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A20756 The conflict betvveene the flesh and the spirit. Or the last part of The Christian warfare wherein is described the nature of these combatants, the malice and power of the flesh and fleshly lusts, with the meanes whereby we may subdue and ouercome them. By Iohn Dovvname Batchelar in Diuinitie, and preacher of Gods Word.; Christian warfare. Part 4 Downame, John, d. 1652. 1618 (1618) STC 7139; ESTC S110219 333,184 430

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to vnderstand by Spirit in the following discourse The spirit then whereof we intreat is the new man or the regenerate part of a Christian which is nothing else but a created qualitie of wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse whereby we are in the whole man renewed vnto Gods image which continually fighteth against and in the end ouercommeth the flesh with all the lusts thereof And Ephes 4. 24. Col. 3. 10. this is the other champion in the spirituall combate which also is described vnto vs in the Scriptures by diuers names that wee might the better conceiue of the nature thereof For first it is called the Spirit both to note the cause and author of it which is the Spirit of God and to teach vs Ioh. 3. 6. Rom. 7. 6. that it is of a simple pure and immortall nature and most opposite to that which is carnall earthly and sensuall It is called the new man in opposition to the old Adam and that corruption of nature which was deriued immediately from Ephes 4. 22. Col. 3. 10. him and to point out the difference betweene the flesh and the spirit in respect of their causes for the cause of the flesh was the old man our first parent Adam from whom it was propagated the cause of the other was the new man or second Adam Christ Iesus who by his Spirit hath regenerated 2 Cor. 2. 15. and begotten vs vnto God making vs to become new creatures renewed according to the image of God It is called the spirituall man both to point out the cause from which it hath it being euen the Spirit of God which regenerateth Gal. 6. 1. and sanctifieth vs and also in respect that it selfe is the cause of many spirituall actions and is wholly taken vp and exercised about spirituall and diuine obiects aboue all things seeking to bee inriched with Gods sauing graces and to haue sure title and iust claime to the Kingdome of heauen which is the inheritance of the blessed Angels and holy spirits And finally to put a difference betweene him who is led by the spirit and him who is meerely natural and worldly the one resembling and imitating the old Adam who was from the earth earthly the other the second Adam who was from heauen heauenly the one led by the sense and seeking onely things sensuall and carnall the other soaring aloft and minding those things which are diuine and spirituall It is called the a Ioh. 3. ● 1 Pet. 1. 23. regenerate man to note that wee haue it not by naturall propagation but by spirituall regeneration and new birth wherby being begotten by the word and spirit wee are borne vnto God It is called the inner man and the c 1 Pet. 3. 4. hidden man of the heart because it swayeth ruleth principally in the soule mind and b Rom. 7. 22. Eph. 3. 16. heart inlightning the vnderstanding sanctifying the will and affections and so making them conformable to the word and will of God and cannot be discerned outwardly by the sense but only when it sheweth it selfe in the effects and fruits thereof It is called a d 2 Cor. 5. 17. Gal. 6. 15. new creature because it is no relique or remainder of that image of God according to which we were at the first created but a new work of Gods holy spirit by his sole omnipotent power made of nothing and not of any praeexistent matter which it found in vs. Finally it is called the law of the spirit and the law of the e Rom. 8. 2. 7. 23. minde because it is ingrauen and written in our hearts ruling and gouerning vs directing and inclining vs both in our soules and bodies vnto all holy obedience f Rom. 8. 1. 14. and inciting vs to the performance of all Christian duties wherein this lawe of the Spirit differeth from the lawes of men for although it bee the intention of lawgiuers to make men good yet their lawes doe this onely thus far forth as they giue notice vnto them what they ought to doe and leaue vndone but the holy spirit dwelling in vs doth not onely by inlightning our vnderstanding teach vs what is our dutie but also inclineth our hearts and affections vnto obedience causing vs to put in practise the things we know And it is called the Law of the spirit of life For as the naturall spirit or soule is the cause of our naturall life so Gods holy spirit is the cause of the life of Grace according to the saying of our Sauiour It is the spirit which quickneth and the words which I speake vnto Iohn 6. 63. you are spirit and life The which spirit of life is originally in our Sauiour Christ and from him deriued vnto vs who are vnited vnto him and to no other For as the naturall spirit extendeth vnto no member which hath not connexion with the head so this holy spirit of life is deriued vnto none who is not ioyned in communion with Christ our head according to that 1. Ioh. 4. 13. Hereby wee know that 1. Ioh. 4. 13. we dwell in him and he in vs because hee hath giuen vs of his spirit §. Sect. 3. That this combate is not maintained betweene bare qualities onely but as they are backed by the holy spirit and Sathan the wicked spirit And thus haue I shewed what the flesh and the spirit are which are the combatants in this spirituall Warfare the one being that naturall corruption and carnall concupiscence in which wee are conceiued and borne the other a created qualitie of holinesse whereby we are renewed vnto Gods image which through the sinne of Adam was defaced in him and his posteritie and is continually preserued supported and strengthned by the Spirit of God dwelling in vs from which also it had first ●t being Neither are we so to vnderstand it as though this combate were onely maintained by bare and naked qualities of renewed puritie and old corruption but that they are also backed and vpheld by those spirits which are the causes and the authors of them namely the holy Spirit of God and the impure and wicked spirit Sathan the author of all sinne and wickednesse For whilest men remaine in the state of infidelitie the strong man Sathan keepeth possession and dwelleth in them though not after a grosse and sensible manner as in demoniacks yet inuisibly and spiritually ruling and reigning in them and as the Apostle speaketh holding them captiue to doe his will In which his regiment and gouernement hee imployeth the 2. Tim. 2. 26. flesh and our carnal concupiscence as his deputie and chiefe instrument to leade sinfull men into all wickednesse the which he continually animateth inrageth and strengthneth vnto all euill But when a stronger then hee commeth euen the good spirit of God he casteth him out and taking possession dwelleth reigneth and ruleth in our soules and bodie creating in vs that qualitie of holinesse and righteousnesse
we may not slip nor slide or being fallen that we may speedily rise againe by vnfained repentance nor yet let vs thinke any paines too much that wee may shake off this waight of corruption and this sinne that doeth so easily beset vs that wee may runne with patience the race that is set before vs. To which end let vs first consider that if we will Heb. 12. 1. take this paines we shall in the ende be assured of victory the which may well put courage into vs and make vs hold out in this conflict for if the flesh is not wearied in this fight after many wounds and foyles though in the ende it be sure of a shamefull ouerthrowe much lesse let vs faint who are assured in the ende to obtaine a ioyfull victory Secondly 1 Cor. 15. 58. let vs meditate of the riches of the crown of the gloriousnesse of the triumph which we shall enioy after we haue suffred a litle while the paines of this spirituall warfare and when vve are vveary in running the Christian race let vs comfort and refresh our selues by hauing continually in Heb. 12. 2. our eye the goale and garland imitating and looking vnto Iesus the authour and finisher of our faith who for the ioy that was set before him despised all the toyle and trouble which hee found in the way And finally let vs being weake and faint in our selues pray continually vnto God for the assistance of his holy spirit to strengthen vs in this conflict and to renew and repaire our wearied fainting and decayed graces that so receiuing new life vigour and strength from him we may thereby be enabled to hold out vnto the ende let vs when wee are tyred craue this holy annoynting which will so supple and soften our stiffe ioints and weary limmes that we shall be able to continue in the Christian race till being come to the goale we shall obtaine the garland Neither let this discourage vs that the more sharpely we deale with the flesh the more it is inraged for it is but like the fury of an enemy who hath receiued a mortall wound vvhich if for the present it bee resisted the blaze of the choller quickly goeth out and fainting in his strength hee will fall at our feete it is but like the reluctation and resistance of a base minded slaue vvho by a fewe and small stripes is so inraged that he is ready to catch his maister by the throate but if he bee throughly hampred and soundly beaten hee vvill fall downe at his feete and beare what stripes he pleaseth to giue him without resistance And therefore let vs make this vse of the rage of the flesh to be moued thereby to vnite our forces and redouble our blowes and then though it make neuer so many gallant brauadoes it will quickly yeelde and we shall be sure of an happy victory THE SECOND BOOKE OF THE CHRISTIAN WARFARE BETWEENE THE FLESH AND THE SPIRIT INTRE Ating of the conflict it selfe and of the meanes whereby we may get the victory CHAP. I. That there is a combate in euery true Christian betweene the Flesh and the Spirit § Sect 1. Testimonies of scripture to proue that there is this conflict in euerie man that is regenerate NOw hauing shewed the nature of our enemie how daungerous he is and how wee may bee armed and prepared to withstand his assaults and obtaine the victory we are to intreate of the combate and conflict it selfe And first we will shew that there is in the faithfull such a combate and conflict indeede and trueth although worldly and carnall men who neuer found it in themselues are ready to thinke it to bee but a meere conceipt The which will appeare by plaine testimonies of Scripture for the Apostle telleth vs that the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and that these are contrary the one to the other so that we cannot doe the things we would Where by flesh and spirit as I haue proued we cannot vnderstand the body and soule but the part Gal. 5. 17. regenerate and vnregenerate the corruption of nature and the qualitie of holinesse in euery faculty and power of them both So in his owne example hee sheweth the practique and experience of this trueth in the seauenth chapter of the Romaines for he professeth that he could not doe the good hee Rom. 7. 19. 22. 23. would nor leaue vndone the euill hee would not that he was delighted in the lawe of God in the inner man but at the same time found another lawe in his members rebelling and making warre against the lawe of his minde and bringing him into captiuitie to the lawe of sinne which was in his members and plainly saith that when he was thus led captiue vnto sinne it was no more he that did it but the sinne that is the sinnefull corruption that dwelled in him § Sect 2. That the Apostle in the seuenth of the Romans speaketh of this conflict in himself as he was regenerate Now that the Apostle did not speake this of himselfe as he was vnregenerate as some would haue it nor as he was vnder the lawe as others would haue it in his state of humiliation and preparation to his conuersion and so consequently not of the conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit but betweene the conscience and the corrupt will it may easily appeare by the Scripture it selfe for the Apostle doeth not write in the preterperfect-tense what hee had Arminius in Rom. 7. beene in time past but in the present-tense as his state was when he wrote this Epistle And besides the things which he speaketh of himselfe doe plainely euince this which cannot be truely attributed to a man vnregenerate or vnder the lawe and onely in his preparation to his regeneration but are proper vnto them who are conuerted and in part sanctified For first hee alloweth not the euill hee doeth and consenteth vnto the lawe that it vvas good and therfore his conscience and iudgement vvere in part inlightened and rectified hee willeth the good he did not and the euill which he did that hee nilleth and therefore his vvill vvas in part regenerate he hateth the euill he doeth and delighteth in the lawe of God after the inner man and therefore his affections vvere in part sanctified hee did not the euill which was committed but sinne that dwelled in him and there is a sore conflict betweene the lawe of his minde and of his members which was nothing else but the combate betweene the flesh and the spirit and therefore in respect of his whole man he was in part regenerate Finally he desireth earnestly to bee deliuered from the bondage of corruption and professeth that with his minde hee serued the lawe of God though his flesh serued the lawe of sinne and therefore he was not the slaue of sinne and Sathan as all are who are vnregenerate and vnder the lawe but the
