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

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the Truth and in the Cause of God Answer 1. It concerns you to be well assured that it is God's Truth you are Zealous for How many that take their own private conceits for Divine Truths 2. All Truths are not of equal importance And though the least Truth may not be denied or opposed yet lesser Truths may be silenced and concealed when a Zealous contending for them would be to the wrong and prejudice of far greater and more necessary Matters That is not to defend but to betray the Interest of God and his Truth when Men care not perdere substantiam propter accidentia to lose the substance of Religion for Accidents and Circumstances And that is Erratick Zeal and Mischievous like Fire out of its place when Men are so hot and earnest in contending about lesser Points that they themselves neglect and do what in them lieth to hinder others minding the main of Religion Zeal like Fire in its proper place is of great use and benefit But out of its place very dangerous and destructive And remember Sirs that true Zeal for God is most for those Truths and Duties wherein the great interest of Religion lieth And is most against such things whereby God is most dishonoured the Gospel obstructed Religion most wronged discredited c. 8. Right Zeal is joyned with Christian Moderation is for Christian Concord One of a truly zealous Spirit is also of an healing closing Spirit is of a publick Spirit Right Zeal is more for the common interest of Religion than for private Opinions It is no Firebrand no Incendiary in the Church It is moved at what it sees amiss it is for Reformation but will not hurry Men upon disorderly actings in their passionate sense of Disorders It is against extreams on both Hands Passionate Transports and rash heady Courses are not the effects of an holy but of a bitter Zeal Right Zeal keepeth within due compass It is for Edification not for Destruction It is for Peace and Unity It is for Sodering and Cementing not for Separating such as should Joyn. As Fire though it separate Heterogenials congregates Homogenials Yea it will melt divers Metals into one Lump True Zeal is not for perverse Disputings tending to Strife but for godly Edifying in Faith It is not for kindling Dissentions or causing Offences and Divisions amongst Christians but is moved with great Grief at the sight of such things As the Apostle Who is offended and I burn not It is for maintaining the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace And they that are more zealous to maintain some By-opinions than to maintain Union and Communion with their Fellow-Christians are quite besides the Mark. The Churches Peace and Edifying one another in Love are far greater Matters than any unnecessary Opinions which too many too zealously contend for Yea Vnnecessary is too good a word for some of them I should have said unsound Opinions O that the Guilty here would seriously consider whether it would not be more for the Honour of God the Credit and Interest of the Gospel and the securing of true Religion amongst us to joyn with their Fellow-Christians so far as they can to hold together to their mutual help strengthening and encouragement than to be so hot for their Opinions which if they were true yet are far remote from the Foundation and so far from being necessary to Salvation that not one of hundreds that are saved and now in Heaven was ever of their Way and Opinion here To be so rigid in their Way to carry as if all were unfit and unworthy for them to hold Christian Communion with that come not over to such Opinions of theirs alas this is Wild-fire not true Spiritual Zeal And verily I cannot think of any thing that will probably more harden and encourage Papists at this Day than the sad Rents and Dissentions amongst Protestants As he said Is not the hand of Joab in all this So it is probable enough the Heads of Jesuites have been in this Divide impera They know a Kingdom divided against it self is not likely to stand long and hope to raise themselves on our Ruines 9. That is right Zeal when we are more moved with Indignities offered unto God than with any Injuries done to our selves When we are more zealous in God's Cause than in our own We find Numb 12.1 2. Miriam and Aaron speak against Moses yet he seemed not at all concerned for himself We find not any reply that he made He was meek in his own cause Whereas upon sight of the Peoples Impiety their Idolatry in the Cause of God he was presently all on a flame His anger waxed hot Exod. 32.19 To be mild in our own cause but zealous in God's is a sign that we are indeed zealous for God As it is a sign of the contrary when we are remiss as can be unmoved unless when our own Interest is wrapt together with God's Interest As most Parents and Masters can bear it well enough though Children fail never so grosly in respect of the Duty that they owe to God though Servants plainly neglect and contemn God's Service They can bear with their Impiety with their taking God's Name in vain with the prophaning of his Day c. And yet many times they are all Fire and Tow if such do but fail in point of good Manners to them if they be not very observant of them and their commands Now it is true the least Irreverence towards Parents and so negligence in Servants are Sins against God But if upon that account you are most moved and displeased then you will be displeased at other Sins as well and more displeased at greater Sins than you are at these You will be zealous for God when Self is not so much concerned 10. Right Zeal for God is joyned with real Love and true compassion towards Men towards Sinners Thus while we hate their Sins we should yet love and heartily wish well to their Persons While we cannot bear with them that are evil in that which is evil yet we should be glad to do them good and glad indeed if by any means we might be helping to make them better As great Enemies as the Jews were to the Gospel and to the Apostle Paul yet he could not but pity them and his hearts desire and prayer to God was for them that they might be saved Rom. 10.1 Zeal against Sinners hath anger and grief in it not hatred As in the Apostle 2 Cor. 12.21 True Zeal desires their Conversion rather than Confusion And would rejoyce more in their Reformation than in their Ruine Our Saviour checked the furious Zeal of the Disciples when they would fain have been calling down Fire from Heaven to consume those poor Creatures that would not receive him Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of Luke 9.54 55. They were too hasty at that time a spirit of Revenge was stirring in them which was not Elias's spirit
Treachery The settled bent of their Hearts and so the general course of their Lives is right 16. The upright Man is striving after and growing up towards full Perfection The Righteous shall hold on his way And he that hath clean Hands wax stronger and stronger Thus the Way of the Lord is strength to the Upright And his Word does good to the Upright Mic. 2.7 It is an ill sign when one is at a constant stay in Religion When one holds on in a round of Duties without going forward And commonly Hypocrites go out at last in a stinking snuff But the Path of the Just is as the shining Light which shineth more and more unto the Perfect Day Prov. 4.18 Such are pressing towards the Mark Phil. 3.14 15. Of Zeal TIT. 2.14 A peculiar People zealous of good Works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accensum studio bonorum operum as Beza fervently given unto good Works as in our old English translation Zeal is a word of various acceptation In general it signifies heat and fervour From 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ferveo In Heb. 10.27 there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we read fiery indignation in our old Translation violent Fire This Word is transferred to the heat and fervour of the Spirit and Affections which is of diverse kinds As 1. There is a natural Zeal As some naturally are of lively active spirits full of mettle as we use to say Luther seemeth to have been naturally of such a temper As Bucer said of him Nihil in eo non vehemens What an happy thing it is when such a temper is guided and acted by Grace Ordinarily such will do more for God 2. There is a carnal Zeal We find emulations among the works of the Flesh reckoned up Gal. 5.19 20 21. In the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the Apostle James condemns 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a bitter Zeal Jam. 3.14 Envy is a kind of Zeal but not of the right kind It is bitter Zeal It is a sort of wild Grapes There is a Blind Zeal Such as Idolaters Papists Persecuters may be acted by A blind zeal when Men are Zealous in a false way and Zealous against the Truth Taking light for darkness and darkness for light Calling good evil and evil good There is a superstitious extravagant and erratick zeal when Men are Zealous about such things where it would be a vertue to be cool and moderate And there is an Hypocritical Zeal when Men have or seem to have great Zeal for the Truth and against Errour and falshood but it is only for self-respects and carnal ends Thus carnal Zeal moves in a large Sphere takes a great compass 3. There is a Spiritual Zeal A being zealous of good Works indeed and zealous for God even for his sake An holy Zeal This is both commanded Rev. 3.19 Be zealous And commended Num. 25.11 Phinehas the Son of Eleazer hath turned my wrath away while he was zealous for my sake So this Zeal should not go unrewarded Many commend lukewarmness and indifferency in Religion under the terms of Moderation Prudence and Discretion But Christ and the World are not of a mind A lukewarm temper the Lord cannot endure Rev. 3.15 16. Because thou art luke-warm and neither cold nor hot I will spue thee out of my mouth But as Bishop Hall observes Vol. 1. p. 903. The goodness of God winks at the Errors of honest Zeal and so loveth the strength of good Affections that it passeth over their Infirmities Again ib. p. 938. He Pardoneth the Errours of our fervency rather than the indifferencies of lukewarmness Indeed where there is no Zeal for God there is no Love to God Qui non Zelat non amat Where there is Life there will be some heat Here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be spiritually alive and to be lively are not more alike in sound than really akin Zeal in one degree or other is as inseparable from spiritual Life as heat is from fire It 's true as every sincere Christian is not a Nathaniel for degree and measure of Sincerity and plain-heartedness So neither is every such Soul a Moses a Phinehas an Elias for Zeal Yet the Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by force Mat 11.12 And it is one property of Christ's redeemed ones his peculiar People to be zealous of good Works This holy Zeal of which I am to speak as was said of Vprightness and Sincerity is not any distinct particular Grace but a modus or respect of other Graces Though some define it as a compound of Love and Anger Zelus est affectus ex amore irâ mixtus cum scil irascimur ei à quo laeditur id quod amamus Yet I cannot so confine it There must be Zeal accompanying our Repentance 2 Cor. 7.11 And Zeal in our Love We must love fervently 1 Pet. 1.22 and 4.8 And it is the symtom of corrupt times when love waxeth cold Mat. 24.12 Zeal is the spritely vigour and activity of all Grace the ardor of all the Affections with the earnestness and intention that is in all spiritual actings Indeed the chief heat of it is in the Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12.11 This Fire is burning in the gracious Heart in the sanctified Will and Affections yet its heat is further diffused into the Conversation All our Spiritual Sacrifices must be offered up with this Fire Fervent in Spirit serving the Lord. Prayer must be Zealous fervent Prayer Jam. 5.16 Col. 4.12 13. Ministers must Preach zealously as Apollos Act. 18.25 None are allowed to do the work of the Lord negligently remisly There must be Zeal in hearing the Word Here our hearts should burn within us as Luk. 24.32 we should be zealous in reproving as Gal. 2.11 Yea no good work is well done without Zeal We must be zealous of and zealous in good Works It s not enough barely to do good Works but we must be earnest upon it and vigorous in the Work Quest But how shall we know whether our Zeal be right Answ 1. True Zeal is guided by a right Judgment a judgment regulated by the Word To allude to that Isa 4.4 The spirit of judgment must go along with the spirit of burning A blind ignorant rash Zeal is not good nor will it prove ones estate good Such a Zeal Paul had while a desperate Persecuter Act. 26.9 which afterwards he saw to be fury and madness rather than Zeal v. 11. This made him Mad once not his learning as Festus would have had it v. 24. such a Zeal the carnal unbelieving Jews had Rom. 10.2 Let Men be never so zealous in their way if it be not God's way their Zeal runs waste God is not honoured but dishonoured not well pleased but displeased with that Zeal which is not according to his Word To be zealous for what he hath not commanded and much more to be zealous for what he hath forbidden to be zealous against
