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A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

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univocè dicitur say the Schoolmen God is not simply Invisible but in reference to us Angels and Saints above see him they behold his face He is Invisible to a mortal eye as the Apostle speaketh Reasons First God is a Spirit because a Spirit is the best highest and purest Nature God being the most excellent and highest Nature must needs be a Spirit too Secondly God is a most simple and noble being therefore must needs be incorporeal Angels and souls have a composition in them their Essence and Faculties are distinguished they are compounded of Subject and Accidents their Nature and Qualities or Graces but Gods Holiness is his Nature Thirdly God is insensible therefore a Spirit Spirits are not subject to senses Iohn 1. 18. This confutes 1. Tertullian who held God to be corporeal then he should consist of matter and form 2. The Anthropomorphites who ascribed to God the parts and members of a man they ●lled●e that place Gen. 1. 27. But some think the soul is the only subject and seat in which the Image of God is placed Grant that it was in the body likewise it being capable of Immortality yet a man was not said to be made after the Image of God in respect of his corporal figure but in respect of Knowledge Righteousness and Holiness Ephes. 4. 23. Col. 3. 10. not in respect of his substance but qualities Object God is said to have Members Face Hands Eyes in some places of Scripture and yet in others he is said not to be a body but a Spirit and consequently to have no hands nor eyes Answ. The word Hand and Eye is taken figuratively for the power of seeing and working which are actions that men perform with the hand and eye as an Instrument and so it is attributed to God because he hath an ability of discerning and doing infinitely more excellent then can be found in man Sometimes again those words are taken properly for members of the body of some such form fashion making so they are not to be attributed unto God who because he hath no body cannot have an hand an eye A body is taken three wayes 1. For every thing which is opposite to a fancy and notion and so whatever hath a being may be called a body in this sense Tertullian attributes a body to God 2. For that thing which hath some composition or change so God onely is incorporeall 3. More strictly for that which consists of matter and form so some say Angels are incorporeal 3. This shews the unlawfulness then of painting the God-head Cajetan disliked it Bellarmine b argues thus Man is the Image of God But man may be pictured Therefore the Image of God may be pictured Man is not the Image of God but in the faculties of his soul which cannot be pictured therefore the Image of God cannot be pictured Although the whole man may be said Synecdochically to be pictured yet is not man called the Image of God in his whole but in a part which is his reasonable and invisible soul which can not be pictured 1. We must call upon God and worship him with the Spirit our Saviour Christ teacheth us this practical use Iohn 4. 24. Blesse the Lord O my soul Psalm 103. Whom I serve in the Spirit saith Paul The very Heathen made this inference Si Deus est animus sit pura mente colendus 1. The Lord chiefly cals for the heart Prov. 23. 26. His eye is upon it Ezekiel 33. 31. 2. He abhors all services done without the heart Matth. 5. 8. 3. It hath been the great care of Gods people to bring their hearts to these services Phil. 3. 3. Motives to excite us when we draw neer to God to bring our hearts 1. It is this only which will make the service honourable Gal. 4. 9. 2. This only makes it acceptable 1 P●t 2. 5. Hos. 14. 6. 3. This only makes it profitable 1 Tim. 4. 7. Heb. 9. 9. Rom. 6. 22. 4. This only will make it comfortable all true comfort flows from the sweetness in fellowship with God and Christ Revel 3. 24. 5. Else in every service we tempt God Acts 5. 9. Isa. 29. 13. How to know when I serve God in my heart or worship him in Spirit 1. Such a ones great care in all services will be to prepare his heart before-hand 2 Chron. 30. 9. 2. Then the inward man is active thorowout the duty Revel 3. 3. 2 Pet. 1. 5. 3. Then one keeps his thoughts intent throughout Matth. 6. 21. 4 The grief after the duty done will be that the heart was so much estranged from God in duty 2. God though invisible in himself may be known by things visible He that seeth the Sonne hath seen the Father Joh. 14. 9. We should praise God as for other Excellencies so for his Invisibility 1 Tim. 1. 17. 2. Learn to walk by faith as seeing him who is Invisible Heb. 11. 27. 3. Labour for pure hearts that we may see God hereafter 4. Here is comfort against invisible Enemies we have the invisible God and invisible Angels to help us 3. God hath immediate power over thy Spirit to humble and terrifie thee He is the Father of Spirits he cannot only make thee poor sick but make thy conscience roar for sin it was God put that horrour into Spira's spirits He is a Spirit and so can deal with the Spirit Lastly Take heed of the sins of the heart and spirit ignorance pride unbelief insincerity 2 Cor. 7. 1. 1 Thess. 5. 23. such as not only arise from but are terminated in the spirit These are first abhorred by God He is a Spirit and as he loveth spiritual performances so he hates spiritual iniquities Gen. 6. He punisht the old world because all the imaginations of the thoughts of their hearts were evil 2. Most contrary to the Law of God which is chiefly spiritual 3. Sin is strongest in the spirit as all evil in the fountain Mat. 15. 19. ●4 Spiritual evils make us most like the Devils who are spiritual wickednesses All sin is from Satan per modum servitutis these per modum imaginis We should therefore also take heed to our own spirits because of the danger we are in from these spiritual adversaries 1. They are malignant spirits 1 Iohn 5. 18. and 2. 13 14. 2. The spirit of a man is most maligned by Satan all he did to Iobs name estate posterity was to enrage his spirit 3. The spirit of a man is frequently and very easily surprized few men are able to deny temptations that are sutable 4. When the spirit is once surprized one is ready to ingage with and for the Devil Mat. 12. 30. 5. The spirit will then bring all about for the service of sin the excellent parts of the minde wit memory strength Rom. 8. 7. and 6. 13 19. Iames 3. 15. Matth. 23. 15. 6. It is hard for such a sinner to be