of his regeneration fighteth against the flesh the world and the diuel without any pressing by the conscience or inticement and enforcing by the terrours of the lawe denouncing punishment if hee goe not on this Warfare onely out of his loue and obedience towards God and his owns inclination carying him against these enemies as it were by a naturall antipathy and inward contrariety as the fire striueth against the water health against sickenesse or life against death § Sect. 7. The fourth difference is in their contrarie effectes The fourth difference betweene the combate of the spirit and the flesh in the regenerate and betweene the reason and will the conscience and affections in the vnregenerate is in their contrary effects for by the conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit our faith is confirmed in the assurance of our regeneration seeing the spirit of God which is one of the combattants dwelleth in vs of Gods loue and fauour seeing hee hath chosen vs for his souldiars to fight his battailes and of our owne saluation seeing Gods spirit fighting in and for vs we are assured of victory for who can withstand his power or resist his will and of the crowne of victory euerlasting glory promised by trueth it selfe to all those who ouercome But contrariwise from the conflict of cōscience in the vnregenerate where in oftentimes the worser part preuaileth ariseth doubting and incredulity terrours feares and vtter despaire in the apprehension of Gods wrath and those dreadfull punishments which sinne hath deserued Secondly from the combate of the flesh and spirit vnsained repentance is begunne or renewed and encreased in those who are regenerate for there is a change in them principally in their wils hearts and affection whereby in all things they oppose the flesh hating that which it loueth and louing that which it hateth willing what it nilleth and nilling that which it willeth vpon which followeth the purifying of the heart and the purging of it from all sinfull corruptions the hating and forsaking of all sinne and a hearty desire and earnest endeauour to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnes of life and not onely a reformation in part but totall obedience in all our affections and actions in the renouncing of all sin and the embracing of al good duties in the whole course of our liues But there is no such change following the conflict betweene the conscience and affections reason and will onely there may bee some pange of sorrowe and shedding of teares caused not by the loue of God or hatred of sinne but by the apprehension and expectation of deserued punishments There may be also some confession and acknowledgement of sinne whilest they are vpon the racke of conscience and are terrified with the feare and apprehension or pinched with the present sense and smart of punishment and some promise or it may be purposes of leauing and forsaking their wicked courses as wee see in the example of Pharaob who whilest the hand of God was vpon himselfe and his people confessed his sinne and promised amendment And finally they may out of this serude feare leaue the most of their sinnes and outwardly reforme themselues and conforme their practise in many things to Mark 6. 20. such obedience and to the performance of so many good duties that they may thinke themselues and perswade others that they are notable conuerts as we may see in the example of Herod and yet for all this there is in them no sound repentance no change of nature no purging and remouing but onely a temporary restraining of their corruptions wrought in them not by grace and the spirit but by other corruptions of a different nature namely seruile feare and terrour of conscience As hereby it plainely appeareth in that when as they are taken from the racke and secured ●n their conceipt from the feeling of further punishment they returne againe to their wicked courses and become more obdurate and rebellious then they were before or if there is any shewe of some amendment yet it is not a through reformation or a purging of the heart from all the filth of sinne such as followeth the conflict of the spirit and the flesh but a reducing of the vnregenerate man from extreamitie to some medioctitie from being a Publican and notorious sinner to be a Pharisee Hypocrite or at the best a meere ciuill man conformable to the politique lawes in the state and no opposer to outward discipline and order in the Church And this also is the worke of naturall reason which perswadeth them to this information for worldly respects whereas the other is the worke of the spirit which in loue and obedience to God beginneth and continueth this amendment in them the fruite and benefite whereof redoundeth chiefely to the preseruation of humaine societie the good of common wealthes in the maintayning of externall discipline which could not stand against the rage and fury of tumultuous passions and affections were it not that their strength is abated their violence restrained by the conflict of conscience whereas the fruits of the combate betweene the spirit the flesh are much better namely the aduancement of Gods glory by our worshipping seruing him in spirit truth the strengthening increasing of our faith the inward purging and purifying of the heart and conscience from the hidden and secrete corruption of all sinne humiliation in this life and glorification in the life to come for all that thus fight shall surely ouercome and receiue for th●● reward the crown of victory euerlasting blessednes Thirdly the warre betweene the spirit and the flesh causeth vnto vs the most secure peace euen peace with God when as be comming his souldia●s we fight vnder his standard against his and out enemies peace betweene the faculties of our soules when as the inferiour faculties are in quiet subiection to the superiour the affections harkening vnto and obeying the conscrence the will yeelding voluntary obedience to reason as Gods viceroy and all to God as their supreame soueraigne It bringeth also with it vnspeakeable comfort spirituall reioycing and ioy in the holy Ghost because it assureth vs of Gods loue and gracious assistance of a full and finall victory ouer all our enemies and the crowne of victory euerlasting glory but the conflict of conscience in the vnregenerate causeth continuall garboyles hot dissension tyranny in the superiour faculties ruling onely by seruile feare and rebellion in the inferiour when as they haue power to breake the yoke of gouernment horrour and anguish of minde disconsolate sorrow and hellish dispaire when the affrighted conscience beareth sway or the mad and tumultuous ioy of frantique men when the wilde affections and disordred passions by gagging and silencing the conscience doe get the vpper hand the which oftentimes lasting no longer then a blaze of thornes doth leaue behinde it redoubled griefe and desperate despaire Finally the conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh maketh the
man regenerate with more care and diligence to obserue his owne heart and more conscionably to watch ouer all his wayes that hee giue no aduantage to his sinfull flesh It causeth him studiously to affect and earnestly to endeauour in the vse of all good meanes whereby the spirituall part may be more and more strengthened and the flesh with all carnall lustes may be mortified and subdued that so it may not rebell and gather strength to preuaile against it as wee see in the example of the Apostle But the conflict of conscience 1 Cor. 9. 27 is commonly ioyned with secure retchlesnesse whereby the vnregenerate man doeth car lesly neglct the causes and occasions of this bitter conflict vntill he be ouertaken with them and onely auoideth the punishment and not the sinne which causeth it o● the sinne onely when hee is sensible of the punishment it worketh in him no care to mortifie his sinnes vnlesse it bee onely in outward fact and that alone for seruile feare of paine and smart and not in loue and obedience vnto God yea still he loueth them as his dearest darlings and when he dare not giue them place and entertainment in his workes and actions as it were in his outward roomes he secretly lodgeth them in his heart as in his secrete closet or priuate chamber It doeth not make him vse any meanes to subdue his flesh and mortifie his corruptions yea rather it bringeth him into a sluggish despaire which maketh him to cry out that there is a Lyon in the streete to starue his soule because hee will not take paines to plucke his hand out of his bosome and put it to his mouth to stop his eares against all good counsel and to harden his heart against all instruction 〈…〉 exhortation whereby he is taught the way wh 〈…〉 may come out of his misery or is incited and stirred vp to walke in it complaining that all these meanes are vnto him vselesse and bootelesse seeing he is already irrecouerably plunged into a desperate condition Or else if he vse at all the meanes of his recouery it is onely inhypocrisie not with a desire to profite by them but onely to stop the cry of conscience vpon this perswasion that God will bee contented with this formall seruice notwithstanding that he still goeth on in his wicked courses § Sect. 8. The first difference is in the subiect matter or occasion The fift difference is the subiect matter or occasion about which these conflicts are made by these diuers enemies For the Flesh and the Spirit doe in all things oppose against one another the spirit the flesh in all that is euill the flesh the spirit in all that is good For there is no good action which the spirituall man performeth but the flesh interposing hindreth and interrupteth him as in prayer hearing the word receiuing the sacrament sanctification of the Sabbath the workes of iustice and mercie temperance and sobrietie sometime wholly withdrawing him from them and sometime distracting and disabling him in them which maketh him to complaine with the Apostle To will is present with me but I finde not how to performe that which is good For I finde a law that when I would doe good euill is present Rom. 7. 18 21. with me the which is to be vnderstood not only of particular actions but also of our whole life and conuersatition And contrariwise there is no euill knowne to the spirit and done by the flesh wherein the spirit doth not crosse and oppose it no not those sinnes which by carnall men are thought sleight and veniall either hindering and restraining the regenerate man that hee may not fall into it or mouing him being fallen to rise againe by vnfained repentance But the conflict of conscience extendeth not to the whole course of life but onely to some particular actions and yeelding vnto the will and affections in lesser common and ordinarie sinnes it onely con 〈…〉 h with them about the committing of such sinnes as 〈…〉 ●nd outragious and especially those which are against the second Table not so much regarding or restraining them in those which are committed against the first § Sect. 9 The last differēce is in respect of time The last difference betweene these diuers conflicts is in respect of time for the combate betweene the flesh and the spirit beginneth at the time of our regeneration conuersion and not before and being begunne it is constant and continuall to the very end of our liues though it may haue some intermissions in respect of our sense and feeling as when the spirit through the thicke vapour of corruption raised by the flesh is cast into a slumber or by some mighty blowe wounding the conscience astonishing the senses and hardening the heart is as it were cast into a sowne and hath no signes of spirituall life remaining in it out of which it alwayes recouereth being excited and reenlyued by Gods quickening spirit But the combate of conscience doth begin oftentimes long before conuersion euen as soone as we haue the vse of reason and vnderstanding receiuing common notions from the light of nature but it is neither constant and continuall but onely by panges and fits vpon the occasion of some grieuous sinne already acted or about to be committed nor yet alwayes permanent and lasting to the end of life seeing oftentimes by customable sinning the conscience becommeth so deadded and seared that it taketh no notice of sin nor opposeth against the will and affections but as it were casteth the reines in their necke neuer at all checking or curbing them in but suffering them to runne on in an headlong course vnto the committing of all manner of wickednesse CHAP. IX That the Conflict of Conscience is not in all that are vnregenerate nor in them onely § Sect. 1 That no comfort arisetth out of the conflict of conscience AND thus we haue shewed the many differences betweene the combate of the flesh and spirit and of the conscience and affections Whereby it is plaine that as the former giueth vnto vs comfortable assurance of our regeneration adoption and saluation so there can no such hope arise from the other For as we see it may be and most commonly is in the wicked and reprobate it hath no reference to God nor springeth from faith loue filiall feare and obedience but from carnall selfe-loue and seruile feare of iudgement and punishment not from any dislike of sinne the which the wicked in the hottest of this conflict doe loue with all their heart but onely because they desire to auoide the punishment like vnto children whose teeth water when they se● l●●●rous meates but yet dare not touch them for feare of the rod. An example whereof we haue in Balaam who with all is heart would haue sinned in cursing Gods people that hee might haue gained the reward of vnrighteousnesse but yet durst not doe it for Balaacs kingdome because he was affraid to
seruice of sinne we are now become the seruants of righteousnesse setting before vs the whole Law of God as the rule and square of our liues and all our actions and conforming our selues in obedience vnto al and euery of the commandements both in the hating and forsaking of whatsoeuer it forbiddeth and condemneth and in the imbracing and practising of whatsoeuer it commendeth and inioyeth § Sect. 7 The differences betweene the quickning of the spirit in the regenerate that which seemeth to be in the vnregenerate But here let vs take heede that wee doe not deceiue our selues for though those onely in whom the spirit dwelleth are thus truely quickened yet there may be a shew of it in them that are vnregenerate as wee may see in the example of the Angell of the Church of Sardis who had a name that he liued and yet was dead and of the Church of Laodicca who thought himselfe quick sighted and rich in all spirituall grace when as he was wretched and miserable poore blinde and naked And though all new and true obedience Apoc. 3. 1 17. is the fruit of the spirit yet there is in the vnregenerate some resemblance and shewes of it though it be not in them in truth euen as there are many things done by beasts which a man would thinke did proceede from reason and vnderstanding where as in truth they are by instinct of nature they propounding no ends vnto themselues in all their actions but are directed vnto them by him that made them and by phantasie and imagination reasons Ape which inableth them to produce such strange effects that diuers being hereby deceiued haue thought them reasonable Now that we may not be thus deceiued let vs remember that hee who is led by the spirit performeth simple obedience vnto the law of God because hee requireth it but the vnregenerate in dissimulation for worldly and sinister respects hee yeeldeth totall obedience vnto the whole law of God and with all the powers and faculties of his soule and body but the other onely in the outward man and that vnto some commandements alone making no conscience of the rest Hee is constant in his obedience because the cause therof Gods loue towards him and his loue towards God is constant and permanent and he walketh daily continually in Gods law as in his way but the other is obedient by fits onely going forward and backward as he is spurred on or curbed and rayned in by worldly respects which being mutable and vnconstant doe make his obedience like vnto them In which respect the motion of the vnregenerate in the waies of godlinesse may be said to be dead and accidentall incited and stirred on by outward causes as the horse which would not goe vnlesse he were compelled by the spurre or like the wheeles in the clocke which no longer moue then the waights and poyzes doe hang vpon it But the motion of the regenerate is liuely and naturall proceeding from an inward cause euen the spirit of God dwelling in vs which quickneth vs as it were with a new soule of life and power whereby wee are inabled to goe on in the wayes of godlinesse euen as a man naturally moueth and walketh by vertue of his soule 2 Pet. 1. 