could not but express his Zeal for God at Athens when he had none to back him Acts 17. Come see my Zeal for the Lord says Jehu a Kings 10.16 An Hypocrite is not well pleased if he have not some to take notice of his Zeal some that will applaud him for it His Zeal in a good cause is soon cooled if he have not some about him such as would encourage and help to blow it up Whereas true Zeal will burn still when there are none about it but such as endeavour to blow it out As Lot's Soul was vexed from day to day in Sodom with their unlawful deeds 2 Pet. 2.8 If a Zealous Christian hath his lot cast in a wicked prophane Place or Family even there will his Zeal be breaking forth True Zeal will not be smothered or put out with the coldness and deadness of others about it but rather useth to be more excited and intended As Fire burns hottest in cold frosty Weather 5. True Zeal is not Partial but would appear for all that wherein God's Honour and Interest lieth It is as Extensive as sincere and sound Obedience It is Quantitas intensiva obedientiae according to Dr. Ames Thus to be Zealous of good works in the whole kind of them ready to promote any good Work earnestly desirous to abound in every good Work would shew our Zeal to be right But a partial Zeal as a partial Obedience is not right As partial heats in the Body are no signs of good Health To be Zealous for works of Charity but no friends of Holiness and true Piety Or to seem forward for pious Exercises but to be careless of other Moral Duties To be negligent in the duties of our particular Callings and Relations cannot be right True Zeal in a Magistrate will make him active for God as a Magistrate as Nehemiah was True Zeal in a Minister will make him diligent in the work of his Ministry Like Apollos who being fervent in Spirit spake and taught diligently the things of the Lord Acts 18.25 True Zeal in the Master of a Family will make him Industrious in his Place To instruct his Houshold in the Way of the Lord and to engage them in God's Service after Abraham's example Yea one that is truly Zealous of good Works will act uniformly Not be hot in Prayer Hearing Conference and Cold and Heartless as to other Duties 6. True Zeal sets against all Sin as it is discovered This will cause ones Blood to rise against Sin So a Man will be ready to reprove and shew his dislike of Sin as he has opportunity So he will endeavour in his Place according to his Power to oppose Sin to prevent suppress it True Zeal will make a Man an enemy to Sin wheresoever he sees it wheresoever he meets with it To appear very forward to condemn the faults of an Enemy of such as bear no good will to us and to bear with Sin in our Friends in such as are nearly related to us this is not right True Zeal would make one like Levi in God's Cause Who said unto his Father and to his Mother I have not seen him neither did he acknowledg his Brethren nor knew his own Children Deut. 33.9 As Asa would not bear with Idolatry in his own Mother 2 Chron. 15.16 In the trial of your Love observe its working at a distance as this will better appear in its workings towards those that are farthest off in its being extended to Strangers Enemies than in its workings towards Friends and Relations that are near you But in the trial of your Zeal on the contrary especially observe how it worketh near hand To condemn Sin in others but to indulge and spare our own Sins is not right Some are so Zealous against others Offences De Adventu Dom. Ser. 4. as Bernard says that they might seem to hunger and thirst after Righteousness if they had the same judgment also of their own Sins But now a weight and a weight as he alludes is an abomination to the Lord. True Zeal would least endure Sin in its own Territories As Fire has most power on what is next it Zeal where it is in truth will be firing out ones own Corruptions Like an Hearth of fire among Wood and like a Torch of fire in a Sheaf As the Psalmist says My Zeal hath consumed me Psal 119.139 So Zeal will be consuming ones Lusts Are we salted with this Fire according to the expression Mark 9.49 A truly Zealous Christian has the greatest indignation against his own Sins and is most forward to take revenge on himself and them 2 Cor. 7.11 And he would not spare one of his Sins Jehu destroyed Baal out of Israel yet this shewed his Zeal was not right that he departed not from the sins of Jeroboam he was still for the Golden Calves 2 Kings 10.28 29. A resolved indulgence and allowance of any known Sin and true Zeal are inconsistent 7. A right and regular Zeal is most vehement in the greatest Matters As Fire the grosser the substance that it takes hold Ignis in materia densiori acriùs urit and feeds upon the hotter it burns True Zeal is more for plain and necessary Duties than for any disputable point or matter of Controversie So likewise it riseth against Sin according to the quality and aggravations thereof What one noteth to have always been the Hypocrites guise Dr. Downam on Psal 15. p. 33. is the genius of false Zeal scil To neglect the greater Duties and to affect the observation of the less to prefer Circumstances before the Substance and Ceremonies before the works either of Piety or Charity to place the height of their Religion either in observing or urging Ceremonies or contrariwise in inveighing against them Observe it to be more Zealous for or against a Ceremony than for the weightiest and most substantial Duties or than against great and foul Enormities to be more Zealous about some disputable Point and Opinion wherein sound Christians may have different apprehensions than for main matters of Faith and Godliness matters essential to true Christianity wherein all that are Christians indeed must agree both as to Belief and Practice is no good sign You would not take him for a wise and careful Builder that laid the greatest weight on the weakest part of the Wall So it must be indiscreet Zeal or worse than indiscreet which is more for unnecessary Opinions than for the most substantial Duties and fundamental Truths Is that true Zeal for God Or rather is it not a selfish Zeal which is for ones own Opinions neglecting those things which make most for the Honour of God and wherein the main interest of Religion lieth Though many warm themselves at these Sparks many comfort themselves that they are Zealous in their way for their own Parties and Opinions yet in the end they may lie down in sorrow for it But some will say Would you not have us Zealous for
11. True Zeal is for expedition in God's Service As Phinehas Ignis est maxime actuosus maximè mobilis who was zealous for God could not sit still when he saw God so greatly Dishonoured Psal 106. Then stood up Phinehas and executed Judgment Then stood up Phinehas The word may import his readiness and forwardness to appear for God against Sin as occasion was then offered So Nehemiah testified against the Merchants that had lodged but once or twice without Jerusalem under the Wall on the Sabbath threatning to clap them up If they did so again he would lay hands on them Neh. 13.20 21. So David Psal 101.8 I will early destroy all the wicked Though it may point at the usual time of sitting in Judgment in the morning yet withal it may import that he would not be delatory in the work Thus Zeal will set Men early on work for God will make Men quick and speedy in giving check to Sin as they have power and opportunity to put a stop to it as soon as they can Sinful sluggish demurs delays put-offs are contrary to the nature of true Zeal So a listlesness to Duty is no sign of Zeal It is cold that benummeth So it is a sign of the want of Zeal a sign of extream coldness when we cannot find our hands to turn them to any good work when we are like the slothful Prov. 19.24 that hides his hand in his bosom 12. True Zeal makes souls as forward unto so free and lively in God's service What a Man does zealously he does very heartily To be zealous of good Works is not barely to do some good Works but it further implieth earnestness alacrity and fervency of spirit in the doing of Good Works To pray with Zeal is more than saying a Prayer it is no less than to be fervent in Prayer to pray earnestly To be zealous in works of Charity is not meerly to give to such that stand in need but to give willingly and freely Like those of Macedonia 2 Cor. 8.3 that were willing of themselves That needed no spurring on What the Apostle sayes of Love 1 Cor. 13.4 It is kind bountiful this may well be said of Zeal which is the fervour of Love Zeal is bountiful at least in will and desire Cold has a condensing and contracting quality but heat rarifies and extends So Zeal in the Heart enlarges it A zealous Christian would not serve God at an ordinary rate he desires to abound in the work of the Lord. The flame will be mounting upwards A zealous spirit is a raised spirit raised in God's Service But a cold dead heart is still bearing downward We read of Jehoshaphat that his heart was lifted up in the wayes of the Lord 2 Chron. 17.6 So one of a zealous spirit never thinks he does enough for God He will desire still to serve him more and to serve him better 13. True Zeal gives courage in the Cause of God filleth the Soul full of resolution for God And indeed that may be the meaning of Jehoshaphat's heart being lifted up in the wayes of the Lord. A zealous Spirit is a magnanimous Spirit An holy Zeal is indeed Cos fortitudinis the Whetstone of Valour As Esther's Zeal for God and his People put courage into her though she might naturally be timorous as is common to her Sex What an heroick resolution was there Esth 4.16 I will go in unto the King and if I perish I perish If we have no Spirit no Courage to appear for God his Truth and Wayes sure we have no Zeal forthem Indeed of all things Sinners are most offended at holy Zeal They that have nothing to say against Christian Meekness or Charitableness and some other Graces yet can ill endure the heat of Godly Zeal O it is scorching and tormenting to them Here they are ready to cry out Fire fire as one says This oft puts them into a great combustion Yet true Zeal will break thorow opposition Many Waters cannot quench Love neither can the Floods drown it The like may be said of Zeal It is not quenched or cooled but oft more intended and increased when others would discourage it 14. True Zeal that is a cause of such courage and resolution for God that giveth confidence and boldness before Men yet is joyned with Humility and Holy Fear and Trembling before God One gracious disposition is not contrary to another And true Zeal is not blown up with high thoughts of ones self but with high thoughts of God The Dread and Reverence of the most High of an infinitely Glorious and Holy Majesty promotes true Zeal for God helpeth to set an edge upon it and steeleth the Soul with an holy boldness hardeneth it against a base carnal fear of Man Mr. Vines But it is not right when as one says Zeal that should eat us up is eaten up of Pride 15. Right regular Zeal will more dispose and fit us for our Work and Duty not take off from Duty or transport into Sin That is not Zeal but distempered Passion it is not from Grace but from the workings of Corruption when we are discomposed and unhinged 16. If we have true Zeal for God it will be a joy to us to see any zealous and active for God As on the other hand it will be our great grief to see Men generally cold indifferent lukewarm in Religion To see others regardless of God and of the interest of true Religion will move our displeasure and indignation But it will not offend us to see any acted with regular Zeal for God Indeed the Apostle did and would rejoyce that Christ was Preached though some preached Christ out of envy Phil. 1.15 18. How much more would he have rejoyced to have seen as good proof and evidence of their pure Love and Zeal as he saw of their Envy carrying them out in the work If we are truly zealous for God we shall be taken with those whom we see or hear to be zealous for him our hearts will be towards such yea knit to them as Jonathans was to David And we shall bless God for such As Deborah Judg. 5.9 My heart is towards the Governours of Israel that offered themselves willingly among the People Bless the Lord. She desired that the Lord might be praised that put such a spirit into them If others out-shine us here yet if we have true Zeal for God we shall be so far from envying them that the more zealous any are the more we shall honour and be taken with them 17. If we are truly zealous we have an holy emulation a desire to follow yea if it might be to outstrip those that excel in vertue As the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 14.12 Forasmuch as ye are zealous of spiritual gifts seek that ye may excel As the Corinthians Zeal and forwardness provoked very many 2 Cor 9.2 We should not envy such as have got the start of us and yet should in a good