punisheth the sins of the Elect in his own Son when he was made sin he was made a curse 4. How small sins have been punished The Angels for one aspiring thought were cast into hell Uzza struck dead for touching the Ark fifty thousand Bethshemites for looking into it Mr. Peacock felt a hell in his conscience for eating too much at one meal 5. The appointing of everlasting torments We should hate sin for God hateth it and that with the greatest hatred even as hell it self Rom. 129. Sin is the first principal and most immediate object of hatred Paul mentioning divers evils saith God forbid I hate vain thoughts saith David our affections must be conformable to Gods He hateth nothing simply but sin and sinners for sinnes sake 2. Sin is as most injurious to God so most hurtful to man therefore it is in it self most hateful The ground of hatred of any thing is the contrariety of it to our welfare as we hate wild fierce and raging beasts for their mischievousnesse Toades and Serpents for their poysonfulness which is a strong enemy to life and health Sin is the most mischievous and harmful thing in the world Just hatred is general of whole kindes as we hate all Serpents so we should all sins Means to hate sin 1. Pray to God that his Spirit may rule and order our affections and set the same against evil 2. Exercise our selves in meditating of the infinite torments of hell which sin deserveth and the fearful threats denounced against it in the word of God of all sorts of evils 3. We should labor to get out of our natural estate for the unregenerate man hates God Psal. 81. 15. Rom. 1. 30. Christ Iohn 7. 7. and good men eo nomine as Cain did Abel 1 Iohn 3. 10 12. they hate Gods ways and Ordinances Prov. 1. 22 29. This hatred is 1. Causelesse Psa. 69. 44. 2 Intire without any mixture of love 3. Violent Psal. 53. 3. 4. Irreconcilable Gen. 3. 15. CHAP. IX Of the Affections of Anger and Clemency given to God Metaphorically OTher affections which are given to God metaphorically and by an Anthropopathy are 1. Anger and its contrary complacency or gentlenesse which are improperly in God for he is neither pleased nor displeased neither can a sudden either pertubation or tranquillity agree to God but by these the actions of God are declared which are such as those of offended and pleased men are wont to be viz. God by an eternal and constant act of his will approves obedience and the purity of the creature and witnesseth that by some sign of his favour but abhors the iniquity and sin of the same creature and shews the same by inflicting a punishment not lesse severe but far more just then men are wont to do when they are hot with anger Exod 32. 10. Now therefore let me alone that my wrath may wax hot against them and that I may consume them and I will make of thee a great Nation Gods Anger is an excellency of his own Essence by which it is so displeased with sin as it is inclined to punish the sinner or a setled and unchangeable resolution to punish sinners according to their sins God is greatly moved to anger against all impenitent sinners especially the unjust enemies of his people Rom. 1. 18. and 2. 8 9. 1 Cor. 10. 22. Ephes. 5. 6. and Col. 3. 6. Deut. 32. 21. Psal. 106. 40 because such wrong God He cannot be hurt for that were a weaknesse but he may be wronged for that is no weaknesse but a fruit of excellency seeing nothing is more subject to be wronged then an excellent thing or person for wrong is any behaviour to a person not suitable to his worth And the more worthy a person is the more easie it is to carry ones self unseemly Sin wrongs God 1. In his authority when a just and righteous Governor hath made just and right Laws then it is a wrong to his authority a denying and opposing of it to neglect dis-regard and infringe those Laws Sin is a transgressing of Gods Law and impenitent sin doing it in a very wilful manner with a kinde of carelesnesse and bold dis-respect of the Law-maker God should not have shewed himself wise just good careful of mankinde that is to say of his own work if he had not made his Law for it is a rule tending to guide man to order his life most fitly for that which was the main end of it the glory of his maker and that which was the subordinate end of it his own welfare 2. It wrongs him in his honor name and dignity it is a denying of his perfect wisdom and justice 3. In his goods abusing them 4. In his person sin being offensive to the purity of his holy person Lastly the opposing of Gods people wrongs him in those that are nearest him The properties of Gods anger 1. It is terrible He is called Bagnal Chemah the Lord of anger Nahum 1. 5. His wrath is infinite like himself Rom. 9. 