4. which quickeneth and strengtheneth his body to the performance of those actions So that in a true Christian there is the right perpetuall motion whose cause is not outward but in himselfe making him constantly and continually to goe on in his holy way as kindely and naturally by vertue of that godly nature whereof hee is made partaker by the holy spirit euen as the fountaine springs and the riuer runnes And how soeuer there may bee both in the regenerate and the vnregenerate an heate of loue and zeale which is the cause of all their motion and actions yet there is great difference betweene them for the one is like the heate in a bathe whose cause is naturall and in it selfe and is therefore constant and continuall and not abated and lessened but rather intended and increased by the outward cold of crosses and afflictions but the other like the heate of ordinarie hot water which being naturally colde and onely hot by accident and heate of the fire is not constant but though for a time it may be much more hot then the other yet the cause being not in it selfe but outward and accidentall when this is put out the heate continueth not but againe returneth to more then wonted coldnesse For so the heate in the vnregenerate being onely caused by outward prosperitie and temporall benefits they seeme feruent in their loue towards God whilest these continue but if this fuell which nourisheth it be taken away and they be compassed about with afflictions and persecutions they become more colde in their loue and zeale towards God then euer they were before Or else they may be resembled to a liuing body and dead carkase the one whereof is hot by an inward cause euen the radicall and vitall heate which warmeth the bloud in all the veines but the other howsoeuer it may bee made hote by the heate of the fire and by much friction and rubbing yet it continueth not any longer then these meanes are applyed because it hath no inward cause but they beeing remoued it becommeth againe as cold as a stone or the earth and clay whereof it is made § Sect. 8. The former operations of the sanctifiing spirit signified by diuers metaphors as first wine and oyle And these are the effects respecting our repentance which the spirit worketh in vs the which are also implyed by diuers metaphors or similitudes by which in the Scriptures it is represented vnto vs. For it is likened vnto winde because like it yea much aboue it it is mighty and powerfull to cast downe all that standeth in the way as proude reason stubborne will and rebellious affections and to make the strong okes and lofty cedars equall with the lowest shrubes Secondly in respect of its secrete operation and the vnknowne liberty which it taketh in working where it listeth Thirdly because the more it bloweth vpon Ioh. 3. 8. 2 Cor. 10. 5. vs the more it causeth vs to burne and flame out in the feruent zeale of Gods glory And fourthly because it hath a cleansing and purifying vertue wherby it purgeth vs from the contagion and corruption of our sinnes euen as the winde purgeth the wheate and driueth away the chaffe 2 Cor. 1. 21. cleanseth the ayer and purifieth it from all hurtfull and dangerous infection Secondly it is likened to oyle and the operation thereof to outward annointing in respect of that suppling softning vertue which it hath whereby it mollifyeth our hard and stony hearts and makes them to become flesh tender and pliable to Gods will and word and also because our powers and parts being spiritually annointed 1 Ioh. 2. 20. with this holy oyle they are made strong and
breake then bowe and incline to any good the spirit of God maketh it to melt like the heart of Iosiah and so suppleth and softneth ●t that it becommeth flexible to Gods wil and fit to receiue any impression which he is pleased to stampe vpon it or any forme which hee will frame it vnto as if it were no more yron but now become clay or waxe So whereas he is naturally of a more then earthy coldnes Eph. 2. 1 Psal 34. 38. and like yron which maketh other things colde with the very touch thereof Gods spirit so heateth and inflameth him with feruent loue and ardent zeale that hee hath not onely liuely heate in himselfe but euen like spirituall fire he communicateth his heate and warmth of holinesse and righteousnesse to all that are neare vnto him making them which were colde and dull hot and zealously feruent in all Christian and holy duties Finally whereas like yron hee is naturally so lumpish and heauy that hee is wholly fixed and fastened to the earth minding onely worldly things and can no more mount vp aloft in holy heauenly meditations then yron of it selfe can ascend into the ayre or if by some outward force his thoughts be raised vp to minde those things which are aboue no sooner is the strength of the outward agent spent but presently like an yron bullet it falleth downe againe and euen presseth into the earth with more then wonted waight violence Contrariwise when as his earthy massinesse is attenuated with the fire of Gods spirit hee not onely becommeth more light but being throughly heated in this holy forge he sendeth vp the sparkes of spirituall meditations and now forgetting his olde earthy nature hee doeth no longer lye groueling on the ground minding onely earthly things but being risen with Christ he seeketh not things beneath but those things that are aboue and euen whilest his body is on earth Col. 3. 2. Phil. 3. 20 his conuersation is in heauen and though hee cannot corporally ascend yet he continually sendeth vp the therward the sparkles of holy heauenly thoughts and euen taketh his chiefe comfort and delight to spend his spirits in diuine contemplation Lastly as fire by the warmth and heate thereof refresheth and cheareth those creatures which are frozen and benummed with colde and communicateth vnto them the operations of life strength and nimblenes So this holy fire of the spirit giueth spirituall life and quickening vnto vs who are dead in trespasses and sinnes and by the diuine heate of Gods loue it warmeth cheareth and refresheth our icy and benummed hearts inflameth them with a feruent zeale of his glory and an ardent loue towards him who hath so loued vs and also to our neighbours for his sake whereby it commeth to passe that we who were frozen in the dregges of our sinnes and so weake and stiffe that we were not able to stirre a limbe for the doing of any good action are now made by this vitall heate strong and actiue for all good duties So our Sauiour saith that it is the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing and the Apostle telleth vs that the spirit giueth life And Ioh. 6. 63. 2 Cor. 3. 6. Rom. 8. 2. 10. therefore he calleth him the lawe of the spirit of life and saith that this spirit is life because of righteousnesse § Sect. 11 That we may know that the spirit dwelleth in vs by the operations signified by the former metaphors If therefore we would knowe whether the spirit of God dwell in vs or no wee must examine our owne hearts and try our selues whether there be in vs these operations and effects of the spirit which are resembled by these metaphors and similitudes as first if it haue like a mighty winde cast downe the strong holds of sinne and as it were laide flat on the ground our proude carnall reason and rebellious will subiecting them to the will of God and the rule of his word if it hath caused vs not onely to burne in loue of Gods Maiesty but euen to blaze out in the zeale of his glory and if it hath cleansed vs like pure wheate from the chaffe of our corruptions and from the light corne of humaine inuentions and vngrounded superstitions Secondly let vs consider and try our selues if like an oyle it hath suppled and softned our hard and stony hearts so as they are pliable to Gods will if by this spirituall annoyting wee be made more strong actiue and nimble to performe holy and Christian duties then euer wee haue beene in time past and finally if it haue comforted and cheared our hearts in the assurance of our reconciliation with God and remission of our sinnes filling them with spirituall ioy and hath brought peace of conscience which maketh vs to looke with a chearefull countenance euen whilest the world frowneth vpon vs. Thirdly let vs examine if like water it hath cleared the eyes of our mindes and hath giuen vnto vs a sauing feeling and experimentall knowledge of God our selues and his holy trueth if it hath cooled and refreshed vs who were scorched with the apprehension of Gods anger for our sinnes or with the heate of troubles and afflictions and hath quenched our spirituall thirst by applying vnto vs Christs righteousnesse and blood-shead as it were a fountaine of liuing waters if it hath by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death cleansed and purged vs not onely from the guilt and punishment but also from the corruption of our sinnes so as though they dwell yet they doe not raigne in our mortall bodie and lastly if it haue watered our hearts as it were dry and barraigne grounds and hath made them like a fertile soyle to bring foorth plentifull fruites of holinesse and righteousnesse Finally let vs examine and try our selues if it haue beene vnto vs a spirituall fire to giue vnto vs light who sate in darkenesse and in the shadow of death if like a fire it haue consumed the drosse and rust of our corruptions and in some measure hath refined vs and made vs vessels of grace fit for Gods vse and finally if it hath warmed our colde and frozen hearts with the zeale of Gods glory and with the loue of him and our neighbours so as wee who were stiffe and benummed are become strong liuely and actiue in performing all holy and Christian duties which wee owe vnto them And if wee finde these effects and operations in vs then may wee be assured that the spirit of God which is the cause and authour of them dwelleth in vs though they be not in vs in perfection if they be in sincerity and truth but if vpon trial we finde that they are altogether wanting then haue we not the spirit of God which can no more be seuered from these effects and signes of it then light from the Sunne or those effects before spoken of from the wind and oyle the water and the fire § Sect 12.
§ Sect 5. The 5 meanes is to preserue our selues pure and cleane from all pellution The fifth meanes to nourish and cherish the spirit in vs is to preserue our bodies and soules which are his temples in their cleannesse and puritie from all pollution of sinne and wickednesse for as a good ayre and sweete habitation doeth much refresh and strengthen our naturall and vitall spirits and preserue our bodies in health so no lesse doeth it comfort our comforter and cheare and cherish the spirit of God in vs if wee prouide for him a holesome and pleasant lodging cleansed and purged from all noisome filth of sinfull impuritie and sweetned and adorned with the incense and odours of our prayers and the flowers and fruits of our good workes and holy obedience § Sect. 6 The 6 meanes is to keepe the spirit and the graces thereof in continuall exercise The sixth meanes to preserue and strenthen the spirit and to increase in vs the graces and giftes thereof is to keepe them in continuall exercise and to cause these habits to shew themselues in their functions and operations For no more necessary is breathing and mouing for the preseruing the life of our bodies then fruitfull working and holy walking in all Christian duties is for the preseruing and cherishing the life of the spirit according to that of the Apostle If wee liue in the spirit let vs also walke in the Gal. 5. 25. spirit And as in naturall things the causes are preserued by producing their effects and habits and qualities confirmed and strengthened by their functions and operations so is it also in the spirit and spirituall graces We finde by experience that the sight is bettred by seeing and much weakened when it is depriued of fit obiects The habituall memory is much strengthened by the practical and made feeble and vnfaithfull when as it hath no exercise or imployment the vnderstanding becommeth more intelligent by minding and conceiuing and i● much impaired when it is not vsed the strength of the arme hand legge and the whole body is much strengthened and increased by action and exercise and decaieth and is greatly enfeebled by sloth and idlenesse And thus it is also with the spirit and spirituall graces let vs vse them and we shall haue them let these rootes of holinesse bring forth their boughes and branches their leaues of profession and their fruits of practise and they will liue and prosper spread inwardly and spring and sproute outwardly but if wee hinder them from bearing their leaues and rootes and bee still cutting and lopping of their boughes and branches they will in a while dye and perish Let this fire of the spirit haue fit vent to send out its flames of holy and righteous actions and it will still liue burne and blaze but if once wee beginne to stop this vent it will presently dye and turne to cold embers Let faith exercise it selfe in apprehending the promises in waiting for the performance in fighting against doubting and in bearing the fruits of good workes and from a graine of mustardseede it will growe to a great tree from smoking flaxe to a burning flame and from a feeble assent to a firme and full perswasion So let loue be exercised in doing and suffring for Gods sake in performing vnto him all holy seruice and Christian duties and in the workes of mercy and charitie towards our neighbours and of a litle sparke it will increase to a great fire let the shoulders of patience be inured to bearing of the Crosse and suffering afflictions in putting vp wrongs and ouercomming euill with good though they bee weake and tender at the first they will in a litle while become hard strong and so it is in all other graces by exercise they are increased by sloth and ease they are weakned and wasted And therefore Dauid no sooner thinketh of receiuing grace and strength from God then he resolueth to exercise them to the vttermost I will runne saith he the way of thy Commaundements when thou shalt inlarge my heart And againe teach me O Lord the way of thy Psal 119. 32. 33. 34. statutes and I will keepe them vnto the end Giue mee vnderstanding and I shall keepe thy lawe yea I shall obserue it with my whole heart § Sect. 7 The last meanes is frequent and feruent prayer The last principall meanes of strengthening and cherishing the spirit is earnest and effectual prayer vnto God that he will strengthen our weaknesse and quicken our dulnesse and support our faintnesse by continuall renewing his spirit in vs and sending fresh supplies of his sauing graces to re-enforce and refresh our decaied bands that by these new aides wee may be enabled to stand in the day of battell and to get the victory ouer all our spirituall enemies for it is this holy fire descended from heauen which kindleth this spirituall fire in vs whereby wee offer incense sacrifices and oblations acceptable vnto God the smoake whereof driueth away the enemies of our saluation His eternall spirit is the liuing fountaine of these cleare cristalline waters whereby our thirsty soules are refreshed in the spirituall conflict and our hands and eyes all other parts when they are wearied and tired doe receiue renewed Psal 144. 