sense emulate them We should strive at least to overtake those that are foremost Yea true Zeal for God and Godliness will not set it self any bounds or limits You cannot call them zealous that stint themselves and count it an high point of prudence and discretion not to be too forward in Religion But as Love so Zeal is like Fire that cannot be hid it will break forth Quis enim celaverit ignem Lumine qui semper proditur ipse suo Such as are afraid of being counted zealous as if it was a matter of disgrace are far from such a spirit as David had who when he was mocked and despised of Michal spake resolvedly I will yet be more vile than thus if this be to be vile Fire is one of those things which say not It is enough Prov. 30.16 So true Zeal never says It is enough A zealous Christian would have more Grace more Zeal for God They that are zealous of good works desire to abound more and more in good works 18. True Zeal is not for a spurt for a flash it is constant a Fire that never goes out Like that Fire upon the Altar Lev. 6.13 Though I must grant the Zeal of a true Christian doth not flame up at all times alike yet it is never totally extinguished It is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing Gal. 4.18 And this is a good sign thy Zeal is right if it be constant There are some whose Zeal is but a flash scarce any sooner in than out again Some have a burning fit of Zeal for a while that is quickly over Their praeter-natural heat stays not But true Zeal is like the natural heat of the Body that continues as long as one lives Yea though it is like Fire in green wood subject to go out if it be not blown up yet that Spirit which first kindled this spark in Believers is given to dwell in them and to abide with them for ever And therefore though there may be some decays of Holy Zeal for a time yet it is stirred up again in the Faithful and usually burneth clearer after it is recovered As we sometimes see Fire blaze up more after a dash of water cast on it Yea ordinarily as we may observe a flame mount highest before it goes out ordinarily I say a Christians Zeal is most raised the nearer he is to his end But such as once seemed very forward for that which is good but are quite fallen off again have quite out-lived their Zeal they even give others cause enough to suspect that they were never sound OF A Lively Hope ROM 12.12 Rejoycing in Hope TO go on to the Trial of all other Christian Vertues might upon some accounts cross my design in what is Written which is to help and direct ordinary Christians in the Trial and exercise of Grace even such as cannot purchase or have not time to peruse large Volums I have spoken of the chief Cardinal Graces and shewed how they work how they may be known Prove these in your selves and there is no question but you have the whole Train of those better things that necessarily accompany Salvation As without these any other Vertues you may seem to have as Temperance Patience Meekness c. are but Shadows and Counterfeits So that I might make a Full-stop at what is Written Yet because many are kept off from any serious examination of their Estates satisfying themselves with this That they have Hopes and some That they have Joys too never enquiring How they came by them or of what kind they are Therefore before I conclude this Treatise I shall shew you how you may know whether your Hope and Joy be sound or no. And first of Hope But let me premise these Three Things 1. It is unquestionable that there is a false a deceiving Hope as well as a true and certain Hope There is a dead Hope as well as a lively Hope There is a confounding Hope as well as an Hope that maketh not ashamed There is the Hope of the Hypocrite Job 8.13 as well as the Hope of the Righteous Prov. 10.28 2. Better no Hopes than false Hopes As we may allude to that Prov. 26.12 Seest thou a Man wise in his own conceit There is more hope of a Fool than of him So there is more Hope of Sinners that are most despondent in one sense without Hope than of such as are very confident high in their Hopes but without any ground And how sad is it as I remember one says to sail on smoothly to Hell having Heaven all the while in view Hope that is like to end in horrour and utter desperation is not worth having 3. It is justly to be suspected that their Hopes are groundless and false who are unwilling to bring them to the Test and Trial. That part of a Man's Body which he could not endure to have touched we would conclude not right or sound But if your Hope be right it would not suffer any injury or damage by a fair impartial Trial but be more confirmed Now if you ask What is Christian Hope I answer It is a longing and fiducial expectation of Good promised to come in God's Time and Way Faith and Hope are very near akin Yet thus they differ 1. In Order Faith in order of nature is before Hope Hope is the Daughter at least the youngest Sister of Faith 2. In the Object Faith has respect to the whole Word of God Hope to the Word of Promise Good only is the object of Hope And Future Good Quod speratur non possidetur good to be received and enjoyed Rom. 8.24 Or if I may be said to hope that I am in a state of Grace that my Sins are pardoned which is hope of a present Good if my Hope be sound or if I say I hope God heard my prayer at such a time and gave in such a Mercy in answer to it here seems to be Hope of a thing past Here the word Hope seems to be used more improperly or taken more largely It is more properly a Perswasion though short of full Perswasion or Assurance But properly Hope looks at Good to come Whereas what is past may be the object of Faith as well as what is to come As we believe the Creation of the World a thing past as well as the Resurrection of the Body which is future 3. In their proper formal Acts. Faith apprehends and assents to the truth of the Promises Hope expects and looks for the Good promised An expectation of Good is the formal Act of Hope And herein also it is differenced from or contrary to Fear which is an expectation of Evil not of Good But that which I mainly intend is to shew wherein sound Hope differs from Presumption or from a false Hope Or how we may know whether our Hope be sound 1. True hope is not ordinarily obtained but after sad doubts and fears As it is Hos
the Jew first Of the Jew first as knowing most being instructed out of the Law ver 17 18. To be wise unto Salvation is to be wise indeed But a common notional Knowledg like a dead Faith may deceive will never save Men. Now to shew wherein sound Spiritual-Knowledg differeth from other common knowledg 1. Spiritual Knowledg differeth from Natural Knowledg as this is a Knowledg of Natural things that of Spiritual things Natural Knowledg is the Knowledg of a Man Spiritual Knowledg is the Knowledg of the Holy Prov. 9.10 the knowledg of a Saint or of a Christian Natural Knowledg is a Knowledg of God in his works Rom. 1.19 20. Spiritual Knowledg is a Knowledg of God according as he is revealed in his Word Psal 119.169 But here you may say Is there not a Literal Knowledg of the Word different from Saving Spiritual Knowledg Answ 2. Spiritual Knowledg differs from a Literal Knowledg as a Literal Knowledg doth not always infer a Spiritual Knowledg though a Spiritual Knowledg doth not include the Literal A Literal Knowledg is from a common illumination Spiritual Knowledg from a special Illumination of the Spirit Eph. 1.17 * Docet modum nempe per revelationem Sacrarum Literarum quae fit tollendo velum è cordibus nostris illustrando mentes nostras quò c. De Revelatione hîc loquitur non quae Prophetis speciali modo siebat sed quae omnibus piis communis est M. Pol. è Zanch. in Eph. p. 31. c. b. Not that it is by immediate Revelation as the Doctrine of the Gopel was made known to the Aspostles Nor do Divines intend such immediate Revelation or Inspiration when they distinguish betwixt Literal Knowledg and Spiritual as betwixt an acquired Habit and an Habit infused But this is by a special powerful irradiation and shining upon the Understanding lightning and raising it to a Spiritual discerning of the Mystery and method of Salvation revealed in the Word which a Man had but a slighty overly Knowledg of before 1 Cor. 2.14 The natural Man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Though by such means as Reading Hearing Study Conference he may come to a notional literal Knowledg of the Scriptures and of the Doctrine of Christ yet without a special work of the Spirit a Man cannot spiritually discern the same Take a Natural Man that knows most of the things of God that can discourse well of Regeneration and other Points in Divinity yet they are strange things to him he sees them but as things afar off yea blindness of Mind in a prevailing degree still hinders him from passing a right practical Judgment of the surpassing worth and excellency of Spiritual things till he comes to this enlightning of the Spirit And one that is thus enlightned can say as he Joh. 9.25 whereas I was blind now I see He hath other thoughts of Sin than he had before he hath other thoughts of God and Christ of Heaven and Holiness than he had before 3. Spiritual Knowledg is not ordinarily attained without means and when it is attained it teacheth still to attend humbly and diligently on the means God hath appointed The more common works of the Spirit prepare for the special works of the Spirit So a common Literal Knowledg makes way for Spiritual Knowledg Certainly it is not the ordinary way and method of the Spirit to dart in the Saving Knowledg of God and Christ immediately into Souls that knew nothing of God and Christ before But those Divine Truths which we had but a dim and slighty apprehension of he sheweth with fuller and plainer evidence And as the Lord hath enjoyned us the use of the means to attain to Knowledg Men have no ground to hope they should come to Knowledg in the neglect of means Then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord. Hos 6.3 We are not now to look for immediate Revelations but to hear what the Word saith which was given by Divine Inspiration What the Scripture saith that the Spirit saith Heb. 3.7 Rev. 2.7 We are to wait on the Spirit not to give us new Scriptures but to open our Vnderstandings to understand the Scriptures which he hath already given We are to Read Hear Pray c. that we may understand They that wholly neglect and despise the means of Knowledg that will not go to the Law and to the Testimony