22. if we consider it 1. In regard of its intension for God is called A consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. it pierceth the soul and the inmost part of the Spirit 2. In respect of its extension it comprehends in it all kindes of evil Corporeal Spiritual in life death after death it reacheth to Kingdoms as well as to particular persons or families to the posterity as well as to the present generation 3. In respect of duration it continueth to all eternity Iohn 3. 36. it is unquenchable fire 2. Irresistable compared to a whirlwind God is most wise of great and perfect understanding He is slow to anger never moved till there be great cause therefore he holds out in his anger Great persons inflict great punishments on those with whom they are displeased Object Fury is not in me Isa. 27. 4. Answ. Take fury for unjust undue and excessive anger which riseth too soon worketh too strong and continneth too long so it is not in God but a discreet and well advised motion against any offender by which one is moved to punish him according to his offence anger so taken is in him Anger wrath and rage or fury are sometimes promiscuously put one for another and sometimes distinguished Anger is a boyling of the blood about the heart causing a commotion of the spirits that are near Wrath is the manifestation of that inward distemper by looks gestures or actions tending to revenge but rage is the extremity of both the former Prov. 27. 4. This may humble and astonish impenitent sinners Hos. 8. 5. Psal. 90. 11. We must quench Gods wrath as men do fire at the first by casting in water and taking away the fewel by repentance and reformation pour out water 1 Sam. 7. 8. Ier. 4. 14. Psal. 6. 8. pray earnestly to him Zeph. 3 3. Moses by prayer turned away Gods hot anger from Aaron and
Spirit the corrupt self is lookt on as an enemy Rom. 7. lat end I delight in the Law of God in the inward man and concludes but I my self that is his sanctified self serve the Lord. Mark what it is that thou esteemest in thy self Is it Grace Gods Image and what thou dislikest and strivest to destroy is it the body of sin 2. Then that love is subordinate to the love of God God to every sanctified man is the Summum bonum ultimus sinis therefore all other things are but media subordinata none of us must live to himself 3. Such a one loves himself for those ends God allows him 1. That he may be happy for ever God presseth us to duty by this argument that we may have eternal life 2. He would have thee get more knowledge grace experience that thou maist be more serviceable here The third object of our love is our neighbour Marks to know whether my love to my neighbour be a sanctified love First When it is subordinate to the love of God when I love him under God we must love our neighbour in God and for God Secondly I must love there specially where God loves those that have most of God in them All my delight is in the Saints Christ calls this a new Commandment Thirdly There will be a performing of all second Table duties Love is the fulfilling of the Law I will give him that respect which is due unto his place I will strive to preserve his life chastity estate good name I shall be content with my own and rejoyce in his welfare It is the nature of love to seek the preservation of the thing beloved The fourth object of our love is the rest of Gods creatures which he hath given to us Marks to know whether our love to the creature be right or no 1. When the beholding God in the creature draws the heart out the delighting to behold the wisdom and power of God in the creature 2. Mark for what end thou lovest the creature Every creature must be delighted in as it brings us nearer to God or serves as an instrument to honour him thou lovest the creatures because they are a means to keep thee in a better frame for duty CHAP. XXI II. Of Hatred THe affection opposite to love is Hatred 1. The nature of hatred 2. The image of God in it 3. The extream depravation of it by sin 4. The work of grace sanctifying it Of the first Hatred in a reasonable soul is a motion of the will whereby it flies from that which it apprehends to be evil and opposeth it indeavouring to hurt it It ariseth from a discord and disconformity of the object There is a two-fold hatred 1. Odium abominationis a stying only from a thing 2. Odium inimicitiae whereby ● pursue what is evil There was little use of this affection in our primitive pure estate there was nothing evil to man or in himself a concord in all There are dive●s causes of this hatred 1. Antipathy 2. What hinders us from attaining good envy jealousie there was nothing then to work this but the sinne of the devil only which whether man knew it or no is uncertain yet this affection was in him and sanctified First He was prone in his spirit to shunne a real evil sinne in that degree it was evil Secondly The depravation of this affection the image of the devil As much of our original corruption is found in this affection as any The greatnesse of the depravation of this affection appears in three things 1. The object of it 2. The Quality of it 3. The fruits Only sin is the proper object of it but now our hatred is wholly taken from sin it abhors nothing that is evil The second object of it now is that which is truly and properly good 1. God himself primarily all wicked men hate him Psalm 81. 15. Rom. 1. 30. in all his glorious perfections Justice Holinesse 2. Christ Iohn 7. 7. 15. ●h 3. All good men You shall be hated of all men for my names sake 4. All Gods wayes and Ordinances Fools hate instruction Prov. 1. Secondly The Quality of this affection It is 1. A causlesse hatred Christ saith They hate me without a cause and so the Saints may say 2. Perfect entire without any mixture of any love 3. Violent Psal 55. 3. 4. Cruel Psal. 25. 9. 