1. strength It is he that teacheth our hands to warre and our fingers to fight and giueth vnto vs full and finall victory ouer all our enemies and the crowne of victory euerlasting glory And therfore when we see the battell hot against vs 1 King 22. and ourselues weary and weake to make resistance let vs imitate the good King Iehosaphat and crie aloude vnto the Lord to succour and strengthen vs when wee see our graces spent and our spirituall strength wasted and weakened in making resistance let vs call vnto him for fresh aides and renewed strength whereby wee may bee enabled to hold o●t and ouercome § Sect. 8. The conclusion of the booke And thus haue I through Gods mighty and most mercifull assistance finished also this last part of the Christian Warfare a worke so much the more difficult because the flesh which is the enemy against whom I intend it holdeth a strong party in my selfe darkening my vnderstanding that I might not discouer its slights and subtilties malice and might nor discerne the best meanes for the defeating of its pollicies and subduing of it power The Lord make me euer truely thankefull vnto his holy Maiesty for this mercie and giue me grace alwayes to esteeme it as one of his his chiefest benefits in this life that hee hath vsed mee the weakest and vnworthiest of many hundreds of my brethren as his poore instrument in so good an imployment and stirre vp in his good time some other of his choysest and chiefest Worthies for the further perfecting of that which I in my mediocritie haue begun hitting the marke at which I haue but aymed and training exactly the Christian Souldiour in the feates of spirituall armes whom I as I was able haue but in some little measure acquainted with the knowledge of the Christian Warfare And the Lord giue his grace vnto vs all both strongest weakest that we may not onely instruct others in this spirituall art of fighting against the enemies of our saluation but that wee our selues muy put on the spirituall armour and fight continually with courage and resolution vnder the standard of the Lord of Hoasts and because we are vnskilfull and knowe not how to fight and exceeding weake and feeble in our strength and vnable to stand in the incounter and beare the brunt of the battell that hee will teach our hands or rather our hearts to warre and our fingers or rather our affections to fight and that hee will continually renew our strength and send vs dayly fresh supplyes of his spirituall and sauing graces whereby wee may be enabled vvith constancy and perseuerance to maintaine the fight vntill hauing gotten a full and finall victory wee be like conquerours crowned with glory and immortalitie the which he vouchsafe vnto vs euen for his Christs sake the Sonne of his loue and the author continuer and finisher of our saluation to whom with the blessed Father and holy Spirit be ascribed of vs and his whole Church all praise and glory power and dominion from this time forth and for euermore Amen FINIS
THE CONFLICT BETVVEENE THE FLESH and the SPIRIT OR THE LAST PART OF THE CHRISTIAN WARFARE Wherein is described the nature of these Combatants the malice and power of the Flesh and fleshly lusts with the meanes whereby we may subdue and ouercome them By IOHN DOWNAME Batchelar in Diuinitie and Preacher of Gods Word GAL. 5. 17. For the Flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the Flesh and these are contrarie the one to the other so that ye cannot doe the thing that ye would LONDON Printed by William Iones dwelling in Red-crosse streete neere Saint Gyles Church without Cripple-gate 1618. TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE SIR FRANCIS BACON KNIGHT Lord KEEPER of the Great Seale I. D. wisheth all increase of grace with true honour in this world and euerlasting happinesse in the life to come THere is no time Right Honorable for carelesse securitie when there is no place free from danger But whilest a Christian liueth in this world he is encompassed with perils walketh among snares and is beset on all sides with many mighty enemies For though hee were at peace with all visible creatures yet those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which the Apostle speaketh doe in all times and places make warre against him Without him there are many legions of wicked spirits assisted with the strong aydes of worldly enemies which beeing farre superiour vnto him in power and policie doe besiedge and beset him on euery side watching all opportunities to worke his destruction within him he harboureth many secret traitors euen innumerable fleshly lusts which if hee preuent not the danger by continuall watchfulfulnesse are euer ready to open the gates of his soule and letting in those forraigne forces to ioyne vvith them in spoiling him of those rich treasures Gods sauing graces and in making him thc miserable captiue of sinne and Sathan In which regard it becommeth all Christian Souldiours whiles they liue in the Church militant not to dreame of peace or ease but to stand alwaies in their station with vndaunted valour and vnwearied watchfulnesse and to bee armed continually with the whole armour of God that they may resist these enemies and obtaine the victory But especially this courage and care is required of Gods Ministers that they may with Timothy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Tim. 1. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vnto which is required not onely that they bee valourous in fighting the Lords battailes but also prudent and skilfull in the militarie discipline that they may bee able to teach and traine others in these feates of Armes and how to vse their valure strength and weapons for their best aduantage seeing they are called of God not to be common Souldiers but Captaines and Leaders of his holy armies The consideration and conscience of which dutie hath moued me the least and vnworthiest of this number to intreat of this Christian Warfare that for the present the weake and vnskilfull might haue some helpe and direction for the strengthening of themselues and defeating of their enemies vntill some of Gods greatest Worthies doe vndertake this taske and purtray perfectly this spirituall patterne of militarie discipline which I as I could haue rudely delineated The finishing of which worke in all the parts thereof was when I first vndertooke it in regard of my weakenesse and other imployments in the worke of my ministerie so farre in my conceipt aboue my hopes that I durst scarce aspire vnto it in my highest desires though in this kinde ambitious aboue my strength And yet now the Lord who taketh delight to manifest his power in the weakenesse of his instruments hath enabled me to finish the last part of this worke And as in the other parts to describe the Warfare betweene the Christian and his forraigne enemies the Diuell and the World with the meanes whereby hee may bee inabled to ouercome so in this the intestine warre that is in our selues betweene the Spirit the Flesh wherin if we will get the victorie we must after a sort flee and abandon our selues and if wee will kill our enemies wee must mortifie and crucifie our earthly members The which my poore labours I humbly offer to your Honours patronage not because I thinke them worthy your learned view or so perfect that they may merit approbation in your iudicious censure but that passing as tolerable in your estimate they may appeare euen commendable to weaker iudgements and like meane seruants of Honorable Lords may be more esteemed and better entertained when as they come abroad graced with your name Neither haue I offered this Discourse of Christian Warfare to your view like Phormio to Annibal as though I thought I could hereby adde any thing to your skill in this militarie discipline but onely that it might finde shelter vnder such Honourable shade against the stormes of seuerer censures knowing that the weaker the pupill is the more neede he hath of a strong Patron and Guardian Nor dare I say that hereby I desired to honour your name by commending it to posteritie as truely honourable although these paper monuments are oftentimes more durable then those which are erected of lasting Marble for what glory can my dimme candle adde to your sunshine And what increase can my mite add to your treasury And yet though the main Ocean bee neuer the fuller by the accesse of small springs and little streames notwithstanding they run into it as taking some delight to doe their homage and those who are of meanest abilitie to honour their superiours doe take some pleasure in indeauouring to doe it because hereby they manifest their will and in their greatest impotencie expresse in some sort their loue and dutie The which not onely your personall worth may challenge as due from all of my profession as excelling in those treasures which we onely acknowledge worth the coueting the vnvaluable riches of the minde in all kindes especially those chiefely precious Iewels learning and religion but also the outward exercise of these excellent endowments for the good of others by letting heretofore some streames vnualuable in their worth and vnmatchable in their kinde flowe out in common from the fountaine of your rich minde and now in place of honour and gouernment by approuing your selfe a notable pillar of Gods holy Temple in professing and vpholding his true Religion a worthy Maecenas of the Godly learned and a faithfull and vncorrupted Patron vnder his excellent Maiestie in the freee bestowing of Church-preferments vpon such as you conceiue are worthy to bee preferred The Lord inrich you more and more with all gifts and graces of his holy Spirit and make you faithfull vnto the end in the imploying of his rich talents which he hath committed so bountifully vnto you for the aduancement of his glory and good of his familie that so when you are called to giue an account of your Stewardship you may doe it with ioy hearing that blessed Euge Well done thou good and faithfull seruant
thou hast beene faithfull ouer a few things I will make thee ruler ouer many things Enter thou into the ioy of thy Lord. Your Honours in all humble seruice to be commanded IOHN DOWNAME The Contents of the First booke of this Christian Warfare betweene the spirit and the flesh CHAP. 1. Contayning an Introduction into the following discourse wherein is shewed that our spirituall enemies are many mightie and dangerous especially our owne flesh with the lusts thereof § 1 THat we are to expect no peace in this life but to fight against the enemies of our salvation § 2 That we are daily assaulted with forraigne forces the deuill and the world § 3 That our outward enemyes are not so dangerous as our owne flesh and fleshly lusts § 4 That Sathan and the world could not hurt vs were they not ayded by our owne flesh CHAP. 2. Of the flesh and the divers significations of it and what we are to vnderstand by it in the following discourse § 1 That there is in every Christian this fight betweene the spirit and the flesh § 2 Of the divers significations of the word flesh and first as it is taken for thinges materially subsisting § 3 Of the divers significations of the word flesh taken for accidents and qualities § 4 That the flesh is taken for the corruption of nature § 5 That the flesh in this discourse signifieth the vnregenerate part in a Christian CHAP. 3. What we are to vnderstand by the spirit in this discourse § 1 That the word spirit is diuersty taken in the scriptures § 2 That the spirit in this discourse signifieth the part regenerate § 3 That this combate is not maintained by bare qualities alone but as they are backed by the holy spirit and Sathan the wicked spirit § 4 The former point proued by diuers reasons § 5 That the spirit doeth not dwell in us essentially more then in other creatures § 6 That the faithfull haue speciall right even vnto the very essence of the spirit and that he dwelleth in them in respect of efficacie CHAP. IIII. Of the erroneous conceipt of the Papists who by the flesh vnderstand the body and the sensuall faculties only § 1 That the Papists propound vnto us a freind to fight against in steede of our enemy § 2 That the cheife doctors of the Papists by flesh vnderstand the body § 3 That the Papists in their purest doctrine vnderstand by the flesh our bodyes and the inferiour and sensitiue faculties onely § 4 That the practise of popish mortification plainely sheweth that by the flesh they vnderstand the body only § 5 That the Popish Doctors are to be iustly taxed for teaching this doctrine and the people for putting it in practise § 6 That our opposition against the Papists in this doctrine is very necessarie CHAP. V. That the body and sensitiue faculties only are not the flesh proued by testimonies and reasons § 1. 2 The poynt proued by testimonies of scriptures § 3 Reasons prouing that the body only is not the flesh The 1 taken from the names and the 2 from the actions and the 3 from the sins which are attributed vnto it § 4 The 4 reason because originall sin hath ouerspread the whole man § 5 The 5 reason because the body and soule are freinds and not enemies § 6 The 6 reason taken from the words of the Apost Rom. 7. 18 § 7 The 7 reason because the body is not absolutely euill as the flesh is § 8 The 8 reason because the faithfull are tempted to such sinnes as properly belonge to the vnderstanding and will CHAP. VI. Testimonies of fathers prouing that the body alone is not our enemie the fleshe § 1 The poynt proued by testimonies of Augustine Chrysostome Gregorie Hierome Basill and Theoderet § 2 That Sathan hath assaulted not only the body and affections but allso the minde and vnderstanding § 3 That no part is more corrupted than the minde and vnderstanding § 4. 5 That the soule cheifly sinneth and in it the minde and vnderstanding § 6 That the body is but the seruant of the soule in acting of sin § 7 That the soule only properly sinneth § 8. 9 That the body is not the flesh proued by the testimonies of the aduersaries themselues CHAP. VII Obiections of the aduersaries answered whereby they indeauour to proue that the body and sensitiue faculties are the flesh § 1 first obiection because this our enemie is vsually called the flesh § 2. 3 The reasons why the corruption of nature is called the flesh § 4 The second obiection grounded on 1 Cor. 9. 27. answered § 5 The third obiection grounded on Rom 12. 6. answered § 6 The fourth obiection because the cheife poyson of corruption is to be discerned in the sensitiue faculties answered § 7 The last obiection because certaine sins are proper to the body and sensitiue faculties answered CHAP. VIII That the flesh is a most daungerous enemie First because it is exceeding malitious § 1 That by the flesh alone we are exposed to all daunger § 2 That in the flesh dwelleth nothing that is good § 3 That all manner of euill is in the flesh § 4 That the flesh is the author of all wickednesse § 5 That the flesh is more malitions then the diuill or the world § 6 That the flesh is the author of all our sins § 7 That the flesh is the cause of the depriuation of our nature and of the defacing of Gods image in vs. § 8 That the flesh bringeth vs into a most base condition § 9 That whilest we liue in the flesh we cannot please God § 10 That the flesh setteth man at emnitie against God § 11 That the flesh is the cause of all our punishments § 12 That the malice of the flesh is the more daungerous because it is masked vnder the coullor of freindship § 13 How we may defeate the malitious treasons of the flesh CHAP. IX That the flesh is an enemy exceeding powerful mightie § 1 The flesh is to the vnregenerate a mightie Kinge and to the regenerate a powerfull Tyrant § 2 Of the strength of the flesh being considered in it selfe § 3 That the flesh is mightie being compared with the spirit § 4 Of the multitude of our fleshly lusts § 5 That the power of our enemies should make vs shake off all securitie § 6 That the might of our enemie should not discourage vs from the fight but make vs the more couragious CHAP. X. Of the pollicie of the flesh and that it is more daungerous and pernicious then it power and strength § 1 That the pollicie of the flesh in it owne nature is exceeding pernicious § 2 That the pollicy of the flesh is most pernicious vnto vs. § 3 That the pollicy of the flesh should make vs more watchfull and vigilant CHAP. XI Of certaine particular deceipt of the flesh respecting our persons § 1 The first deceipt that we are nothing so euill as