that seek not the Law at the Mouths of God's Messengers whose Lips should preserve Knowledg but despise prophesying conceiting themselves wiser than their Teachers And they that would be Wise and knowing besides and above that which is written and set up cry up the Light within as they speak above the written Word how much soever they are conceited of their own Knowledg should know that it cannot be sound Such as exalt their Wisdom against the Wisdom of God in his Word contemning the means he hath appointed are presumptuous indeed and Proud knowing nothing as they ought to know Such are not taught as the Holy Ghost teacheth be their pretences to the Spirit never so high To receive Wisdom's words to incline our Ears and apply our Hearts thereto to cry after Knowledg and lift up our Voice for Understanding to seek her as Silver and dig for her as for hid treasures this is the way indeed to find the Knowledg of God Prov. 2.1 c. 4. Spiritual Knowledg is clear and satisfying True it is that all who have the special Illumination of the Spirit have not the same degree and measure of Knowledg but recipitur ad modum recipientis Some Christians are but Babes not Men of Knowledg And we all know but in part and see but darkly compared with the Saints in Heaven Yet where God hath shined into the Hearts of any to give the Light of the Knowledg of his Glory in the Face of Jesus Christ Such must needs have a more firm and certain assent to the Truth than they who are in a state of Darkness As Peter said Joh. 6.69 We believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the Living God As Christ of the Disciples Joh. 17.8 They have received my Words and have known surely that I came out from thee As the Apostle Rom. 14.14 I know and am perswaded As the Gospel came to the believing Thessalonians not in Word only but also in Power and in the Holy Ghost and in much Assurance 1 Thes 1.5 As the Apostle speaks of the full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgment of the Mystery of the Gospel Col. 2.2 As Divines distinguish inter cognitionem agnitionem betwixt bare knowing and acknowledging of the Truth That of the Head only this of the Heart also that overly and superficial this deep and thorow As the Apostle prayeth here that they might be filled with the Knowledg of God's Will
such conditions but his Grace worketh by means and a conditional Promise is his stablished means to draw Mans Heart to the performance of the Condition which well considered is a sufficient answer to the Arguments that are commonly urged against the conditionality of the Promises As the Spirit worketh powerfully within so he useth that word from without Direct to sound Convers p. 289 290. as his Instrument which worketh sapientially and powerfully to the same work And the like observation we may take concerning the Threatnings in the Word Therein ordinarily some such evil as we naturally abhor and dread is threatned either to excite us to our duty which our corrupt hearts and natures are exceeding backward to or to deter us from Sin to which we are naturally prone and strongly inclined Now to apply these things to the point in hand The Believer is made sensible what a Sinner he has been and what woe and wrath is due to Sin and Sinners that indeed he has deserved Hell for his Portion yet withal he believes according to the Word that God is in Christ reconciling Sinners unto himself that he so loved the World as to give his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on him should not perish but have Everlasting Life that Jesus Christ is the only and an all-sufficient Saviour that he is willing as well as able to save those that come to God by him But withal that there is no coming to him only as a Saviour so as to find welcome but he must come to him also as a Leader and Commander resolving sincerely to obey and follow him that without taking his Yoak upon us we cannot find rest for our Souls To these things a Believer cannot but subscribe These things are set home and kept close to his Heart and such Truths as these being mixed with Faith firmly assented to they work effectually Thus he deliberately makes choice of Christ as the only meet help for his Soul in all the World Now go to Hypocrites and Unbelievers and it appears they have but some faint and weak Assent to the foresaid Truths Did they really believe Heaven and Hell and that without an interest in Christ there is no hope of Heaven but to Hell they must go all the World cannot save them how is it possible they should make so light of Christ as they do preferring a momentary pleasure or a little worldly pelf before him which a true Believer accounts but dung and trash If you tell a Man there is a Lyon in the way behind him with open mouth ready to devour him and he flees not as for his Life does it not plainly shew that he believes not what you say So that Sinners do not flee to Christ it shews they do not believe their misery and danger out of Christ Or if sometimes they have strong Convictions that startle and terrify them they have Arts and Devices to put them off They will not suffer them to stay Their corrupt Wills and Affections call off their thoughts from such things as most nearly concern them As we read Mat. 13.15 Their Eyes they have closed lest at any time they should see with their Eyes and hear with their Ears and should understand with their Heart and should be converted and I should heal them Their Eyes they have closed Thus poor Sinners wink hard shut the Windows to keep out the Light that they may still sleep on in Sin Or when they can be no longer quiet as they are then they bribe their Consciences and deceive themselves with a seeming Faith a seeming Conversion a seeming Reformation which they take up with as sufficient as poor Laodicea thought her self rich Thus by one means or other they are kept off from a serious and deliberate closing with the Lord Jesus But then come to a sound Believer and he is as sure that the Word of God will prove true as that there is a God which is as sure as that there are any Creatures in the World and so that Heaven and Hell are not Fancies which have a being only in Mens imaginations but unquestionable realities that all Miseries and Sufferings in this life are case and pleasure compared with the Torments of Hell and Miseries of the Damned and all the Pleasures and enjoyments of this Life but pain and loss compared with the Joys of Heaven that if ever he be saved he must be saved by Christ and that he cannot hope to be saved by Christ but in his own way Thus he sees it unquestionably his grand concern to accept of Christ as he is offered And such Truths being set home by the Spirit with Power and Evidence they have a mighty force to pull down strong-holds and carnal reasonings in the Heart against them to bring into Captivity every Thought to the Obedience of Christ And thus the Will and Affections are wrought upon And what sorrow then See Dr. Preston of Effectual Faith p. 204. to think of ones former natural and sinful State and what Fear O what will become of me if I get not a Part and Interest in Christ If I fall short of Heaven at last then where am I how miserable shall I be to Eternity And what vehement desire after Christ Give me Christ or I die And what resolution in the Will I will go to Christ and give up my self to him and cast my self upon him If I perish I perish Lord whither should I go Thou hast the words of Eternal Life Thus a Believer consents and closeth with Christ deliberately upon clear conviction that he has no other way to take 3. A true Believer consents unfeignedly and heartily True Faith is Faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1.5 A Sound Believer does not take up with a profession of Faith in Christ and of subjection to him does not think it enough to say Lord Lord to speak honourably of him but hath his heart opened to receive the King of Glory The Lord Jesus Christ is his desire and choice indeed And as he had rather have Christ alone for his Portion than the whole World without him so he had rather be subject to the Laws of Christ than freed from them Though the Flesh is still lusting in him against the Spirit and the Law in his Members rebelling against the Law of his Mind yet he can truly say his Will is more to Christ and to his Service than to please and gratify the Flesh and to serve Sin And he repents not of any thing he does for Christ but is grieved and ashamed that he does no more and that what he hath done has been done in no better manner but he heartily repents of his serving Sin heretofore and of what he hath done displeasing unto Christ And in the ordinary habitual and prevailing bent of his will he is for taking part with Christ and his Laws against the lustings of the Flesh against the motions and workings of remaining corruption in him He is so
should no more Lye or Curse or Swear and he that was given to Tipling and Drinking should no more be intemperate this will not prove a Man Sanctified You may be civilized and yet not sanctified For a Man to argue thus I am not guilty of open profaneness therefore I am a Saints is no better arguing than to reason thus I have not the Plague or Leprosy therefore I am a Sound Man But who knoweth not that a Man may be Sick of diverse other Diseases who is free from these And may not one die of a Feaver or Consumption though he have not the Plague 2. If we are sanctified by Faith there is not only a negative but a positive change wrought in us One that is Sanctified hath put off the old Man and put on the new He may say by the Grace of God I am not what I was sometimes and by the Grace of God I am what I am He is not now what he was before he is now what he was not before Once he was Proud Self-conceited but now humble self-abhorring Once very vain and it may be profane but now strict and serious Once altogether selfish but now self-denying Once he was at least in his Heart an Enemy to the Power of Godliness and perhaps a scoffer at Holiness but now a lover and follower of what before he had so great a Prejudice and Antipathy against Once he was very backward to Religious Duties to the strict observation of the Sabbath to the reading of the Word to Family-Prayer and secret Prayer c. but now his delight is in Holy Duties and he could not live without them Once his Heart was wholly set upon Sin and the World but now in a good measure weaned from the World now resolved and set against Sin now set upon God and Christ set upon Holiness and Heaven and heavenly things 3. If we are sanctified by Faith then there is a thorow change wrought in us As the Apostle prayeth 1 Thes 5.23 The very God of Peace sanctify you wholly your whole Spirit and Soul and Body 2 Cor. 5.17 If any Man be in Christ he is a new Creature old things are past away behold all things are become new Behold q. d. this is a thing to be well observed Sanctifying grace makes a great change indeed Mark it Behold all things are become new The new Creature hath a new Heart a new Tongue a new Life The new Creature walks by a new Rule is for new Designs new Employment new Company new Delights Sanctification is a renewing of the whole Man As in our natural state corruption overspreads the whole Man for which reason it may be called the old Man So if we are sanctified Grace makes a change on the whole Man for which cause it may be called the new Man though it makes not a perfect change here in this Life The new Creature is renewed in every part though he be renewed but in part while here He has a perfection of Parts though not of Degrees As a Child hath all the Parts of a Man though not a● Mans Proportion As when Day breaketh the whole Air is immediately enlightned though not in that degree as when the Sun is up and shineth in its Strength As Fire quickly enters all the Pores of the Iron put into it though it is not presently red hot Sanctifying Grace worketh upon the Judgment Will Affections upon the whole Soul all its Powers and Faculties And hence ariseth a main difference betwixt the Conflicts of the Regenerate and those Contests which are in the Unregenerate There is oft a great Contest in an Unregenerate Man betwixt his Conscience convinced and awakened