5. Durable irreconcilable Thirdly The effects of it 1. All sins of omission 2. Abundance of actual wickednesse contempt and distrust of God his wayes and children Fourthly The Sanctification of this affection of hatred The work of grace in every faculty is destroying the power of corruption and creating in it those principles of grace that turn it again into the right way 1. It is taken off from those objects to which it was undeservedly carried afore 2. It is ordered aright for measure 3. It brings forth that fruit which God requires First What the work of Gods grace carries the affection of hatred to 1. It makes all our opposition to God and his Ordinances cease it ceaseth to hate good and hates that which is evil 2. It is carried to the right object which is every thing that is really evil to us the will shuns and opposeth it Two sorts of things are really evil 1. What ever is opposite to our natural being our life peace wealth name as sicknesse affliction death 2. What is contrary to our spiritual being as sin All evils of the first nature come from God Gods will is the rule of all holinesse therefore we should submit 1. Our will to God to do what he pleaseth That is the greatest evil which is against the greatest good God sin and wicked men oppose him the greatest evil must have the greatest opposition I hate every fal●e way sin strikes at the being and excellency of God we must dislike wicked men for sins sake 2. The work of grace appears in the degree and measure of working when it sanctifieth any affection It is according as the light of understanding guided by Gods counsel orders the Spirit of evils sin is to be more hated then punishment and the greater the sin the greater should be the opposition 3. The work of Gods grace in sanctifying this affection is much seen in the fruits of hatred This stands in two things 1. Hatred is a Sentinel to the soul to keep out evil it makes the soul warily shun and avoid those things which are really evil to me it is a deep and severe passion not sudden as anger 2. It quickens the soul to the destruction of the thing hated it maketh it endeavour its ruine Signs I. Of Hatred Speaking against a thing still and disgracing it is displeased at its company and cannot endure its presence II. Of Sanctified Hatred 1. If it be sanctified thou ceasest to be a hater of God This makes a creature so like the devil that no
man will believe he hates God Hatred is an opposition to love love of God makes us endeavour an union with him thou carest not for a knowledge of God or being nigh him 2. A desire that another may not be so excellent as he is wicked men would not have God have a being or so excellent a being would not have him be so holy pure just 3. A great sign of hatred is contrariety or opposition of wils Gods will is revealed in his Word when there is an opposition to it we sinne against him Exod. 20. 2d Commandment Those that love me and keep my Commandments those hate God that do not keep his Commandments God chooseth holinesse you filthiness if thy will be contrary to the choice he makes thou hatest him 4. That which is feared unlesse it be with a reverential fear is hated To stand in awe of God a● the Indians of the Devil who dare not but offer Sacrifices lest the Devil should hurt them Secondly For the evil of punishment how far sanctified hatred may be carried against crosses We may use all lawful means to have the crosses removed but with a quiet resignation to the will of God if he will have it so If our hatred be sanctified then it is carried against sinne primarily and properly because it is Gods great enemy and ours and the great evil in it self How to know whether our heart be rightly carried against sin This is a great part of Repentance Repentance is the turning of the affections especially those two great affections of love and hatred in our lost condition Our hatred was against God and our love set on sin now contrarily 1. Where ever this affection of hatred is carried aright against sinne the minde judgeth of sinne as Gods Wotd doth counteth it the greatest abomination and dislikes it not onely because it brings damnation but because of the nature of it The Scripture cals it our deformity uncleannesse nakednesse a running issue 2. Here sinne is grieved for as the greatest evil if one have an antipathy against a creature yet if that be farre enough there is no great trouble Rom. 7. Wretched man that I am It is the greatest spiritual though not sensitive grief we are most troubled at those evils which most affect the body have the greatest sense of grief for them as the ●amp gont stone but here the intellectual nature is most offended with sin chuseth more to be rid of it then trouble and judgeth himself more abominable for it 3. A constant hatred of sin 4. It endeavours to ●uine and destroy it the Scripture often expresseth it by killing of sin Mor●isi ●our members 5. It hates it upon those grounds that God hates it because it is a rebellion against God crucifieth Christ grieves the Spirit is at enmity to the grace of God in me I hate it upon such spiritual grounds 6. Where ever sin is truly hated there we hate it most in those that are nearest to our selves Hatred of sin is one half of repentance sin is a hatred of God and a loving of sinne in Repentance our love is turned to God and hatred set on sinne Means to get our hatred of sin sanctified First Study to get a right information of sin what ever can be the object of hatred meets in sin in the highest degree in crosses there is something evil but in sin there is nothing good it is not only evil but hath in it all kinde of evil 1. A defiling evil 2. Deprives us of all other good robs us of God