nature of man as it is born in corruption polluted with originall sin And thus our Sauiour saith that that which is born of the flesh is flesh that is if Iohn 3. 6. the parents be defiled with sin then needs must the childrē be polluted with their corruption for a stinking fountaine cannot bring forth sweet waters and who as Iob saith can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse And thus the Apostle Iob 14. 4. saith that they who are in the flesh that is remaine in that Rom. 8. 8. corrupt and sinfull condition in which they were borne cannot please God But in none of these senses are we to conceiue the flesh to be our enemie for neither may wee Timon-like be at enmitie with mankinde nor like mad men make warre and offer violence against our owne persons nor ought we with the Baalites and Papists to fight against our owne bodies neither is there any warre in the naturall man borne in corruption seeing he is wholly flesh and vnder Sathans gouernment who like the strong man whilest he keepeth the house possesseth all in peace sauing that now and then there is some ciuill dissension and small iarres betweene the will and conscience and one passion with another which are quickly taken vp as wee shall shew hereafter §. Sect. 3. Diuers significations of the word flesh taken for accidents and qualities But we are further to consider that the flesh is not onely thus substantially taken for things really and materially by themselues subsisting but also for accidents and qualities In which sense it is taken two wayes in the Scriptures First for that qualitie of corruption frailetie and infirmitie of the humane nature which is not sinne but rather the effect and punishment which attendeth and waiteth vpon it and in this sense it is said of the Israelites that he turned away his wrath from them because hee remembred that they were but 1. Cor. 15. 50. flesh and a winde that passeth away and commeth not againe Thus also it is said that flesh and bloud cannot inherite the Kingdome of God and what this flesh and bloud is hee expoundeth in the next words neither doth corruption in herit 2. Cor. 10. 2 3 4 corruption And thus the Apostle saith that though hee walked in the flesh yet he did not warre after the flesh not with weake and carnall but with strong and mighty weapons which were able to cast downe all that opposed against them and in this sense as I take it are wee to vnderstand the speech of our Sauiour to his Apostles The Spirit indeed is willing but the Flesh is weake And in this signification Mat. 26. 41. the flesh is not to be taken for a malicious enemie but rather a weake and feeble friend which is not to be opposed in hostile manner as it were with a sword and speare but rather to be strengthned with the cordials of comfort after that the corruption of sinne which is the cause thereof by the physicke of the Word is purged away §. Sect. 4. The flesh taken for the corruption of nature Secondly the flesh is taken for the whole corruption of nature or for that originall sinne whereby the whole nature of man with all the powers and faculties of his soule and body ate wholly defiled the image of God vtterly defaced and he quite disabled vnto all good and made prone vnto all manner of euill the which as it is the child and off-spring of our first parents sinne so is it the mother and nurse of all actuall transgressions and of all our rebellion against God and his will And this carnall corruption possesseth and ouer-spreadeth the whole man before regeneration defiling and disabling his body and soule with all the members parts and faculties of them raigning and ruling in him in his full strength as a King and soueraigne and making him obedient to the sinfull lusts thereof and after regeneration it still remaineth and dwelleth in him although wounded and weakned like a wicked enemie and false traitor rebelling against the Spirit and resisting the good motions thereof and though it be deposed from the regencie and expelled as it were out of the heart of the Kingdome yet like the cursed Cananites it still keepeth residence in the borders of the land and after it is beaten out of the Citie doth still dwell in the Suburbs whence it much molesteth the spirituall part and is to the regenerate man a snare to intangle him and a trap to catch him a scourge to his Ios 23. 13. sides and a thorne in his eyes sometime assaulting him by open violence and sometime indangering him by secret ambushments and hidden vnderminings In which sence the flesh is taken either for the whole nature of man as it commeth into the world corrupted and defiled with sinne seeing he is nothing but a masse of corruption and a sinke of all filthinesse till he be regenerate by the Spirit of God or else for that part of a Christian which remaineth still vnregenerate after his effectuall calling and sound conuersion vnto God In the former signification we are to vnderstand all those places where vnregenerate and wicked men are called flesh as where our Sauiour saith that that which is Ioh. 3. 6. Rom. 7. 5. borne of the flesh is flesh and the Apostle Paul that when we were in the flesh the motions of sinne which were by the Law did worke in our members to bring forth fruit vnto death and that they who are in the flesh cannot please God In the later Rom. 8. 8. we are to vnderstand it when it is applied vnto the faithfull who are but in part regenerate to signifie the reliques of naturall corruption and the vicious qualitie of sinne which still dwell and remaine in them vnmortified and vnsubdued So the Apostle complaineth that there was giuen him a pricke in the flesh that in his flesh dwelled 2. Cor. 12. 7. Rom. 7. 18. 25. no good thing and that in the flesh hee serued the Law of sinne And thus he would haue the incestuous person deliuered to Sathan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit 1. Cor. 5. 5. that is the regenerate man might bee saued in the day of the Lord Iesus But most plainely and distinctly doth hee speake of it where he saith that the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and that these are contrarie Gal. 5. 17. the one to the other bringing forth in the same man diuers and contrarie fruits as hee there at large describeth them §. Sect. 5. That the flesh in this discourse signifieth the part vnregenerate in a christian or the reliques of corruption remaining after sanctification Now in this last sense we are to take the word flesh in the following discourse vnderstanding thereby those reliques of corruption which after regeneration doe still remaine in vs the corrupt qualitie of sinne
adhering to all the parts and faculties of our soules and bodies vnmortified and vncrucified or that part of a Christian which is vnregenerate and continually fighteth and striueth against the spirit And this is the malicions enemie that assisteth Sathan and the world to worke our vtter ouerthrow vnto which the Scriptures haue giuen many names whereby the nature and qualities there of are implyed that we may the better know it and arme our selues to fight against it For it is called the a Rom. 6. 6. Ephes 4. 22. Col. 3. 9. old man not onely because in age and antiquitie it almost matcheth humane nature but rather to imply vnto vs that like those who by reason of their old age haue had much experience it is very subtle and politique and so full of sleights and stratagems that if wee be not exceeding wary and watchfull it will easily circumuent vs. It is called also the b 1. Cor. 2. 14. naturall man because this corruption ouerspreadeth the whole nature of all men who are vnregenerate for howsoeuer in the first creation we were good free from sinne yet after the fall of our first parents wee were so degenerate and infected in our natures with the poison of their corruption that it is as naturall familiar and easie to sin and offend God as for a man to eate drink and sleepe for a fish to swim a bird to flie or for a stone to descend downwards It is called the old Adam to leade vs vnto the fountaine from which it sprung that is not God who made all things good but our first parents who as they lost the image of God by their fall and were wholly corrupted in their owne natures so they deriued their corruption vnto all their posteritie and hauing first defiled themselues with this spirituall Leprosie did also infect therewith all that numerous of-spring which descended of them It is called the c 2. Cor. 9. 17. Rom. 8. 10. body because this corruption dwelleth in the bodie and exerciseth it selfe in it by it as by it instrument in the committing and perpetrating of all the workes of darknes and that we may the more clearely discerne what body the Apostle meaneth he calleth it the d Rom. 6. 6. body of sinne and the e Col. 2. 11. body of the sinnes of the flesh because the flesh by the bodie committeth all manner of sinne and wickednesse It is called the body of death because it is the cause of death and f Rom. 7. 24. condemnation in which sense Elizaus his Disciples said that death was in the pot that is deadly poysonous hearbs which would cause them to dye who had tasted of them It is called also g Rom. 7. 8. 11 sinne not onely because it selfe is sinne but also the roote and fountaine of all other wickednesse and the h Rom. 7. 17. sinne that dwelleth in vs because like the strong man it keepeth sure possession till a stronger commeth and dispossesseth it euen the Spirit of God dwelling in vs. It is called i Iam. 1. 13. 14. euill concupiscence because it filleth vs with sinfull lusts and maketh vs to to stand in opposition against the will of God desiring and willing that which he nilleth and condemneth It is called k Heb. 12. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sin which encloseth or besetteth vs about because this hellish Captaine with a whole armie of sinfull lusts enuiron vs on euery side so as wee cannot possibly of our selues escape out of their ambushments Finally it is called the law of sinne the l Rom. 7. 23. law of the members and the m Rom 8. 2. law of death because it is the rule of all the naturall mans actions guiding him into all wickednesse the commander of all his parts and members vnto whose iniunctions they doe like subiects yeeld free and willing obedience the which their seruice and subiection is in the end rewarded with euerlasting death of bodie and soule CHAP. III. What wee are to vnderstand by the Spirit in this discourse §. Sect. 1. That the word Spirit is diuersly taken in the Scriptures AND thus wee haue shewed what the flesh is which is one of the champions in this spirituall combate now wee are to consider of the other which is the Spirit and that wee may the more distinctly know what it is wee must vnderstand that the word Spirit is diuersly taken in the Scriptures and to omit many acceptations which are altogether impertinent to our present purpose we may obserue that it is sometimes taken generally for all spirituall and incorporeall substances and sometimes more specially for some one of them And thus it sometime signifieth the whole a Ioh. 4. 24. deitie and sometime euery one of the persons the Father the b Ioh. 6. 63. Sonne in respect of his diuine nature and the c 1. Ioh. 5. 6. 7. holy Ghost who hath this name of spirit after a vsuall and peculiar manner giuen vnto him But howsoeuer God and euery of these holy and diuine persons doe fight in vs and for vs against the flesh seeing it is their grace that supporteth vs and their strength whereby wee ouercome yet we are not to vnderstand by spirit in the following discourse this diuine nature who being omnipotent none is able to resist Sometime it signifieth the d Eccles 12. 7. Act. 7. 59. 2. Cor. 7. 1. soule of man euen as the flesh is taken for the bodie but these are not opposites and enemies but deare friends who so entirely loue that they feare nothing more then to be separated and to part company Sometime it signifieth that chiefe and excellent facultie of the soule called e 1. Cor. 2. 11. Rom. 12. 2. Luke 1. 47. reason and vnderstanding but neither can it here be taken in this sense because this spirit it selfe is corrupt and sinfull and this naturall reason and wisedome is enmitie against God and against this spirit whereof we speake which opposeth and fighteth against it as against his chiefest enemie Sometime it is taken for the vigour and efficacie of the vnderstanding and reason it selfe as where the Apostle exhorteth the Ephesians to be renued in the spirit of their minde Sometime by spirit we vnderstand the f Luke 1. 15. Gal. 3. 2. Act. 2. 18. gifts and graces of the spirit as Faith Loue Hope Ioy and the rest which being fruits of the Spirit do stand in opposition to the lusts of the flesh and in some sort doe fight against them they being contrarie the one to the other Finally the Spirit sometime signifieth a new qualitie of holinesse created and wrought in all the Elect by the Spirit of God whereby all the powers and faculties of his soule and body are renewed according to the image of God in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse In which sense wee are to vnderstand it in this place §. Sect. 2. What wee are
