledge in the Non dona sed bona head a stammering prayer coming from grace in the heart is more pleasing to God than that which is more eloquent and hath no grace in it Though a soul cannot pray as it should do though it cannot speak but sigh yet if it proceed from the spirit it is acceptable to Rom. 8. 26. God The widows two mites were more than the great offerings the little grace that the Luke 21. 4. righteous have is better than the rich gifts that the wicked may have a drop of true grace is better than an ocean of common talents a lark is worth a kite 2. Not confidences of any kind but true joy discovers effectual calling 1. Such joy as proceeds from sorrow Assurances S. 31 are more strongly built when founded Fit plerumque ut in ipsis piis fletibus gaudii claritas erumpat John 16. 20. Mat. 5. 4. in the depth of humiliation Musick yields the sweetest strains upon the water saving and sanctifying comforts have usually a sable usher You shall be sorrowful but your sorrow shall be turned into joy Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted 2. Such as is in the use of Sacraments word prayer and the exercise of graces or else it is S. 32 naught The triumphing of the wicked is short Job 20. 5. c. The joy of many comes in at a wrong door true spiritual mirth always loves to make use of spiritual means to contemn the ordinances and yet have strong confidences and presumptions is sadly to be suspected If the fire be not fed by this fuel it is a sign it was never fetched from heaven the stream of true joy runs always in the channel of duties and ordinances 3. Not to go according to conscience simply S. 33 but to go according to it as guided and inlightned by the word and spirit is effectual calling There is but one Law-giver and Jam. 4. 12. that is God the legislative power is not in conscience if conscience receive not its law Regula regulata priusquam regulans Conscientia bona est aula Dei habitaculum spiritus S. from God it cannot rule thee rightly conscience must be ruled before it can rule if the conscience be not good God keeps not his court nor hath the spirit its mansion in thy mind Conscience in God's people in the effectually called is not Lord paramount but acknowledgeth it self to be under the power of heaven 4. Not to take up this or that opinion c. S. 34 but to adhere to Christ to be of his mind and party is effectual calling Let the same mind Phil. 2. 5. be in you which was in Christ Christians must 1 Cor. 11. 1. be followers of Christ but of others no further Ego sum via veritas vita tanquam diceret qua vis ire ego sum via quo vis ire ego sum veritas ubi vis permanere ego sum vita than they follow Christ they are to wear the livery of Christ He is a true Saint that truly sides with Christ it matters not who are file-leaders and of the foremost rank of this that way if Christ as Captain go not before Parts taking is but faction Christ-owning is true faith He is the way the truth and the life as he hath said John 14. 6. To imitate Christ in his words and works is true grace He is the great Apostle and high Priest of our profession He. b 3. 1. As they said We know no King but Caesar so saith a gracious soul I know no King but Christ Him I desire to own for my Lord and Master 2. For those things that are of the second rank 1. Not confession of sin with the tongue but S. 35 confession of sin in truth argueth effectual calling the mind must bear a part in it as well as the mouth a noise may strike the ear Confessio peccatorum in corde ante quam os petat exauditur Psal 51. 17. Hos 7. 14. and never affect the mind so it
will and can fit any ground to bring forth a good crop not but that the Lord can go against the stream and throw down strong Towers and break through Walls of Steel and Brasse I go not about to weaken the hand or to shorten the Arm of the Lord Is there any thing too hard for the Lord Gen. 18. 14. But the Lord worketh by means of his own appointment and hath no other bonds than what he hath been pleased to put upon himself I speak now not of the skill but of the will of God not what he can do but what he doth do not of his extraordinary power but his ordinary providence in Spirituals not of his special and unusual operations but of his general and more common dispensations The Lord can do more than he will or doth do Nor do I mean that all of the middle sort and ranke are called but amongst them doth God pitch his Tabernacle more than among others nor by the middle sort do I mean those that are next Neighbours to the wealthiest but rather those that dwell upon the Borders of meannesse and so for wisedom and nobility they think themselves too high to put their shoulders to the work of the Lord and would be ready to think God were beholding to them for their service Doth not the Scripture and experience manifest this all along Doth not Christ himself speak the same I thank thee O Father Lord of Heaven and Earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto Babes Matth. 