peace comfort Secondly Principally get thy heart filled with the love of God and his wayes you that love God hate that which is evil Psal. 119. I love all thy Commandments therefore I hate every evil way love the holy Spirit and thou wilt hate filthinesse CHAP. XXII II. Desire and Flight THe next affection is that of Desire It differs no more from love then the Act from the Habit it being the exercise of love The surest Character you can make of a man is by his desires as much as the Physician can judge of his patients condition by his appetite In this affection four things are considerable 1. The Nature of it 2. The Image of God in it before the fall 3. How extreamly depraved our desires are in their natural condition 4. The work of grace in sanctifying of it Desire is the going out of the will endeavouring after that we love a good thing not yet enjoyed or not perfectly the making out of the soul for the fruition of that good There are three affections conversant about good say some Love about good in general present or absent Desire about good absent Joy about good present Des Cartes saith not only the presence of good absent but also the conservation of a good present is desired God gave to the soul of man when he created it a two-fold appetite 1. Sensitive or natural whereby the desires are carried violently after their own preservation 2. Rational or the will these rational desires are exercised about spiritural things in the fruition of which one placeth his happinesse Of the Image of God in our desires in our innocent condition The understanding then lookt on God as his only absolute Good and the will of man did adhere to him and acquiesce in him He desired 1. A more perfect fruition of God and that he might lay out himself more for him Natural desires were few moderate subordinate to this to be helps and furtherances of the perfect enjoying of God 2. The depravation of this affection A great deal of our original corruption is vented out this way the corruption of the understanding will love hatred thoughts fall in here 1. The object of the desire whereas God should be only desired in our sinful condition we have no desire after him only vellieties faint wishings and wouldings Though the soul be full of desires they are taken off from God and wholly carried to some poor empty creature 2. The Qualities or Properties of these sinful desires 3. The woful fruits of them The qualities of our corrupt and carnal desires 1. The vanity of them which appears in three particulars 1. There is no reason to be given of our corrupt desires as Samson Give me her she likes me 2. The things that we desire appear to be toyes 3. The innumerablenesse of them 2. They are intense and violent the soul pursues such things 3. They are insatiable 3. The woful effects and fruits of them 1. These corrupt desires have got the regiment of the soul they enslave reason the most noble faculty of it 2. Destroy all hope of profiting they take up our time and study the soul is ever imployed about some of these unworthy desires 3. They make the soul extreamly unthankful for the mercies already received they make the Soul and Spirit of a man base 4. The work of Gods grace in renewing or sanctifying our desires
6. 36. so to Gospel-repentance there must be a right sense of sin 2. Sorrow for sin a spirit of mourning goes along with Gospel-repentance Zec. 12. 10. Ezek. 7. 16. Hos. 11. 12. a sorrow according to God 2 Cor. 7. 10. 3. A self-judging Psal. 51. 4. condemning his acts and judging himself worthy of all the curses of the Law 4. A turning from sin to the Lord Hos. 14. 8. Dan. 4. 27. 5. It must be grounded upon the apprehension and hope of mercy Isa. 55. 7. Poenitentia non est sola contritio sed sides Luther Therefore the Lutherans commonly make faith a part of repentance it is the foundation of it Non pars sed principium P. Martyr One saith True repentance consists in four things 1. In a humble lamenting and bewailing of our sins our sinful nature and wicked lives whereby we are subject to Gods wrath and eternal death even a giving our selves so to consider and feel the cursed effects of sinne in that it angers God and enforceth his justice to punish us till it makes our hearts to ake and be troubled perplexed and disquieted 1 Sam. 7. 6. Psal. 38. 18. Ioel 2. 12. Iam. 4. 9. so David and Peter wept for their sins 2. A confessing the same to God particularly Prov. 28. 13. Psal. 32. 3 5. judging our selves worthy to be destroyed therefore and to perish eternally David saith I will confesse mine iniquity and be sorry for my sin And Iohn If we confesse our sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sins 3. An earnest crying to God for pardon of sinne and for power against it in the name of Christ. David Psal. 51. saith Sprinkle me with hysop that is forgive me for his bloud sake whom that hysop represented We must take words and beseech the Lord to receive us graciously 4. A hearty and sincere purpose to reform our heart and life to cast away all our transgressions to resist and forbear the practice of sinne in all things and to exercise our selves in all righteousnesse i. e. A firm purpose to leave all the evil that I know condemned and to do all the good that I know required a fixed resolution of heart so to do in consideration of Gods goodnesse and grace that hath sent Christ to save the penitent The Antinomians say The Saints of God once justified and in Christ need not repentance they cry down this as an un Gospel-like practice and dislike mourning for sinne they would have nothing but faith in Christ and rejoycing in him To be troubled for sinne they say is a dishonour to the grace of God and satisfaction of Christ our repentance and humiliation indeed cannot satisfie God Christ hath done that laid down a price answerable to the debt but the Lord hath inseparably annexed repentance and remission Act. 2. 