Iudas who is still plotting the fittest meanes whereby he may betray vs into the power of our enemies to haue alwaies with vs such a flattering false Ioab who when hee performeth all complements of kindnesse doth but watch his opportunitie to stab and kill vs to be besieged with mighty enemies and to haue within the walles of our citie secret traitors who are still ready to open the gates to let them in and beeing entred to ioyne with them that so together they may worke our ouerthrow §. Sect. 13. How wee may d●eaet the malti●●s treasons of the flesh But it is not inough to know our danger vnlesse we also bee acquainted with the meanes how wee may preuent it And therefore let vs inquire how we may auoide these pernitious treasons and escape the perill of these secret ambushments And first taking notice that the flesh whilest it professeth friendship and offereth vnto vs much profit and many delights is our mortall enemy and a slye traytor which taketh part with the chief enemies of our saluation we must hearken to the Prophets counsell in another case Trust yee not in a friend put ye not confidence in a guide keepe the dores of thy mouth from her that lyeth in thy bosome and alwayes Mica 7. ● haue it in iealousie then most suspecting it when as it offereth to satisfie our desires And vvhen it commendeth vnto vs the vanities of the world promising that in the fruition of them vve shall haue great contentment let vs beware of secret treacherie and againe and againe looke vnder these baites to see if there bee not hidden vnder them the hooke of sinne and curiously search if these booties are not purposely set out to make vs fall into Sathans ambushments that so he may ouercome vs and lead vs captiue to doe his will For who would giue any credit to such a false traytor as hath before his eyes brought so many to vtter ruine yea which we know by manifold experience hath many hundred times betrayed vs to the Diuell and the world when as it hath tendred vnto vs the fairest promises pretences Secōdly seeing we know it to be a traiterous enemy we must disarme weaken captiue hold it in subiection that so though it haue euer a malitious will to hurt vs yet being disabled it may not haue any power to rebell against vs. Thirdly we must keepe a narrow watch ouer it and ouer our selues that it doeth not take vs at any aduantage and often looke to our senses as it were the gates of our soules that they be not by our flesh and carnall corruption vnbarred and left open to entertaine the forces of our spirituall enemies And because our vigilance is not sufficient to preuent the plots and practises of this subtile traytor let vs often intreate by our most feruent prayers the keeper of Israel who neuer slumbreth nor sleepeth that hee will watch ouer vs and by his holy spirit discouer and deface these treacherous enemies CHAP. IX That the flesh is an enemy exceeding powerfull and mightie §. Sect. 1. That the flesh is to the vnregenerate a mighny king and to the regenerate a powerfull tyrant WE haue shewed that the flesh is a most malitious enemy so that it wanteth no will to bring vs to destruction And now it remaineth that we shew how mighty and powerfull it is in effecting that which it desireth and lusteth The which will appeare if we consider the mighty power and subtile pollicy of these malitious enemies Their power appeareth both in regard of their strength and number For the first if wee looke vpon the flesh in it full strength as it is Rom. 6. 12. in a man vnregenerate and is not subdued nor hath the vigour thereof abated by Gods spirit wee shall finde that it raigneth as a mightie monarch in the little world of man holding euery facultie power and part both of soule and body in subiection The which the Apostle plainely intimateth where he exhorteth those whom Christ by his spirit hath regenerated and freed from this regiment not to let sinne raigne in their mortall bodies that they should obey it in the lustes thereof Yea it raigneth not onely as a King and absolute soueraigne but as a Lord or tyrant who hauing conquered mankinde doth hold them in subiection as miserable captiues and bondslaues selling them ouer to the committing of all actuall transgressions for the base price of earthly vanities The which the Apostle intimateth in these words but I am carnall sold vnder sinne Whereby Rom. 7. 14. he signifieth that the flesh dealt with him like a proude and cruell tyrant seasing vpon him like one who had bought a slaue in the market and forcibly compelling him to doe his will The which if the Apostle might truely speake of himselfe though he were regenerate in respect of that part which remained vnsanctified then how much more may it be verified of those who remaine in the state of corruption and vnregenerate who are wholly vnder the dominion of sinne Now if we would see with what power and vnresistable force this cruell tyrant did rule in all the sonnes of men whilest they remained in the state of corruption hereby it will appeare in that they were so vtterly vnable to free themselues out of this thraldome that they neuer durst nor could attempt their libertie because their wils were no lesse captiuated then their other parts and faculties and it was their chiefe delight to liue in this slauery Neither were any outward helps auaileable because being possessed and ruled by this legion of wicked lusts like the Doemoniake in the Gospell nothing would containe them nor restraine their fury but they break easily all those chaines giues and Mar. 5. 2. fetters wherwith they vvere bound being like mad men a like harmefull both to themselues and others For neither would Gods loue and many benefits allure them and containe them in obedience nor his vvrath and fearfull iudgements terrifiee and restraine them from sinne Neither the law of God containing so many gracious promises to them who obeyed it and so many terrible threatnings against them that transgressed it both of temporary plagues and euerlasting punishments nor the execution of these dreadfull iudgements in the punishment of the whole world by a vniuersal deluge of Sodom Gomorrah with fire and brimstone with many other cities countries which haue beene made examples of Gods wrath against sinne besides the experience of innumerable particular persons and euen of themselues visited by the hand of God in a fearefull manner were all sufficient and strong inough to curbe and keepe vnder these sinfull passions and corrupt lusts nor to subdue and thrust out of his regency this powerfull tyrant the flesh till Christ Iesus himselfe came who is the wisdome and power of his father conquered him on his crosse triumphing gloriously ouer him together with the rest of our spirituall enemies
and vntill he apply the vertue of this victory vnto vs and by his powerful spirit which is infinitely stronger then all men and Angels doe vanquish this mighty tyrant giue him a deadly wound of which he continually languisheth and deposing him from his regency doe set vp in our hearts the gracious and glorious kingdome of our blessed Sauiour So that we may conclude this In Iohan. lib. 3. cap. 34. point with the saying of Cyrill The voluptuous lustes of the flesh without doubt are of mightie power by which the mindes of men are wholly diuerted from all honestie and goodnesse § Sect. 2 Of the strength of the flesh being considered in it selfe But least those who are regenerate should contemne this enemy as being weake and impotent because it is in part mortified the strength thereof abated by vertue of Gods spirit dwelling in them let vs in the next place know that though it bee not in them so puissant and powerfull as in those who remaine in their naturall corruption yet it is exceeding strong and mighty whether wee consider it simply in it selfe as it worketh and rebelleth in those who are sanctified or compare it with the spirituall and regenerate part The former is notably set downe by the Apostle in his owne person in the seauenth chapter of the Epistle to the Romanes where he sheweth that this corrupt and sinfull flesh is so farre off from any conformity to the lawe that taking occasion by the commaundement it wrought in him all maner of concupiscence and so abused the lawe which was purposely giuen to restraine him from sinne and to subdue and mortifie his corruptions as a meanes to giue strength life and vigour vnto it Whereby the lawe which was ordained to life became to be vnto death Further shewing vers 8. the power of his fleshly corruption he saith that it tooke occasion by the commaundement to deceiue and slay him working vers 9. death vnto him by that which is good that it ouercame him vers 10. and like a slaue sold him vnder sinne that it made him to doe that which he allowed not to omit the good which he affected and vers 11. commit the euill which he hated that though he were delighted vers 12. in the lawe of God and desired to obey it yet euill was present with bim That though he constantly resolued to serue vers 13. God yet the flesh like a strong rebell making warre against vers 14. him did often foyle and ouercome him and carried him into captiuitie to the lawe of sinne Yea of such force and might did this holy Apostle find the flesh in him that it forced him to crye out wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the body of this death So else where he telleth vs that Gal. 5. 17. the flesh is not so subdued but that it continually maketh warre against the part regenerate and standeth in such strong opposition against it that the godly cannot doe the good they would With whom the Apostle Peter agreeing telleth 1 Pet. 2. 11. vs that the fleshly lustes doe fight against our soules Finally as it hindreth vs often times from yeelding any obedience to the law and enforceth vs to transgresse it so when we doe performe any duties which it requireth it so defileth and staineth them that we haue iust cause to acknowledge with the Prophet that our best righteousnesse is but like a polluted Esa 64. 6. cloath Now this strength of the flesh vnlesse it be wounded subdued and kept vnder by Gods spirit is alwayes in it full vigour yea in daily growth notwithstanding all naturall meanes which can be vsed For the decay of nature it selfe doeth not make it decay but euen in sicknesse it retaineth health and vigour and when through olde age the body is weake and decrepite it continueth firme and strong § Sect 3. That the flesh it mightie being considered comparatiuely with the spirit So also if wee compare it with the spirituall part the flesh is much greater and stronger and therefore would easily ouercome it and quench al Gods graces in vs if God should leaue vs to our selues to be supported and defended by the strength which we haue receiued and not continually send vs new supplies and vphold vs with the power of his owne spirit For the Apostle telleth vs that in this life we haue receiued but first fruits of the spirit which is but an handfull Rom. 8. 23. in comparison of the haruest the whole croppe of grace being reserued till we shall receiue with it the fullnes of glory And in regard that the flesh in quantiiy did so much exceede the spirit he sticketh not to say that the Corinthyans though sanctified in Christ Iesus and called to be saints were carnall and but babes in Christ yea hauing himselfe 1 Cor. 1. 2. chap. 1. 2. receiued such a great measure of grace he notwithstanding in the sight and sence of his great corruption acknowlegeth Rom. 7. 14. that he was carnall and sould vnder sinne Hereof it is that Diuines compare the flesh to the great gyant Goliah and the spirit to little Dauid and not vnfitly for as Dauid was farre vnequall to the mightie Gyant and therefore preuayled not against him by his owne strength but by the power of God assisting him in whose name he came against him so by the same meanes only the spirit getteth victorie ouer the flesh God giuing it strength to ouercome because it fighteth his owne battayles §. Sect. 4. Of the multitude of ●● fleshly lust Finally vnto the strength of our enemie we may adde their multitude for though they be one in name to note that they are all of the like sinfull nature and as one combined in malice to worke our destruction so are they many in number euen whole legions of vnlawfull lusts which continually multiply themselues by begetting a new offspring after the ould are killed and subdued Wherof it is that the apostle Peter willeth vs to abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule speaking plurally of them as being many euen a whole army which maketh warre against vs. § Sect. 5. That the power of our enemies 〈…〉 vs t● shake of all securitie The consideration wherof should moue vs to shake of all securitie arising from contempt of our enemies and seeing they are so mightie in strength and many in number let vs vse so much the more care dilligence and vigilance to defend our selues against their furie buckling vnto our selues the whole armour of God and vsing all meanes both for the vveakning of our enemies and the nourishing and strengthening of Gods graces in vs. Especially let vs call vpon God the Lord of boasts desiring him by our feruent prayers that he vvill by his spirit abate the power of the flesh the sinfull lusts thereof and re inforce and strengthen the armie of
his spirituall graces in vs by sending to them daily new ●i●es and ●●esh supplyes that so in the end wee may obtaine the victorie § Sect 6. That the might of our enemies 〈…〉 discourage 〈…〉 couragious Neither should the power of these spirituall enemies daunt and discourage vs an● so make vs cowardly to she or yeeld our selues as slaues vnto them because being so much too strong for vs there is no hope of with standing their fury or obtaining victory But let vs still remember that we fight the Lords battailes and therefore he being on our side we are sure if we wil but fight to obtaine the victory in the end Let vs remember that our Graund Captaine IESVS CHRIST hath by his death ouercome sinne and led it captiue vpon his crosse triumphing gloriously ouer it together with the rest of our spirituall enemies so as none of them shall bee able to hurt vs. With which meditation the Apostle comforted and incouraged himselfe in his tedious conflict with the flesh for hauing pitifully complained and cryed out Wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death He presently 2 Sam. 2● 9. addeth I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord By whom alone hee had obtained strength whereby hee was able to stand in the fight and was assured in the end to get the victory Yea let vs call to minde that hee by his spirit hath applyed vnto vs the vertue ●f his death whereby he hath giuen vnto our flesh such a deadly wound that it shall neuer recouer o● it but languish in a continuall consumption vntill by our death it be fully abolished And therefore when wee like weake and white-liuered souldiers are tyred in the fight let vs flye to the standerd and fight vnder the shield of Christ our Sauiour vvho is our true Eleazar the comfort of God and so mighty and omnipotent that hee is able to vanquish and ouercome all our enemies alone onely he would haue vs to fight with him in the battaile that so we might also accompany him in his glorious triumph Let vs remember that though our spirituall part be but the first fruits yet it is an earnest of the whole haruest though it be but small in quantitie yet it is full of vertue and vigour the God of life giuing life vnto it and like a little quintescence which is stronger in operation by that vertue which it receiueth from the fire of Gods Spirit then a great quantitie of common waters Whereas contrariwise the flesh though it be much greater and stronger yet being deputed to mortification and hauing receiued a fatall blowe of vvhich it daily languisheth and decayeth it is a gyant indeede in strength and bignesse but yet such an one as being in a deadly consumption pin●th away by little and little till it be vvholly abolished And on the other side the spirit as a child in age statute yet is in a continuall growth vntill it come to mans estate and a perfect age in Iesus Christ CHAP. X. Of the Policie of the Flesh and that it is more dangerous and pernicious then it power and strength § Sect 1. 