and his corrupt Will and vile Affections Conscience calleth him one way while his Will and Affections draw him a contrary way But in the Regenerate there is warring in the same Faculties As all the Faculties are renewed though but imperfectly Hence as the Twins Jacob and Esau strove in Rebeckah's Womb so there is Flesh and Spirit the remainders of Corruption and a Principle of Grace striving in every Faculty Not only an enlightned Conscience against Sin but the habitual bent of the Will and Affections against it too The renewed part of the Will and Affections or to speak more properly that new gracious quality in the Will and Affections against the Unregenerate part or what remains of the old Man in them And though that better Principle is sometimes born down through the impetuousness of Temptation c. yet hence it is that a Regenerate Man sinneth not with full Will and Consent as he did before he was Regenerate Again Sanctifying Grace maketh a thorow change turning the Soul from all Sin to hate every false way So that no Iniquity is regarded in the Heart One that is Sanctified is for cleansing himself from all filthiness both of Flesh and Spirit Again It makes a thorow change inclining the Soul to Obedience unto the Will of God in all things To have a respect to all God's Commands An holy Rule and an holy Heart do well agree As the Apostle saith Rom. 7.22 I delight in the Law of God after the inner Man 4. If we are Sanctified by Faith we are for making progress in Holiness till we come to Perfection As we may see natural things growing up to Perfection in their kind the Seed growing up to a flourishing Plant the Set growing to a Tree the Child growing till he becomes a Man So Sanctifying Grace is of a growing nature And though all that are Sanctified are not of the same pitch and stature in Grace yet all are endeavouring and breathing after Perfection The least Saint would be perfectly Holy and the highest Saint cannot but see great imperfection in himself and so is grieved that he is no more Holy Such never think they have Grace enough while they may have more But as for such as cry up a mean in Religion and conceit they need be no better than they are and desire to be no better they that like to stand at a stay are not right Certainly there is no good Man but desires to be better than he is 3. Mors fidei est separatio charitatis Bern. True Saving-Faith worketh by Love Gal. 5.6 It worketh it begets Love and it works by Love Indeed Faith and Love are two most active Principles that will set the Soul on work How doth Faith beget Love Why thus As it perswades the Soul of the love of God to us miserable lost sinners in giving his Son his only begotten Son and the love of Christ in giving himself for us for our Redemption As it perswades the Soul of the rich and free Grace of God in offering his Son and of Jesus Christ in offering himself to us together with the greatest benefits we can think of or desire to make us for ever happy That such things should be done for and offered unto such undeserving and illdeserving Creatures that Christ
spiritual than for those everlasting Pleasures at God's right-Hand or are more for worldly Riches than for Treasure in Heaven True Faith would lay the World and worldly Things low in our esteem low in our thoughts Faith judgeth of them by the Word it weighteth them in the Ballance of the Sanctuary it compares earthly and spiritual things worldly and heavenly things things temporal and things eternal together Thus the World appears a vain empty worthless base and contemptible thing indeed to a Believer not fit for him to set his heart upon but to get under his feet * Non incurvet terrenum opus quem s●des coelestium erigi● Bern. And when worldly things come to stand in competition with God and Christ and Heaven a Believer cannot but account them Loss and Dung. An Unbeliever for want of Faith makes light of Christ and his Benefits makes light of a Crown of Glory of Heavens Happiness revealed and offered in the Gospel He looks on them but as pleasant Fancies and golden Dreams but things of Sense even momentary Pleasures and perishing Riches are more taking with him These he looks upon as real the other he accounts but imaginary or uncertain But a true Believer on the contrary has a sight of those things within the Vail by Fai●h Faith is the Evidence of things not seen Thus he hath found the hidden Treasure he has found the Pearl of great price he has made a discovery of the good Land that flows with Milk and Hony Faith is that Spy that gives him certain intelligence of the heavenly Canaan He is put out of doubt of the infinite Treasures that are in Christ of that fulness of Joy and the everlasting Pleasures that are in God's Presence in Heaven Though Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard neither have entred into the Heart of Man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him yet God hath revealed them to such by his Spirit 1 Cor. 2.9 10. The Spirit working Faith gives the Soul a view of them And hence it is that worldly things appear to be but empty Bubbles and meer Trifles compared with spiritual things with things above Thus the World's Markets are marred with a Believer He can no more value earthly things at the rate that Worldlings do He is clearly convinced that he should be an infinite Loser if he should throw away his Soul and forgo all Interest in God and Christ and Heaven for such poor Commodities as these are He knows where to bestow his best and most serious Thoughts his Heart and Affections better than on the World He sees worldly things to be valuable only so far as they may help him forward in God's service and in Heavens way but when they would be a hindrance and pull-back would be tempting him from Christ would take him off from his Duty from his main work and business of serving and glorifying of God and working out his own Salvation he looks upon them not only as vain Shadows but as deadly Snares Well Sirs Apply these things to your Hearts While the World either worldly Pleasures or Profits c. bear greatest sway while our Hearts and Affections are captivated by them and our Lives ruled and governed by them we do but vainly pretend to Faith The World loseth its commanding Power the World is in some measure conquered and subdued it is brought low where Faith cometh You have heard before that a true Believer accounts Christ precious and here you see that he contemns the World Indeed it cannot be otherwise but look how much Christ is raised in a Man's esteem so much the World and worldly things go down 2. True Faith overcomes a threatning frowning raging storming World A sound Believer will not forsake Christ his Truth and Ways for any thing the World can do or threaten Rev. 2.7 8. He that overcometh shall inherit all things and I will be his God and he shall be my Son But the Fearful and Vnbelieving shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with Fire and Brimstone which is the second Death Observe here the fearful and unbelieving are opposed to him that overcometh And the fearful and unbelieving are coupled together predominant carnal Fear and true Faith are inconsistent Such as are offended when Tribulation and Persecution arise such as in time of Temptation fall away were never sound Believers It is true Sometimes in an hour of Temptation a Believer is sore shaken but though he fall he shall arise and recover himself as Peter did and Cranmer and others He may fall but does not fall away Again it is true he may have many fears that he shall not be able to hold out in the time of Trial but he is safer for those Fears that cause a godly jealousy over himself that quicken unto Prayer that keep him on his Watch. Self-suspicion is a means to preserve and secure the Soul which Self-confidence would betray and overthrow But tormenting Fears I grant would shew Faith to be but weak yet notwithstanding a true Believer may have such Fears they are not predominant still he is kept by the Power of God and kept through Faith As by Faith Moses refused the Honour of being called the Son of Pharaoh's Daughter and refused the Pleasures of Sin with the greatest Treasures in Aegypt as he thus overcame a flattering World so likewise by Faith he chose to suffer Affliction with the People of God and chose Reproaches for Christ and forsook Aegypt not fearing the wrath of the King Thus he also overcame a frowning and a raging World by Faith And all true Believers have the same Spirit of Faith though not in that heroical degree And Faith will teach a Man to account upon Sufferings All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer must look to suffer in and from the World 2 Tim. 3.12 A Man cannot follow Christ therefore except he deny himself and take up his Cross Again Faith concludes that Sin is far worse than Suffering That it is the greatest Folly in the World to run upon Divine Displeasure to avoid Man's Displeasure That the World cannot afflict any Torments on the faithful like those which God hath threatned and will most certainly inflict on the faithless Apostates Fire and Faggot is a light matter to that Fire and Brimstone which God hath prepared to be the portion of the fearful and unbelieving And further Faith concludes that all the Sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the Glory that is to be revealed That our light Afflictions which are but for a moment shall work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory Thus true Faith will help us to overcome the World If we have this Faith then we are not of them who draw back unto Perdition but of them that believe and persevere to the saving of the Soul ACT. 11.18 Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted Repentance unto
David 1 Sam. 18.1 And here is no respect of persons but a respect of goodness to love them best who are best But if on the contrary a Man only beareth with Holiness in a lower degree and with such as may be Godly in the main but very remiss too much complying with the manners of the World or perhaps can afford such a good word sometimes saying such are honest sober moderate Men when he would thereby condemn those who are more forward when he utterly dislikes and his heart is rising against those whose hearts are lifted up in the ways of God when he cannot endure such as are more exactly conscientious and more zealous for God when he is barking at them as Hot-spurs Fanaticks and I know not what or if he lash them not with the tongue yet his heart is full of envy against them what can this shew but a graceless spirit And let such a one know that the love of God is not in him If the holiness of a Saint be such an eye-sore to thee for which thou canst not affect him how canst thou love God who is Holiness it self There is none holy as the Lord he is infinitely holy If the light of the Moon offends thee which yet shines not without its spots how canst thou bear the surpassing brightness of the Sun it self And how unmeet art thou for fellowship with the Saints in Heaven with the Spirits of Just Ones made perfect who canst not away with such as have attained to any eminent degree of holiness here The Saints in Heaven are more holy than any of those thou thinkest too strict too precise Perhaps thou wilt say 1. Thou couldst love and honour them if they were as good as they seem but they are Hypocrites they do but make a show Answ And dost thou indeed hate Hypocrisie O then take heed that thou beest not guilty of Hypocrisie in this very plea pretending that thou canst not love them because they are not so good as they seem when in very deed thou couldst like well of them if they were worse than they are Again Though it is true Hypocrites there will be among the Saints here yet take heed that thou dost not censure and condemn those as Hypocrites whom the Lord accepteth and approveth of as sincere and upright Thy hard censures cannot hurt and prejudice them so much as thy self The Devil accused Job to be no better than an Hypocrite As he is called The Accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 That this is a Diabolical Practice And to justifie the Wicked and to condemn the Righteous are both of them an abomination to the