38. 3. 19. 8. 22. and he requires not only an initial repentance in reference to a mans state but a daily repentance in reference to the acts of sinne he must daily wash his feet See Gal. 5. 31. The sinne against the holy Ghost is therefore unpardonable because the Lord will not give repentance Heb. 6. Repentance is Evangelical and a Duty in regenerate persons First Because it is a fruit of the holy Ghost Act. 11. 18. Secondly Because none but regenerate persons can perform it to bewail sinne and aggravate it justifying God condemning themselves and laying hold on Christ. Thirdly The Gospel enjoyns it and threatens the neglect of it Some places joyn Repentance and pardon together Act. 5. 31. Luke 24. 47. Some it and faith Mar. 1. 15. Act. 20. 21. Fourthly Christ Iohn Baptist and all the Apostles preacht repentance Mat. 3. 2. 4. 17. Mark 6. 12. Fifthly Because it may and doth work most kindely in and with faith when they look upon Christ whom they have pierced and consider that they have crucified him Sixthly Because it conforms us to God and Christ in hating and subduing sinne in us it breedeth in us a loathing of sinne and gives us a victory over it What the Pump is to the Ship Repentance is to the soul it keeps it clean Seventhly Because we have still flesh in us to be awed as well as the Spirit in us to be cherished Object Justification is but one indivisible act of grace pardoning all sins past present and to come There is a two-fold forgivenesse 1. In foro poli in the Court of God so all sins past present and to come are actually pardoned at the first act of believing and repenting 2. In foro soli in the Court of Conscience so they are not pardoned we shall have no comfort or assurance of their pardon till we actually repent of them Repentance is a part of the exercise of our whole Christian conversation and a work to be ordinarily practised though there be one great and universal repentance for the change of our state In Revel 2. 3. chap. among the duties God requires of the seven Churches which were all converted of four of them he requires the exercise of repentance Revel 2. 5. 3. 13 19. But there are some special seasons wherein God in a more special manner cals his people to repent when he would have the practice of it more full and extraordinary 2 Cor. 7. 11. when we should more strictly examine our selves and our sorrow should be much inlarged 1 Sam. 7. 6. Iudg. 2. There are five special times for renewing of Repentance First The time when Gods hand is upon us in any special correction 1. God expects and requires it then Isa. 22. the first 15 verses Zeph. 2. begin 2. The servants of God have ordinarily practised it then Ieremiah Iob David Lam. 3. 39 40. 3. God hath severely threatned them when they have not repented at such times 2 Chron. 28 22. Ier. 5. 3. Amos 4. The reason is because the Lord hath appointed this exercise of repentance as the only means to remove the rod or turn it to a blessing Secondly Another special time when God would have his servants to renew their repentance is upon their fall when they have committed any grosse sin as David after defiling Urijahs wife Psal. 51. and when he had fallen into the sin of numbring the people 2 Sam. 24. So Ezra 9. when the people had married with strange wives they wept exceedingly So when the Church of Corinth had wrapt themselves in the guilt of the incestuous persons sin 2 Cor. 7. Peter when he had denied his Master Our sorrow doth not make God amends or pacifie his wrath when it is kindled it is only a condition of the Covenant of Grace the exercise of repentance it satisfieth not God but the Church it is a help to our own souls whereby our sins are subdued Thirdly When the Lord cals any of his people to any special service that he would have them do for him and the Church then they ought to renew their
repentance When God called his people to renew their Covenant there was a special humiliation before Ezra 8. 21. Isa. 6. When Ioshua was called to build the Temple and be an high-Priest to God Zech. 3. When they were to come to the Sacrament they were to examine themselves thorowly and judge themselves so Exod. 19. 14. Else our unworthinesse may stand as a bar that we shall not comfortably go on in the work of the Lord Gen. 35. begin Fourthly When we look to receive any special mercy when we either need or expect by vertue of a promise that God will do some great thing for us as Isaac when he lookt for his Fathers servant to return with a wife Dan. 9. The whole Chapter is the humblest exercise of repentance that we reade of the occasion was he expected that the Lord would now break the Babylonian yoke Moses called the people to deep humiliation and repentance when they were to possesse the Land of Canaan Fifthly The time of death when we expect our change then is a special time for the exercise of the duty of repentance that is a fitter time to finish then begin repentance then we should specially look to our hearts and examine our wayes It was the commendation of the Church of Thyatira that their last works were best and it is the last time that we shall have to do with repentance we carry love and joy to Heaven and most of the Graces except Faith and Hope there shall be no use of them when we go hence we go to the greatest Communion with God that the creature is capable of Esther the night or two before she went to lie with Ahashuerus was most carefull to have her body perfumed and oiled Motives to provoke us to the practice of Repentance two especially which are the great Motives to any duty 1. The necessity of it 2. The Utility of it I. The Necessity of it Repentance is necessary to remission 1. Necessitate praecepti Ezek. 18. 