〈…〉 IT now remaineth in the next place hauing seene the power of the Flesh that wee also consider of the policie of this enemy The vvhich as it is great in it selfe so also most dangerous and pernicious vnto vs. For howsoeuer the strength of the flesh be very great yet the policy thereof doth farre exceede it for being not a possessed enemy but a secret traytor it is more exercised in cunning vndermining of our safety with subtle sleights and pollitique stratagems then in assaulting vs after an open and hostile manner with strength and violence Hence it is that the Lord telleth vs by the Prophet that the heart whereby he vnderstandeth the soule of man or that part of the soule which remaineth vnregenerate is deceitfull aboue all things and so desperately wicked in this depth of fraude that none can Ier. 17. 10. know it but the Lord who is omniscient and knoweth all things For howsoeuer Sathan the old Serpent in respect of his naturall abilities and long experience may be more cunning and politique in himselfe yet his deceit is not so great in abusing and wronging vs as is the deceipt of our owne flesh For this being a part of our selues yea of euery power facultie and member of our soules and bodies it is of the priuy counsell of all our thoughts and knowing our most hidden imaginations and secret intentions it can take aduantage of them to worke our owne ouerthrow where as Sathan being ignorant of them cannot by all his craft and subtiltie so much endamage vs. And in this respect Sathan cannot deceiue vs vnlesse our owne flesh assisting him doe first deceiue vs whereof it is that our Sauiour being pure from all fleshly corruption and most free from this carnall guile could not possibly be deceiued vvith Sathans pollicies and most subtle stratagems Whereas on the other side our owne flesh can easily abuse and cozen vs though it haue no helpe at all from the arch-enemy of our saluation And hereof it is that the flesh in the Scriptures is called the old man to note vnto vs that as men in this age grow by their long experience very pollitique and vnlesse they be sanctified with Gods grace and holy Spirit very subtill craftie and full of fraude so the flesh exceedeth and aboundeth in fraude and treacherie § Sect. 2. Of the strength of the flesh being considered in it selfe Rom. 8. 7. Now this fraude and policy of the flesh as it is most malicious in it selfe so it is most pernicious vnto vs. The former appeareth in that it taketh part with sathan the wicked one against God himselfe the chiefe goodnes for so the Apostle telleth vs that the wisedome of the flesh is emnitie against God And that this policy is most pernicious vnto vs it is manifest first because it often preuaileth and much deceiueth vs as the Apostle out of his owne experience complaineth Rom. 7. 11. Sinne taking occasion by the commandement deceiued me In which regard that may iustly be Rom. 7. 11. said vnto vs vvhich the Prophet speaketh in another case Trust ye not in a friend put ye not confidence in a guide keepe the doores of thy mouth from her that lyeth in thy bosome For so often and commonly are we hereby deceiued and abused that wee haue iust cause to subscribe to the wise mans saying He that trusteth in his owne heart is a foole Secondly the perniciousnesse of this policy vnto vs hereby appeareth Pro. 28. 26. in that it tendeth vnto no lesse hurt then our death and vtter destruction for so the Apostle telleth vs that the wisedome Rom. 8. 6. of the flesh is death and therefore he ioyneth these two together that sinne or his sinfull corruption deceiued slew Rom. 7. 11. him because
it was such a deceipt as brought death and destruction vnlesse he had beene redeemed and freed from it by the precious death of Iesus Christ Finally the danger of this carnall policy and deceipt is so much the greater because it is so subtill and secret so deepe and disguised that it can hardly be discerned and found out according to that of the Prophet Ieremie The heart is deceitfull aboue Ier. 17. 10. all things and desperately wicked who can know it So that our longest line cannot sound the bottom of his gulph out quickest and most piercing sight cannot discouer the multitude and strength of these subtle enemies because they display not their coulours in the open field but lye hidden in secret ambushments yea they mingle themselues amongst our owne forces and disguise themselues in our owne coates and habits They make shew of simplicity and sinceritie when as there is nothing but craft and deceipt and these dangerous bogges seeme outwardly faire greene fields and firme ground but hauing with this outward shew inuited vs to them we are ready to sinke and to bee swallowed vp and perish when we rest vpon them In which regard it behooueth vs to follow the Wise mans aduice Pro. 4. 23. Keep thy heart with all diligence And the exhortation Pro. 4. 23 Heb. 3. 12. 13 of the Apostle Take heede brethren lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe in departing from the liuing God But exhort one another dayly whilest it is called to day lest any of you bee hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne For how hard is it to ouercome those enemies which are so hardly discouered and to frustrate and preuent those deceits vvhich cannot without great difficultie be so much as discerned § Sect. 3. That the pollicy of the flesh should make vs more watchfull and vigilant But let this difficultie in sounding of the depth of this hellish policy and in searching out those deceipts vvhich lye lurking in these darke corners onely make vs more vigilant and diligent to discouer them but not daunt and discourage vs or make vs lesse confident and couragious in fighting this spirituall conflict for be the flesh neuer so politique and euen inspired with all the subtiltie of the Diuell yet haue we a wisedome to direct vs in comparison whereof all this depth of craft and cunning is but childish folly And though there be in our corrupt nature such a maze of deceipt that we cannot enter into it or being entred can not tell how to get out and though it be such a darke dungeon of deceipt that by the light of our owne wisedome and vnderstanding we cannot see into it yet the Lord hath giuen vnto vs his word to be our line which if we follow we shall finde euery creeke and corner turning and winding of this Labyrinth of wickednes and to be a light shining in the darkest places which is able to dispell this Ci●erian darknes and to discouer cleerely all these subtilties and 2 Pet. 1. 19. crafty policies teaching vs also the way to preuent and defeate them so as we shall not be in danger of these secret ambushments So the Apostle telleth vs that the Word of Heb. 4. 13. God is quicke and powerfull and sharper then any two edged sword piercing euen to the deuiding a sunder of soule and spirit and of the ioynts and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart And therefore as the darkest dungeon vvhereall things are hidden and vnseene becommeth as light as any other place if there bee made an open passage for the sunne-beames to shine into it so as all the filth and sluttish corners are manifest to euery beholder which before by reason of the darknes none could discerne so this dungeon and depth of carnall policie hideth all things and is it selfe hidden from our sight so long as wee bring vnto it no other light then our darke vnderstanding but if once the beames of Gods shining truth and the bright rayes of his holy Word doe inlighten vs we shall easily discerne these deepe and darke deceipts and discouer all the secret filthinesse and abominable wickednes which lyeth lurking in these secret corners So that if we will make choise of Gods Word to be a lampe to our feete and a light vnto our Psal 119. 105. pathes wee shall easily auoide those secret snares which lye in our way and escape those subde stratagems and dangerous ambushments which the flesh hath purposely laid to insnare and circumuent vs. If we will often and seriously studie in this holy booke we shall finde all the sleights and subtilties of those spirituall enemies layed open together with the meanes how wee may defeate them But vvithal because the flesh doth continually cast fogges and mists before our eyes that we may not discerne this light and like some kindes of fish doth purposely muddy these cleere waters that so it may the better glide away and not be discouered wee must continually desire the Lord to open our eyes that wee may see the wonderfull things of his Law and that hee will by the light of his holy Spirit so illuminate our mindes and dispell these fogges and mists which Psal 119. 18. the flesh dayly raiseth that we may see all the deepe policies and dangerous subtilties of the flesh and haue such a measure of spirituall wisedome and vnderstanding that we may be able to preuent and escape them CHAP. XI Of certaine particular deceipts of the flesh respecting our persons §. Sect. 1. The first deceipt that wee are nothing so euill as in truth we are BVt come we from the generall to some particulars which as they are most common and ordinarie so also most dangerous and pernicious for more easily might I number the hayres of a mans head or the starres of heauen Yea the grasse in a large field or stones vpō the sea shore then al the deceipts of our corrupt flesh Besides my late worthy assistant in the worke of my ministerie that excellent light of Gods Church which ah M. Daniell Dike too soone did set vnto vs that he might for euer gloriously shine in heauen hath in his booke of the deceitfulnesse of the heart so sweetly and diuinely discoursed on this subiect that hee hath eased me of this labour Yet this discourse so necessarily requiring that I should say something of this argument as that it will seeme maymed if it goe without it I wil a little insist vpon it and for our more orderly proceeding I will referre these deceipts of the flesh to two principall heads The first such as respect our persons and states the other such as concerne certaine duties which God requireth of vs. For the former it is a common and most pernicious policy of the flesh to perswade vs that wee are nothing so euill corrupt and wicked as in truth we are To the entertaining of which
people of God subdued and led into miserable captiuitie And the experience of our own times teacheth vs that we cannot conclude that we are in Gods fauour and in the state of saluation because we thriue in the world and haue good successe in all our endeauours seeing by this reason we might inferre that the great Magor the Turke Persian and many other Infidels and Pagans were better beloued of God then Christian Princes and among Christians many prophane and carnall men then the sincere louers of Gods trueth because they more abound in these worldly blessings But of this point I shall neede to say little here seeing I haue written so much of this argument in my second part of this Christian War-fare § Sect. 5. That a ciuill life is not sure signe that we are in the state of grace and saluation And thus the flesh abuseth those who are professed worldlings Neither doth it deale lesse deceiptfully with those that make some shew of religion the which are of two sorts ciuill iusticiaries and temporarie hypocrites Concerning the former it perswadeth them that they are in good estate because they liue ciuilly and vnblameably among their neighbours in respect of notorious crimes which are punishable by the lawes of men and maketh them to blesse themselues because they are no murtherers adulterers drunkards theeues periured persons and couenant breakers but contrariwise deale honestly with all men keepe their word pay euery one their due and sometimes also giue an almes to those that are in want and misery And because in respect of their dutie towards God they are of that religion which the Prince is of and the Law requireth and are no recusants but come to the Church with the rest of their neighbours and there heare diuine seruice and the word preached and receiue the Sacrament as oft as the law inioyneth Though in the meane time they are vtterly ignorant of the true God his persons nature and attributes of Iesus Christ and his natures and offices and the great worke of redemption and in a word of all the principles of true religion And though they make no conscience of performing any duties of the first table as of Prayer hearing the Word receiuing the Sacrament sanctifying the Sabbath in spirit and in truth as God requireth but onely formally for custome and fashion sake yet their corrupt flesh maketh them beleeue that God will accept of their good meaning and superstitious deuotion and will be well satisfied with their bodily exercise and lip-labour though their hearts be farre from him yea though in the very time of his seruice they set vp idols in their hearts and haue all their cogitations wholly taken vp with their pleasures profits and other vanities of the world But that we may not be ouertaken with this deceit let vs know and remember that God will not accept of vs vnlesse with Dauid we haue respect vnto all his commandements and make Psal 119. 6. conscience of performing as well yea principally the duties of the first table as of the second that the feare of God and his true religion is the head and first beginning of sauing wisedome and that it is but a counterfet and carnall Psal 111. 10. righteousnesse such as was in the heathens which doth not spring from the roote of piety that wee cannot haue a liuely faith without sauing knowledge nor doe any good workes without faith that without faith wee cannot please Heb. 11. 4. Rom. 14. 23. God and whatsoeuer we doe without it is sinne That if our iustice arise not from godlinesse it is but meerely morall ciuilitie and if our loue of our brethren spring not from the cleere fountaine of Gods loue then it streameth from the filthy puddle of selfe-loue Let vs know that God will bee worshipped not after the commandements of men but after his owne reuealed will and that whosoeuer serue GOD principally because the princes law requireth it and not because God commandeth it hee worshippeth his King aboue his God That bodily exercise profiteth 1 Tim. 4. 8. nothing and that the Lord wil be worshipped in spirit and Ioh. 4. 24. truth that God regardeth not formall seruice which riseth rather from custome then conscience and that the religion of the soule is the soule of religion without which it is but a dead carkase That God can indure no riuals in his seruice nor no halting betweene Iehouah and Baal God and the world he cannot abide a double or diuided heart but he will either haue all or leaue all to the Diuell and the world and finally that our good meaning will be no currant payment in the day of accompt seeing it hath not Gods image and stampe vpon it but is coined in the forge of our owne braine and hath on it the print of our owne inuentions which the Lord esteemeth no better then high treason against his royall crowne and dignitie § Sect. 6. That a bare profession of the true religion is not sufficient for saluation And thus the flesh deceiueth ciuill iusticiaries the like deceit it vseth towards hypocrites with whom it dealeth diuersly according to their diuers kindes For either they are grosse hypocrites who though they make a great shew of religion yet their liues are so euill and scandalous that their hypocrisie is detected and manifest not onely vnto others but also to their owne hearts and consciences or more cunning and subtle who by their outward profession and seeming conformitie to the law deceiue not onely other men but themselues also Concerning the former the flesh deceiueth them with a vaine conceipt that the bare profession of the true religion is sufficient for their saluation without all practise and obedience that it is inough to say that they haue faith though they bee vtterly barren of all good Workes to cry Lord Lord though they neglect the will of our heauenly Father that they be hearers of the word though they be not doers of it and that they professe that they know God though in their workes they deny him being abominable disobedient and to euery good worke reprobate But this is so contrary to the whole course T● 1. 16. of the Scriptures that who so is but a little conuersant in them may plainely see yea palpably feele this deceipt neither is it possible that any should be deluded with it but those whom the god of this world hath blinded and for want of loue to the truth are giuen vp of God to bee seduced 2 Thes 2. 11. with strong delusions and to beleeue lies For there we shall Rom. 2. 13. plainely see that these conceits are crossed and contradicted in direct and expresse tearmes namely that not the hearers but the doers of the word are iustified that if we heare Iam. 1. 22. Ioh. 13. 17. Luke 11. 28. Mat 7. 21. Iam. 2. 14. 17. 26 and doe not we doe but deceiue our selues that they onely