Lord. How angry was the Lord with Job's three friends for their rash censures of him and harsh dealing with him The Vpright though they are abhorred of many in the World are God's delight And think of it Shall not the Saints judg the World at last Many that censure and accuse them here shall be judged and condemded by them hereafter Yea their holy lives that the World is so offended at shall condemn the World And thou that abhorrest their strict lives think of it whether with Balaam thou wouldest not desire to dye their Death Or 2. Perhaps thou wilt say They make more ado than needs Answ And wherein Indeed it becomes not a Christian to be a busy-body in other Mens matters He has work enough of his own to mind And let all that fear God have a care to walk so that others may find no occasion against them but in the matters of their God But certainly the Command Mat. 22.37 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart c. will bear them out in their greatest Zeal and Activity for God So Luke 13.24 strive to enter in at the straight Gate c. And Phil. 2.18 Work out your own Salvation with fear and trembling And 2 Pet. 2.10 Give diligence to make your Calling and Election sure will warrant their most strenuous endeavours to get to Heaven And Ephes 5.15 See that ye walk circumspectly And 1 Thes 5.22 Abstain from all appearance of evil will justify their tenderness of Spirit and fear of Sin And Col. 1.10 Walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitfull in every good work And 1 Cor. 15.58 Always abounding in the work of the Lord will prove that the best are so far from doing more than needs that they fall very far short of doing what they ought in Religion And therefore as Christ said to his Disciples Mat. 26.10 Why trouble ye the Woman for she hath wrought a good work on me So why do any go about to discourage such as for his Name sake are labouring and taking pains to glorifie God and save their souls Are any offended that they do so much Alas they see great cause to be ashamed that they have done so little that they do no more for God and Jesus Christ for their own and others souls It 's granted we should not be righteous over much as we should take heed of being over wise Eccles 7.16 To be wise above that which is written is Wisdom falsly so called and to be righteous above that which is commanded is but a Pharisaical righteousness That which is beyond the Rule is not true Religion but vain Superstition And works of Supererrogation are works of Superarrogancy But keeping to the Rule none can be over-righteous When it is said there v. 17. Be not over-much wicked surely the meaning is not that we may allow our selves a little here They that would shun all impiety more and less are not to be condemned as over-precise or doing more than needs Or 3. perhaps thou wilt say Thou canst not be quiet for them they will not let thee alone but are still reproving thee Answ And does that offend thee Then as the Psalmist says For my love they are my adversaries thou dost ill requite thy best thy most faithful friends Then it seems thou lovest thine enemies but hatest thy friends And is this well done of thee If they could be satisfied to suffer thee to go on offending and provoking God and wronging thine own Soul which is not love but hatred then thou couldst be better pleased with them If it be thus thou neither lovest the Godly nor thy self aright You may think me very long on this third particular Note That if we love the Godly for God and Godliness-sake then we love them most who are most like God most eminent in Godliness And yet before I pass on to another there is a Question or two that fall in here to be answered Quest 1. Are we to love the Godly more than near Relations if they be not Godly and to love those who are eminent in Godliness above Godly Relations that are not so eminent Answ 1. There is a peculiar love due unto Relations as such which is in part natural and sensitive as irrational Creatures also have a love to their mates and
self-exaltation is self-destruction Pride goeth before a Fall To be lifted up is the high-way to ruine We are no nearer Heaven for lifting up our selves But God is ready graciously to condescend to those that humble themselves and lie low before him The most High hath a special respect unto them that are lowly He hath promised to dwell with them that are of an humble and contrite spirit Isa 57.15 and such he will in due time take up to dwell with him for ever But what is this Humility 1 I shall tell you in the Negative what it is not So 1. It is not a minding low and base things of the World Though the words humilis humilitas be derived from humus the Ground or Earth yet Humility is not a minding earthly things not a setting our affections on things on the Earth No We may be lowly-minded and heavenly-minded both Indeed earthly Riches worldly Honours that seem to many to be great matters high things yet are but mean and base things compared with the things above And yet we may seek the things above and be humble too or we may be very proud while taken with things below 2. Humility lieth not in ones affecting the poorest habit or affecting any add dress how mean so ever that he may not seem to be proud Yet mistake me not I speak not this to cloke the proud gawdiness of any Excess in costly Attire in vain strange and light immodest fashions is a great Sin and shame of our times Oh how many that this way glory in their shame were the Daughters of Zion reproved and threatned for this sin Isa 3. ever more guilty than multitudes among us at this day But yet I must tell you a proud heart may be under vile raiment too I trample on Plato's pride said Diogenes Laert. in Diogene l. 6. p. 381. But with another kind of pride said Plato Thus some may be proud of an affected plainness proud of their seeming free from pride of their looking like humble mortified Men. And some there are whose pride lies not in such gawds as fine Clothes which one would think none but Children and Fools should be taken with but in an high conceit of themselves their Knowledg Light and Perfection 3. Humility is not a base abject disposition or such a dejected frame of spirit as takes a Man off from his work and duty A despondent mind makes a Man fit for nothing makes a Man a burden to himself a burden to others to the World Sometimes we may meet with Persons so far out of conceit with themselves that they think themselves unfit for any company for any imployment and cannot be drawn to lay out any Abilities Gift or Talent they have Such pusillanimity is quite another thing from true Humility not a Vertue but an evil Disease 4. A base unworthy crouching unto Men and sinful compliance with them this is not Humility A yeilding to the will and humours of Men contrary to the will of God either for fear or to obtain their favour This is not true Humility to honour Men above the Lord. 5. A denial of what God hath given us or hath done for us this is unthankfulness not Humility As there is that maketh himself rich and yet hath nothing there is again that maketh himself poor yes hath great riches 6. A lowly courteous affable carriage towards all even towards inferiours though it is good and commendable where it is not used to serve ones pride and ambition as Absalom used it 2 Sam. 15.5 6. yet it is not sufficient to prove one endued with the Grace of Humility Good Nature may teach Courteousness towards Men where there is no Principle or spark of Grace The Grace of Humility shews it self not only in respect to Men but especially in its respect towards God 7. There is an artificial hypocritical Humility As some have an Art of discommending what they have or do to draw commendations from others And Hypocrites may be forward to confess such sins as the best and most sincere are not free from while here concluding that they shall be never the worse thought of for this yea hoping by such confessions and complaints of themselves they shall gain the repute of serious humble Souls Now this is but the shadow of Humility or masked pride pride under a veil True Humility God loves it is very pleasing to him but this which is only painted is loathsom to him 8. We may have a dislike of Pride in others without true Humility There are some whose pride makes them forward to censure and condemn pride in others As Diogenes said to Alexander I aert l. 6. in Diog. p. 389. Noli mihi umbram facere they cannot endure that others should stand in their light or shade and obscure them They take it as a wrong to them if others come near them much more if they put them down 9. There is a kind of humiliation without Humility Though God ordereth the humiliation of his People to the working and encreasing of Humility in them yet there is a difference betwixt humiliation and Humility and many have been humbled who yet were not humble Pharoah was humbled under God's Judgments yet had he a proud stout and stubborn spirit that would not yeild to God Many are brought low in their Estates and yet their spirits are high still Instead of humbling themselves under God's afflicting hand and being willing to lie down at his feet their hearts fret against the Lord. Some are humbled under Terrours under a sense of God's Wrath and brought full low in their own apprehension even to the gates of Hell and the brink of Despair when all is but a forced humiliation Though as this tends to make them truly humble if it comes to have this effect it will be very comfortable in the end Otherwise no comfort is to be taken in it As Bernard noteth it is said In Cant. Ser. 34. He that humbleth himself shall be exalted It signifies not that all Humility shall have exaltation following it but that quae de voluntate venit non ex tristitia nec ex necessitate Which is voluntary not involuntary or forced As on the contrary it is not said omnis qui exaltatur every one that is exalted shall be abased but only qui se exaltat he that exalts himself Indeed he is most properly said to humble himself that does it freely willingly whose heart is to the work And thus Ahab did not humble himself That humiliation is without Humility which is not free and voluntary But of this more after 2. I come to shew positively what Humility is Camero gives this brief description of it Praelect ad Mat. 18.2 p. 88. Humilitas est animi demissio orta ex verâ statûs et conditionis suae agnitione De grad humil Very near to Bernard's definition Scil. Humilitas est virtus quâ homo verissima sui cognitione sibi ipsi