30. 2. Necessitate medii one must condemn his sinne and loath himself and prize a pardon afore he obtain it Ezek. 20. 43. Luke 7. 47. The Schoolmen demand why repentance should not make God satisfaction because it hath God for its object as well as sin 2 Cor. 7. 10. The offence takes it measure from the object the good duty from the subject therfore Christ only could make satisfaction It is necessary because every man must appear before the judgement seat of Christ and receive an everlasting doom and our plea must then be either that we have not sinned or else that we have repented Except ye repent ye shall all perish while one remains impenitent his person and services are abominable in the sight of God Isa. 1. Isa. 66. liable to all the curses written in the book of God The Jews have a Proverb saith Drusius Uno die ante mortem poenitentiam agas Repent one day before death that is every day because thou maist die tomorrow There is an absolute necessity of Repentance for a fruitful and worthy receiving of the Sacrament First Without this there can be no true desire to come to this Supper Faith is the hand Repentance the stomack by a sight of sin we see our want and need of Christ. Secondly Without it there can be no fitnesse to receive Christ. We must eat this Passeover with bitter herbs Thirdly All should labour to have assurance of the pardon of their sins This Cup is the New Testament in my bloud for the remission of sins without repentance there is no remission Act. 5. 31. Fourthly Because sinne is of a soiling nature and doth de●ile Gods Ordinance to a mans soul and if we come in sinne we cannot profit by the Lords Ordinance II. The Utility of it The Necessity of it should work on our fear the Utility of it on our love the two great passions of the soul. First It is infinitely pleasing to Almighty God Luke 15. per totum the intent of three Parables there is to shew what content it is to God to see a sinner to turn from his evil wayes him that had lost his Groat his Sheep and the Prodigal Sonne Secondly The benefit of it is unspeakable to thine own soul. 1. It will remove all evil 1. Spiritual all the guilt of sinne and the defilement of it 1 Iohn 1. lat end Isa. 1. 16 17 18. no more prejudice lies against thee then if thou hadst never sinned against him Mary Magdalen was infamous for her uncleannesse yet Christ first appeared to her after he rose from the dead all the curses due to sin are laid on Christ. 2. Outward Evil When I speak concerning a Nation if they repent I will repent of all the evil I thought to do See Ioel 2. 2. B●ing all Good it brings Gods favour that flows on the soul God hath promised grace and means of grace to such Ier. 3. 13 14 15. Prov. 1. 23. temporal blessing Iob 22. Everlasting life is their portion it is called Repentance unto life Act. 11. 18. Unto Salvation 2 Cor. ●1 10. it is a means conducing to that end Means of Repentance 1. Diligently study to know how miserable your state is without it reade over thy doings that have not been good every day See the evil and danger of sin Acts 2. 21. 3. 17 18. 26. 18. Ier. 31. 18. 2 Tim. 2. 25. 2. Repentance is the gift of God he granted also repentance to the Gentiles beg earnestly at Gods hand that he would make sin bitter to thee and cause thee to hate it Zech. 12. they mourned apart then God poured on the house of David the Spirit of supplication Ier. 3. 18. Turn me Lord and I shall be turned 3. Attend upon the Ministery of the Word the preaching of the Word is called the word of Repentance the preaching of the Law Gods word is a hammer to break the hard heart especially the preaching of the Gospel the discovery of Christ They shall look on him whom they have pierced Rom. 2. The goodnesse of God should leade thee to repentance 4. Faith in the bloud of Christ when thou seest thy self lost and undone venture thy self upon the free grace of God revealed in the Gospel faith in Christ will purifie the heart Acts 15. that is instrumentally the holy Ghost is the principal agent You have received the Spirit by the preaching of faith Three things are required in Repentance 1. The sight of sin by the Law 2. Hearty and continual sorrow for sin by considering the filthinesse and desert of it Gods judgements due for sin his mercies bestowed on us Christs suffering for our sins our own unthankfulnesse notwithstanding Gods benefits 3. Amendment an utter and well-advised forsaking of all sin in affection and of grosse sin in life and conversation Renewing of Repentance lies 1. In renewing a mans humiliation and godly sorrow 2. In renewing his obligation to duty The