11. 25. The Disciples of Christ were not rich nor ragged were not the Wise ones of the world nor the witlesse ones This that I have now laid down doth not dash nor jarre with what we spake in the former Head The temperate Zone is most inhabited by converts and changed ones Grace loves to make it's nest in this climate to hatch and brood in this Region Oh then that the rich were lesse careful the poor more cared for and all more contented with mediocrity CHAP. X. IX The time of effectual calling when God doth call 1. MOre generally In the time of this S. 1 life while we have a natural life we must have a Spiritual life if ever we have any As Christ saith so must we I must work the works of him that sent me while it is day the night cometh when no man can work John 9. 4. This life is our Market our fair day when this life is ended time is no more with us but hath taken wing and is fled away This is Gods Preaching day now he speaks pleads calls invites when life is done then is the glasse out the time is spent the Preacher ceaseth and never shall we hear him again in that way Therefore to day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts Heb. 3. 7 8. Those that live not now shall never live those that die not now shall never die I mean to grace to sin Those that are not effectually called now shall never be Now is the day of grace the season of Salvation the acceptable time in this sence as well as otherwise 2 Corinth 6. 2. And care you not though you Quidam antè desierunt vivere quàm inciperen● die before you live how shall you then live when you die after this life there is no Sacrifice for sin no grace to be had no calling voice to be heard Therefore whatsoever thine hand findeth to do for thy Soul do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor knowledge nor wisedom in the grave whither thou goest Eccles 9. 10. We may now and we will not we would hereafter and we shall not when this life is ended we may say the Summer is past the Winter is come the time of the singing of birds is gone and the voice of the Turtle is heard no more in our Land the time of this life is the time of our marring or making for ever 2. More especially In the time of youth S. 2 The Lord can convert and bring home to himself at all times in middle age in old age at the very last as the Thief upon the Crosse you know the saying One that none might despaire but one that none might presume The Lord is tender hearted and ready to reach out Conversio nostra semper inv niet Deum paratum Aug. Ezek. 18. 21 22. Nunquam sera conversio vera R. Jun. his Armes of love to a returning mourning believing Soul whensoever True repentance is never too late but late repentance is seldom true but for any upon this account to run on in excesse of riot and to resist the Holy-ghost is most desperate and sad and yet many do thus presuming upon the last but as one saith wittily this is as if a man should break his neck willingly to trie the skill of the Bone-setter The time of your youth is the choice time therefore saith Solomon Remember thy Creatour now mark now in the dayes of thy youth and illustrates it by the contrary Eccles 12. 1. c. Some have observed the time of effectual calling to be between the years of eighteen and thirty most commonly Though but few can speak punctually as to the particular time and means of their conversion as a parted pious man observeth yet I do believe Master Baxter of Baptisme Jer. 2. 2. that most Saints experience saith that the Lord wrought upon them in their younger dayes and therefore the Lord tells his people he remembers the kindnesse of their youth though youth there may be otherwise understood and this early conversion is meant of those that sit under the dewes of grace the distillings and droppings of Heavenly Doctrine as for Heathens and such who never heard of Christ and his Laws and their sins when they come under the sound of the Silver Trumpet of the Gospel though in old age their conversion may be more likely because they never had the means before I limit not the Holy one of Israel if he can convert at all times yea even then when thou hast worn up thy body and yet will not and doth not use it What is that to thee Follow thou his present call as Christ said to Peter in another case Prize John 21. 22. then your youthful time when those dayes are gone you shall never see such dayes again You may be twice a Child but you can never be twice a young man The morning Aurora Musis amica is observed by Schollers to be best for study The morning of our age is the best time for Spiritual study for studying the condition and state of our Souls The spring of youth is the best time to take Physick Heavenly Purgations in for the working out of sin the cleansing of our Soules the making of our Spirits whole It is the best time for the digging up the Garden of our hearts then doth the Lord sow