humble they would gently stoop to them But it is very grievous to a haughty mind to bow and buckle to a low condition Eccl. 7.8 The patient in spirit and the proud in spirit are there opposed Impatience is mainly from pride And till our hearts are humbled we shall never kindly accept of the punishment of our iniquity Lev. 26.41 But the humble Soul takes all patiently If he be sick impoverished c. he will not expostulate with God and say why am I thus but rather admire that it is no worse 13. Humility will teach thankfulness As the Humble will justifie God in all his severity so they cannot but magnifie him for his Mercy The more humble any one is the more thankful He will be thankful even for the least of Mercies As Jacob acknowledged I am less than the least of all thy mercies which thou hast shewed unto thy Servant Gen. 32.10 And how much more will such a one admire the free Grace of God in any his special favours But proud spirits are not affected with the Mercy of God in what he does for them they look upon all that comes as due Yea when they have much they can be discontented that they have no more They are full of murmurings and complaints as if they were wronged because they have not all they would have Pride shews it self both in unthankfulness and discontent The Proud are ever hard to please What God does for them does not please them Like many proud sawcy beggars who are not pleased with an ordinary Alms count not an ordinary Alms worth thanks 14. Humility teaches souls to pray aright and makes Souls prayerful As it is Prov. 18.23 The poor useth intreaties or supplications So the humble and poor in spirit A poor Man and a Beggar are terms with us oft used promiscuously Poverty will put Men upon begging The humble and poor in spirit will be much in Prayer and serious and earnest in Prayer O such could not live without Prayer And there is no coming to God in Prayer but upon our knees no coming but in Humility in a sense of our wants and of our unworthiness The Humble and they that seek God are put together in the Promise Psal 69.32 The Humble will seek God Such will pray and cry to God and God cannot forget the cry of the Humble Psal 9.12 He will hear the desire of the Humble Psal 10.17 15. Humility will teach souls to wait as well as pray It makes the soul willing to wait for an answer in God's way and time You account those proud sawcy beggars that are not pleased with what you give them as was said before or that will not stay and wait a little till you are ready to serve them But the Humble will say as the Psalmist 123.2 Behold as the eyes of Servants look unto the hand of their Masters and as the eyes of a Maiden unto the hand of her Mistress so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God until that he have mercy upon us The truly humble know that God is worthy indeed to be waited on and that his Mercy is worth waiting for and that they for their parts deserve to be kept waiting and that it is of God's free and abundant Grace if after long waiting Mercy do come in at last 16. Humility causeth reverence in God's Worship in the soul's approaches unto God The Humble in some good measure apprehend an infinite distance betwixt God and them they are sensible of their unworthiness and unfitness to have any converse with so great and glorious and holy a Majesty As Abraham Gen. 18.27 Behold now I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord which am but dust and ashes As Ezra ch 9.6 O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God As the Publican through the sense of his own vileness was ashamed to draw nigh to God and to lift up his eyes to Heaven Luk. 18.13 so likewise the poor humble contrite spirit attends on the Word with reverence trembles at the Word Isa 66.2 17. Humility teacheth Charitableness towards others The Humble use to have more Charity for others than for themselves They have more to say to extenuate others faults than they would have to say for themselves They are for excusing others so far as they may while they are strict and severe in judging themselves The Humble will not despise such as are below them nor envy such as are above them They are charitable The proud are scornful From an over-high esteem of themselves they come to scorn and contemn others or are envious grudging at such as are above them in Place Estate or Gifts 18. Bern. Humility teacheth meekness Nimirum collectaneae sunt humilitas et mansuetudo Humility and Meekness are like twins nourished with the same Milk Diverse of those considerations that tend to make us humble also tend to meeken us Humbleness of mind and meekness are put together Col. 3.12 And they go together As we read of Christ our chief Pattern and Examplar Mat. 11.29 I am meek and lowly in heart Proud persons use to be very tutchy One scarce knows how to speak how to carry towards such Proud Haman is in great wrath if Mordecai fail in a matter of Complement A proud spirit is a turbulent spirit Only by pride cometh contention Pro. 13.10 Such are given to strife Pro. 28.25 We read of the wrath of pride Pro. 21.24 But the humble will be of a patient quiet calm and peaceable spirit Not easily provoked and soon pacified When the proud are easily provoked a small matter will move and irritate them but they are hardly reconciled not pacified without great submission without very much ado Only here must be some allowance for humane frailty where the natural temper and constitution is cholerick c. where there is the Grace of Humility and so Meekness in truth It will not appear so fair in one that is naturally of a rugged and boisterous temper It requires more Grace to master and tame a fierce disposition Yet Grace where it is will be striving against the stream of natural headstrong Passions though it be oft born down by them 19. Humility will teach us as to be sensible of and sorry for our own spiritual weaknesses and sinful imperfections so likewise to be pleased with to rejoyce in the greater abilities more shining and flourishing Graces and comfortable enlargements of others The humble Soul is glad while he is weak yet that others are strong while he can do but little yet that others are full of activity for God while he alas drives on but heavily yet that there are others whose hearts are lifted up in God's wayes who are following hard after God The Proud are not well pleased to see others go before them They are ill affected towards those that by out shining seem to obscure and eclipse them The Humble will not repine but rejoyce
17.1 Walk before me and be thou Perfect or Upright Uprightness in heart and life is not attained without a sense of God's presence with us without setting the Lord before us So 1 King 9.4 If thou wilt walk before me as David thy Father walked in integrity of heart and in uprightness Is 57.2 each one walking in his Vprightness Others have it before Him as it is in the Margent each one that hath walked before him Indeed one cannot walk in Vprightness that does not walk before him 2 Cor. 2.17 of Sincerity and in the sight of God go together And it is something to this purpose that they that know God and the upright in heart are joyned Psal 36.10 As Hypocrites and they that forget God are put together Job 8.13 The Upright so know God as to remember him they have their thoughts much upon him The Hypocrite forgets God thinks little of him He puts off the serious thoughts of God of his Omnipresence of his Omniscience c. as otherwise he could never go on still and quietly in a way of Hyprocrisie The Upright ordinarily so mind God's Presence with them his eye upon them that they are awed therewith and fear before him He that walkes Vprightly is ever one that feareth the Lord Prov. 14.2 9. The Upright Man is one that hates opposes and forsakes all known Sin There is no Sin he knows of that he would spare and indulge And this is a certain infallible note and caracter if we can find it in our selves The Vpright in heart and the Pure in heart are really the same Quest But who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my Sin Answ It is true an absolute perfect purity is not to be found in any upon Earth but only in Heaven yet the Upright are said to be of a clean heart and to have a pure heart Psal 73.1 and 24.4 comparatively That is compared with themselves what they were before God created this clean heart in them and put a right spirit into them as also compared with others that are strangers to the work of spiritual renovation So the denomination follows the better part As we say a Corn-field notwithstanding there are many Weeds in it too And a Gold-Mine though there is much Dross with the Gold And there is this further to be said that though there is sin and impurity still cleaving and adhering to the Upright Man yet his heart cleaves not to any sin It is so far pure it is not for joyning or mingling with corruption but would work it out There is no way of wickedness allowed of in the heart that is upright This last note is clearly laid down Prov. 16.17 The high-way of the Vpright is to depart from evil This is the common path such daily keep unto In their ordinary course they have a care to depart from evil from evil in genere which contains the several species or kinds of evil So Job that was a Perfect and Vpright Man shewed it in his eschewing evil Job 1.1 Though the Upright Man cannot live absolutely free from sin Yet neither can he live in sin It is not his Element Though sin has a being in him still yet it has not dominion over him Psal 19.13 Let them not have dominion over me then shall I be Vpright There is reigning sin which a Man does not oppose but gives up himself unto which he willingly serves and obeys and this is altogether inconsistent with Uprightness Again there is sin which is not reigning but resisted which a Man does not allow of but desires and endeavours to shake off Watches prays strives against and the existence or presence of such sin does not deny or disprove a Man's Uprightness An upright Man may fall into Sin but he does not continue in Sin It is not his way But his high-way is to depart from evil Here is a broad difference betwixt the Hypocrite and the Upright 1. An Hypocrite will sometimes seem very zealous against Sin in others and be forward to censure and condemn others while he willingly overlooks and indulges Sin in himself He can sooner espie a mote in anothers Eye than a beam in his own Eye An upright Man though he would not partake of others Sins by Connivance c. yet he sets especially against his own Sins and against sin in those that are nearest to him In the first place he would reform at home 2. An Hypocrite may leave some Sins as Jehu destroyed Baal and Herod probably reformed in some things But the Upright Man is an Enemy to all known Sin 3. An Hypocrite is for lopping off the Branches But the upright Man is striking even at the root of Sin He is for mortifying that body of Sin within him He is sick of that body of Death He strives in good earnest against inward evil Inclinations An Hypocrite whilst he keeps his hands clean from gross acts of Sin has no care takes no pains to purifie his heart Whilst he avoids open Prophaneness he tolerates and allows of inward Corruptions and Heart-pollutions Mat. 23.25 26. c. The upright Man's care is to cast and keep Sin out of his Heart as well as out of his Life 4. An Hypocrite is not afraid of doing that in God's sight which he would be afraid or ashamed to do in the view of others or if he thought Men would come to the knowledg of it The upright ordinarily dread to sin in secret fear to sin against God though it were possible to keep it close from the knowledg of the World 5. An Hypocrite will condemn the Sins of former Times while he is easily drawn to a compliance with the sins and corruptions of the present Times he liveth in like those Mat. 23.29 30 34. But an upright Man will be good in bad Times As Noah Gen. 6.9 Noah was a just Man and perfect or upright in his Generation In that wicked Age wherein Iniquity did so much abound and defile the World yet still he retained his Integrity He was a just a righteous Man when the Earth was filled with violence He walked with God even at that time when Mankind generally as with one consent lay wallowing in Sin So Psal 125.4 5. They that are upright in heart are opposed to such as turn aside unto crooked ways They cannot wind about and turn with the Times as others An upright Man hates the work of them that turn aside and resolves it shall not cleave to him Psal 101.3 Psal 26.11 But as for me I will walk in mine Integrity Vprightness Rectitude and Streightness are words of very near and great affinity An upright Man is for conforming himself to the Word a streight Rule is not conformed to the World cannot bend to the sinful humours and examples of Men. 6. An Hypocrite sometimes whilst he abstains from gross Sins freely allows himself in lesser Sins or such as he accounts little Peccadillo's Take that Instance the