The activity of grace appears chiefly in our love and desire for the good things of Christians are not yet enjoyed and therefore is this affection so much exercised 1. In general the work of grace is to renew that which our original corruption spoiled in the affections or to repair the image of God once stamped there It takes off the desire from the creature and turns it to the proper object of it in a due order method and measure 2. Particularly 1. The true object of a sanctified desire primary and ultimate is God Christ and all the graces of his Spirit and the means of Grace the Ordinances and in a due place moderately the creature and what ever is helpful to me We ought to desire 1. For our selves only good things Prov. 11. 23. God chiefly Psal. 42. 2. Revel 3. 2. Christs righteousnesse and the vertues of the Spirit the means and helps to grace as the sincere milk of the Word and the company of the Saints and the like helps as Paul desired to see Timothy places and occasions of doing good if we finde our selves furnished for them 1 Tim. 3. 1. Natural benefits and good things health liberty We ought to desire for others their conversion Rom. 10. 1. and growth in grace and salvation the welfare of the Church Secondly The act or measure of it carried to its proper object God and Christ with greatest intensnesse called hungring and thirsting As the Hart pants after the water brook and moderately carried to the things of this world grace is a spur to our desires for spiritual things and a bridle to them for earthly We must 1. Desire spiritual things more then temporal Mat. 5. 6. 2. Among spiritual things those most which may do us most good as Paul bids us covet spiritual gifts chiefly that we may prophesie 3. The publick good more then our own There is no evidence of grace so constantly to be found in a gracious heart as the holinesse of their desires Nehem. 1. 11. The desire of our hearts is toward thee Rom. 7. Cant. 1. Draw me and we will run after thee Reasons 1. Because their good is absent from them the heart which cannot say I pray and believe can say I desire to pray and believe The true desire of grace is grace it self in a degree 2. The Saints of God have ever pleaded their desires as an evidence of their interest in God when they could plead nothing else My soul longeth for thy salvation Marks to try whether our desires after these things be sanctified First Then thou desirest all that is good Christ Grace the Ordinances the Gospel holds out Christ to be good to me therefore one may somewhat desire this and not be sanctified I must desire him to be my King and Lord as well as my Saviour Secondly It hath five Properties 1. It is the greatest and strongest the soul hath of rational not sensitive desires therefore set out by hunger and thirst panting after God Whom have I in heaven but thee and in the whole earth in comparison of thee Desires put out on Election and counsel are put out most on these things 2. It is accompanied with sadnesse and languishing if it attain not the thing desired Hope deferred makes the heart sick 3. They would enjoy the object presently Balaam could desire it at later end If I desire a thing as an end I cannot but desire it presently 4. These desires are constant till the thing be fully enjoyed Ioh. 4. 14. 5. Such desires are operative otherwise if they put us not on the use of means they are not right Such an one will be at any cost for exalting adorning that thing What is a mans happinesse end glory he desires to make as excellent as may be Who ever truly desires spiritual things desires them as their glory they will give all for the glory of Christ and the beauty of the Gospel How to know whether our desires after the things of this life be sanctified try that by two things 1. In the point of subordination as they may stand with subordination to the great things he desires As farre as these outward things may be usefull and helpfull to the things of Gods Kingdome One thing have I desired saith David as an end Ze●h 7. 5 6. Whether you eat or drinke or what ever you doe and so desire do all to the glory of God 2. You shall try it by the moderation of your spirit If you desire these things as inferiour goods 1 Cor. 7. 27. Means or Directions to keep your desires strong and vigorous after spiritual things and to moderate your desires after earthly things Of the first 1. Labour for a thorow knowledge and acquaintance with these spiritual things knowledge of a thing stirs up the appetite Two men did vehemently desire a spiritual communion with God Moses and Paul and none knew more of Christ then these Study the things of God of Christ and Gods Kingdom not only a speculative knowledge but a practical taste of God rest not till thou hast some experience of this supernatural object Other truths quickly ●loy when one understands an Art or Tongue the knowledge of spiritual things quickens the appetite and enlargeth the soul. 2. Labour to be acquainted with thine own emptinesse how empty of all grace and full of corruptions thou art Tecum habita labour to get a sense of these things what a great evil an hard heart is and what it is to be deprived of God so the Lord counsels the Angel of Laodicea 3. Hope of attaining is the whetstone of desiring study those promises He will satisfie the hungry soul and those that thirst after the Well of life and open thy mouth and he will fill it Directions how our desires after the things of this life may be sanctified In general The sanctification of these desires stands in their moderation we must have a care that they be not inordinate First Labour in general for a contented minde Heb. 13. Be without covetousnesse Get a contented spirit which may stand in an indifferency to these things 3. Rules 1. Let thy desires be fully let out after the things of heaven this will moderate them to all other things because they will satisfie them 2. Labour to be rightly informed what all these worldly things are and thy soul will be moderate toward them know six things of them 1. None of all the things of this life have any good in them to us further then they are useful There is a necessity of food and raiment to uphold our natural being but otherwise all these things are but useful in a subordinate way not good further then of good use 2. They are of no use at all to the saving of thy soul I am going to a place said the Martyr where money is nothing worth the thing I am to look after is the saving of my soul. 3. They are all by Gods own appointment most