Hope will give Courage will put a Man in heart and make him resolved for God A true Christian to maintain his Hope will not care to quit present worldly Possessions If we could be perswaded to disclaim all interest in and Hope of Heaven to embrace this present World if we could be content to take up with the World for our Portion then certainly we have no sound Hope of Heaven It is a weighty saying O that it may be well weighed They are no true Hopes of Glory to come Mr. Baxt. Ep. ded before his 32. Directions c. if you cannot cast over board all Worldly Hopes when the Storm is such that you must hazzard the One. 11. A sound Hope will raise ones Thoughts Heart and Desires Heaven-ward What is Hope but an expectation with desire or a desiring expectation As the Apostle speaks of his earnest expectation and Hope Phil. 1.20 So we cannot have a lively Hope of Heaven without lively desires after Heaven Rom. 8.23 We which have the first-fruits of the Spirit groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the Redemption of our Body It cannot be that such as have a sound Hope of Heaven should place their happiness or terminate their desires in the World 12. A lively Hope will quicken and raise the Heart in praise and thankfulness to God Psal 71.14 I will hope continually and will yet praise thee more and more This Hope is called good Hope through Grace 2 Thes 2.16 And Souls that have it cannot but see cause greatly to admire extol and magnifie Divine Grace 13. Sound Hope is a furtherance of Spiritual Joy Rejoycing in Hope As Bernard sed nunquid tantae laetitiae spes erit sine laetitia Yea this Hope oft causeth Joy even in Affliction Psal 119.49 50. Remember the Word unto thy Servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope This is my comfort in my affliction for thy Word hath quickened me The word of promise giving Hope thus brings in Joy and comfort too Sound Hope will chear the Heart and keep it alive under troubles without which it would faint and sink If our Hearts die within us like Nabals under worldly Troubles this would shew we have not a lively Hope of Heaven Such as rejoyce in Hope of the Glory of God will be ready even to glory in Tribulations as Rom. 5.2 3. Of Spiritual Joy ANd so I come to the Trial of Mens Joyes As there are counterfeit Graces so there are false Joyes As we read of the Hope of the Hypocrite so likewise of the Joy of the Hypocrite Job 20.5 A Joy that will end in sorrow and consternation Yea It is possible for Souls that have true Grace yet to be mistaken in their Joys As we find the Seventy Disciples returning with Joy Luk. 10.17 saying Lord even the Devils are subject unto us through thy Name Notwithstanding says Christ v. 20. in this rejoyce not that the Spirits are subject unto you but rather rejoyce because your names are written in Heaven Where he at once corrects and directs their Joy As one says Many times the more excellent a Sermon is Mr. A. Burg. the more carnal the heart of the Preacher may be So Christians may rejoyce carnally in Spiritual Enlargements and Spiritual Experiences As Grace can find something even in natural comforts to feed and increase Spiritual Joy Joy in the Lord So Corruption sometimes prevailes on the contrary making Spiritual Duties and Spiritual Priviledges and Mercies the matter and ground of carnal rejoycing And further as some Christians through weakness yield to needless fears and take up sad conclusions against themselves and their own Estates debarring themselves of comfort belonging to them So others again through heedlesness please themselves erroneously in their own fancies and rejoyce in sparks of their own kindling which they take for the comforts of the Spirit That we should not only try our Graces but our Comforts For which purpose take these following notes 1. Spiritual Joy is not wont to come in till Godly Sorrow hath prepared and made way for it Bernard Opportunè post tristitiam gaudium subit post laborem quies post naufragium portus Thus the Lord oft turns Water into Wine turns his Peoples Sorrow into Joy Christ was anointed to give the Oyl of Joy for mourning the Garments of Praise for the spirit of heaviness Isa 61.3 They that sow in Tears shall reap in Joy Psal 126.5 6. Hearts that were never broken are not yet prepared for Christ to bind them up Paul had a casting down to the Earth before he was caught up to the third Heavens They that have great elevations of Joy and yet were never humbled for Sin have cause enough to suspect their Joy is not right 2. Spiritual Joy hath the Holy Spirit for its Authour Thus it is the Joy of the Holy Ghost 1 Thes 1.6 As I said of a lively Hope it is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Ministers may be helpers of a Believers Joy as 2 Cor. 1.24 but under the Spirit He is the principal efficient Now they that have not the Holy Ghost their Sanctifier cannot have him their Comforter The Disciples were filled with Joy and with the Holy Ghost Act. 13.52 This fruit of the Spirit never grows alone but hath other fruits accompanying it Indeed there may be Saving Sanctifying Grace without actual Joy and Consolation but there cannot be true Joy without Saving Sanctifying Grace 3. Spiritual Joy is never to be found without Saving Faith Rom. 15.13 Now the God of Hope fill you with Joy and Peace in believing No other way that it can be attained Sound Joy is the Joy of Faith Phil. 1.25 Being justified by Faith we have Peace with God and rejoyce in hope of the Glory of God Rom. 5.1 2. Without true Saving Justifying Faith no Peace with God and without Peace and Reconciliation with God no ground for Joy So then if we would know whether our Joy be right we must inquire after the truth of our Faith Certainly a temporary Faith can have no betrer than a temporary Joy following it 4. Spiritual Joy ordinarily is not attained without self-probation without self-searching Gal. 6.4 Let every Man prove his own work and then shall he have rejoycing in himself The ground of an Hypocrites Joy ordinarily is out of himself in the good opinion and esteem of others But says the Apostle 2 Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is this the testimony of our Conscience And this we see is the Scripture-way and method for attaining Spiritual Joy to commune with our own Hearts to ask our own Consciences seriously what evidence they can give that we are in a state of Grace that our works are done in Sincerity And when Conscience can give testimony of our Godly Sincerity and Integrity then indeed we have good ground to rejoyce But therefore such as are great strangers to themselves and fear examining their Consciences strictly lest
That Joy which is born down with any Affliction that comes is not like the Joy of the Spirit which is called strong Consolation Heb. 6.18 15. Spiritual Joy is not swelling But is accompanied with an humble frame of Spirit Heart-humbling Grace is a necessary preparative unto and a necessary preservative of Heart-raising and elevating Joys Isa 29.19 The meek or humble shall encrease their Joy in the Lord and the poor among Men shall rejoyce in the holy One of Israel Such as are lifted up in themselves are not so fit for Comfort as for a Casting down And one way or other they shall have a Casting down If not in Mercy and by Grace then by force and in fury When a Child of God is growing proud of his Comforts and Enlargements he is in the ready way to lose them As I may say Humility is the Save-all and Prolonger and Pride the Extinguisher If you can keep your Joy and Pride together it is more than a Child of God can do 16. Spiritual Joy is not intoxicating but a sober serious thing joyned with an holy Fear Care and Watchfulness Psal 2.11 Rejoyce with trembling When Daniel heard from God that he was a Man greatly beloved yet he stood trembling Dan. 10.11 That is not right rejoycing in the Lord which excludes Reverence towards him And when he speaks Peace yet he expects better carriage of his People than that they should grow secure and careless He expects that they should have a care not to return again to Folly Psal 85.8 Where he says Be of good chear thy Sins are forgiven thee He withal says Sin no more stand in in awe and sin not Grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of Redemption And by sinning presumptuously the Lord would be provoked to hide his Face again to write bitter things against us Thus new storms of Trouble would be raised 17. Spiritual Joy would not put one upon a contemptuous carriage towards others But rather make him full of Charity and pity towards those that want and are strangers to what he enjoys Though a stranger doth not intermeddle with his Joy Prov. 14.10 yet he cannot but desire that others were partakers of the like Psal 51.12 13. Restore unto me the joy of thy Salvation Then will I teach Transgressors thy Wayes I shall encourage Sinners to come in by thy merciful dealing with me who have been so great a Sinner As Christ chargeth Peter when he was converted and restored to strengthen his Brethren Luke 22.32 And the Apostle Paul lays this down as one end the Father of Mercies hath in comforting us that we may be able to comfort them which are in any Trouble by the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God 2 Cor. 1.4 And if we have not a tender pity towards poor troubled Spirits and such as have broken Bones if we have no Wine and Oyl to pour into wounded Consciences if we are not at all concerned for others under Spiritual Troubles we may justly fear our Joy is not right 18. Spiritual Joy will set Souls more on longing after the Joys of Heaven That Joy which comes from Heaven will be raising the Heart up towards Heaven Souls that have tasted that the Lord is Gracious will thirst after more and long for the fulness of Joy in his Presence will breath after the full Enjoyment of God in Glory 2 Cor. 5.5 8. God hath given unto us the earnest of the Spirit Therefore We are willing rather to be absent from the Body and to be present with the Lord. If we have found any consolation in Christ beholding him through the Lattices how shall we desire to see the King in his Beauty and to see him Face to Face Spiritual Joy will make Souls more spiritually-minded will very much take off the affections from things on the Earth and set them upon things Above A BRIEF REHEARSAL 2 COR. 13.5 Examine your selves whether you be in the Faith prove your own selves TO write the same things here shall not be grievous to me if for you it may be safe and profitable To try and examine your selves whether you are in a state of Grace you cannot deny to be your Duty And to direct and assist you therein is the principal design of this Treatise Now of the things which we have spoken this is the Sum. 1. What Knowledg have you And of what kind 1. Have you more than a natural Knowledg of God 2. More than a notional Knowledg Are you come to a discerning of Spiritual things and to a Spiritual discerning of them Have you other thoughts of Sin and other thoughts of God and Christ and Holiness and Heaven than formerly you had 3. How come you by your Knowledg Whether in an humble diligent waiting on God in the use of the means he hath appointed 4. Have you not a bare Knowledg but are you also come to the acknowledgment of the Truth Not only a Verbal but a Real acknowledgment To know the certainty of those things wherein you have been instructed 5. Does your Knowledg reach your Hearts Has it a powerful influence on your Wills Are you not only resolved in your Judgments but also in your Choice 6. Is your Knowledg not only informing but reforming and renewing 7. Is your Knowledg humbling Or does it puff up 8. Is it nourishing as Food and Fuel to Grace and Spiritual Affections 9. Is it Fructifying Is it reduced to Practice 10. Is it Communicative 11. Is it growing And especially are you thriving 1. In the sound and experimental Knowledg of God and Christ 2. And getting more inward acquaintance with your own selves and the state of your own Souls 3. And in learning more of your own Duty and of the Counsel of God concerning you 2. Try your Faith And what can you say to those three principal acts of Faith scil Assent Consent and Affiance 1. How do you assent to Divine Truth 1. Do you assent Impartially 2. Do you assent freely Do you yield willingly to Divine Truth as it is discovered to you 3. Do you assent really Have you more than an half-perswasion of the Truth 4. Have you an holding Assent to the Truth 5. Is it a Practical Assent Does it draw on Consent 2. How do you consent to God's Terms 1. Do you consent entirely not partially 2. Do you consent deliberately 3. Do you consent heartily unfeignedly 4. Do you consent firmly and resolvedly 3. What trust and affiance have you in God and Christ I ask not what Assurance you have Yet is your Dependence on God in Christ And 1. Is it such as is accompanied with Self-distrust and Self-despair 2. And with an hearty acceptance of Christ and sincere subjection to him 3. And with a dependence on the Lord for Temporal Mercies and Deliverance as he sees fit for you Further Do those Scripture-notes given of Faith agree to you 1. Is Christ precious to you