are blessed who heare the word and keepe it that not euery one who saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of heauen but hee that doth the will of our Father which is in heauen that it will nought auaile vs to boast of our faith if it doe not appeare in the fruits of good workes seeing such a faith as is without workes is but a dead carkase without life or soule and therfore cannot iustifie nor saue vs. So the Lord sharpely reprehendeth and condemneth wicked men for Psal 50. 16. 22. making profession of his religion Vnto the wicked saith God What hast thou to doe to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my couenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behinde thee c. And then concludeth Now consider this yee that forget God lest I teare you in pieces and there be none to deliuer So the Prophet Ieremie Behold ye trust in lying words that cannot profit Will yee steale murther and commit adulterie and sweare falsly and Ier. 7. 8. 9. burne incense vnto Baal and walke after other gods that yee know not and come and stand before mee in this house which is called by my name and say we are deliuered to doe all these abominations § Sect. 7. The fleshes deceipt in perswading men to rest in externall ceremonies But if this deceipt bee too grosse as hauing nothing to colour or countenance it but the slight thin vayle of a bare profession then it will perswade vs to place all religion about externall rites and ceremonies and to thinke that we haue done inough if we be strict in the obseruation of them although in the meane time we make no conscience of many Morall duties and vtterly neglect the waighty things of the Law So the Pharises of old placed Mat. 23 all their religion in some legall rites and humane traditions in externall washings sacrifices and tything mynte cummine and annise and neglected the dutie of children to their parents the pure and sincere seruice of God and the waightie points of the Law iudgement mercie and faith And the Apostle telleth vs of some in his times who placed all their religion in the obseruation of dayes Sabbaths Holy-dayes and New Moones and in their obseruance of certaine ordinances Col. 2. 16. 21. as touch not taste not handle not all which did perish with the vsing And wherein doth in these dayes the religion of the Papists chiefely consist but in the obseruation of such holidayes washings purifications fastings from certaine meates at certaine times and in vse of their rites and ceremonies which they preferre before and presse more then many Morall duties or the essentiall parts of Gods seruice with which they will much more easily dispence then with their traditions and superstitious inuentions With which deceipt if the flesh preuaile not it is readie to thrust vs into the contrary extreame and to place all religion in the opposing of these superstitious ceremonies and to spend all our time which should bee spent in attaining vnto the knowledge and practise of true godlinesse in declaiming against will-worship and humane traditions As though it were enough to be free from superstition though we be destitute also of all true religion to oppose against false worship though wee doe not practise that which is true to be zealous against ceremonies and to be key-cold in imbracing the substance truth faith mercie iudgement brotherly kindnes and the rest § Sect. 8. The meanes to defeate the former policie But that we may not be ouertaken with this deceit nor be perswaded to spend the strength of our deuotion about ceremonies things of smal moment let vs know that there is no lesse order and due proportion then iustice iudgement in the commandements of God the Lord requiring that those things which are chiefe and principall in their owne nature should haue the first and chiefe place in our obedience So the Morall duties are to be preferred before ceremoniall and among them our dutie to God before our dutie to our brethren the duties of greatest importance before the meane and the meane before the least Which order who so transpose and wil prefer the duties towards men before their dutie vnto God the ceremonies before the substance such mens religion is hypocriticall and odious in Gods sight Hence is it that the Lord condemneth Esa 11. 12. 13 the Sabbaths New Moones sacrifices and solemne assemblies of the Iewes because they put all their religion in them and neglected iudgement mercie relieuing the oppressed and iudging the fatherlesse Thus hee condemneth Esa 58. 5. their fasts and the afflicting of their soules by these bodily exercises because they were ioyned with strife and debate oppression and cruelty yea so odious is this ceremoniall seruice being seuered from the more weighty and substantiall that the Lord professeth that he that killeth Esa 66. 3. an Oxe is as if he s●●e a man he that sacrificeth a Lambe as he that cutteth of a dogges necke he that offreth an oblation as he that offereth swines blood he that burneth incense as if he blessed an idoll So he professeth I will haue mercie and not sacrifice Hos 6. 6. not because he simply reiected sacrifices which himselfe had commanded but if they were seuered from mercie or preferred before it And saith that hee spake not vnto their fathers nor commanded them in the day that hee brought them out of the land of Egypt concerning burnt offerings or Ier. 7. 22. 23. sacrifices but this thing saith hee commanded I them saying obey my voice and I will be your God and ye shall be my people and walke yee in all the wayes that I haue commanded you that it may be well vnto you Implying hereby that as these maine Morall duties were first commanded so also they should be first and chiefely practised Finally the Apostle telleth vs that true religion consisteth not in outward rites signes and sacraments but in the truth and sinceritie of the heart Circumcision saith he verily profiteth if thou be a keeper of the Law but if thou bee a breaker of the law thy Rom. 2. 25. 28 circumcision is made vncircumcision For he is not a Iew which is one outwardly neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh But he is a Iew which is one inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God CHAP. XIII Of the pollicies of the flesh towards temporarie beleeuers §. Sect. 1. That the flesh in a subtill sort deceiueth temporaries ANd thus the flesh deceiueth the grosser kinde of hypocrites But when men haue receiued such a measure of illightening that these darke fogges and mistes of ignorance are somewhat dispelled and haue their sleepie consciences somwhat awakened so that they are able and ready to tell them that all which is
seruant of God and a subiect of the kingdome of Iesus Christ And thus Austins vpon his second and sounder thoughts reuoking his former Ego enim putabam dici ista non posse nisi de ijs quos it a haberet carnis concupiscentia subiugatos vt facerent quicquid illa compelleret August contra Iulian Pelagian lib. 6. cap. 11. Col. 11 35. T. 7. Vide etiam retract lib 1. Cap. 23 et lib. 2. c. 1. Tom. 1. errour expoundeth this place I thought saith he that these things to wit I am carnall sold vnder sinne and led captiue vnto the lawe of sinne by the lawe of my members could not bee truely spoken of any but of such as are so inthralled of their carnall concupiscence that they did whatsoeuer it compelled them which to conceiue of the Apostle were meere madnesse seeing in many of the Saints the spirit so lusteth against the flesh that it canot thus preuaile But afterwards I gaue way to other of better iudgment or rather to the truth it selfe plainly perceiuing in these words of the Apostle the groaning and complaint of the Saints striuing against their carnall concupiscence c. Whereof it came to passe that I vnderstood this place as it was vnderstood by Hilarie Gregory Ambrose and the rest of the holy and famous Doctors of the Church who doe all thinke that the Apostle did couragiously fight against his carnall concupiscence which he had in him though hee desired to be freed from it and that in these wordes hee professeth this his conflict And a little after neither can well any mans spirit lust against his flesh vnlesse the spirit of Christ dwelled in him So Gregory Nazianzen acknowledgeth and deploreth this conflict vvhich he felt in himselfe betweene the flesh and the spirit Neither am I saith hee wholly minde or spirit that is pure nature nor on the other side wholly flesh that is nature corrupted but composed of both I am an other thing and yet both of them Whereof it is that I continually suffer perpetuall tumults of war the flesh and the spirit encamping against one another I am the image of God and am drawne into vice though I struggle and Greg. Nasian de animae ●uae calamitat pag. 93. 934. strine against it the worse part wickedly conflicting against the better so as not without great labour and daily wrastling the hand and helpe of God assisting me I flee and resist vice And these thus conflicting the one with the other the eye of God beholding them from heauen hath ayded the spirit subdued the tumult and rage of the trouble some flesh ad stilled the swelling waues of carnall preturbations And so also the flesh rageth with furious strength and neuer resteth from making cruell warre and though there may be sometime an intermission yet there is neuer a dismission from the fight §. Sect. 3. That all the regenerate haue feeling and experience of this conflict And these testimonies out of the Scriptures and Fathers may be sufficient to conuince the carnall and vnregenerate who hauing no feeling of this conflict in themselues because they are wholly flesh doe imagine that it is not in any other For as for those who are in part regenerate and yet haue the old man and the reliques of sinnefull corruption dwelling and remaining in them they will easily acknowledge this trueth euen out of their owne feeling and experience though no other testimony or reason could be alleadged Neither is it possible that this mortall combate should be sought in any but that they must easily feele the terrible encounters and cruell blowes giuen on either side Not betweene diuers faculties as the conscience and the will the minde and iudgement against the affections and the sensuall faculties the which is also in the vnregenerate but the selfe same faculties as they are regenerate fighting against themselues as they are vnregenerate as errour against trueth and trueth against errour in the same mind and vnderstanding faith against doubting and doubting against faith in the same heart willing against nilling and nilling against willing about the chusing and refusing of good and euill in the same will the loue of God conflicting and combating with the loue of the world the feare of God with the feare of men affiance in God with diffidence in him and confidence in the creatures hope of heauenly happinesse with hope of enioying earthly vanities as also with presumption and despaire and contrariwise obedience against disobedience and rebellion in the same desires and actions as we shall more fully and plainly shewe in the following discourse All which doth plainly proue that their whole man is diuided and part-takings in all their faculties and powers of body and minde the one adhering and deauing to God the other drawing to Sathan and the world the which is more feelingly discerned and experimentally felt by euery true Christian then it can be demonstrated and euidenced by any mans writing § Sect. 4 The contrarie effects which the Christian feeleth in himselfe doe proue plainly that this conflict is in them Finally the contrary effects which euery Christian may obserue in himselfe do sufficiently argue and demonstrate that there are contrary causes in him from vvhich they proceede and as it were many souldiers of contrary factions led vnder their Captaines the flesh and spirit which like mortall enemies continually make warre the one against the other For who findeth not after his regeneration and conuersion himselfe to bee as a kingdome diuided and that as in his spirituall and renewed part he hath a great desire to serue his Lord and redeemer and taketh delight in his lawes preferring them with Dauid before all Psal 119. manner of riches so in his fleshly part and the olde man that he is inclinable vnto the seruice of sinne and Sathan for the base hyre of worldly vanities that as in the one he affecteth and loueth piety and purity righteousnes mercy and holines of conuersation so in the other hee is transported Eph. 5. 9. with selfe loue and is much addicted to the pleasures of sinne As in the one hee beleeueth God and the truth of his promises and threatnings trusteth in his word power and prouidence loueth and feareth him aboue all things so in the other he is subiect to doubting and infidelitie to distrust in God and affiance in the creatures to the loue of earthly things and the immoderate feare of man Finally as in the one he aspireth vnto Immortalitie euerlasting happines and hauing his conuersation in heauen mindeth not earthly things out chiefely seeketh after P●●● 3. 20. those things which are aboue so in the other he lyeth grouelling on the earth walloweth himselfe in the puddle of sensuall pleasures and vnlawfull lusts meditateth and thinketh onely on momentanie riches and murable preferments or the meanes whereby he may compasse them neuer seeing seeking nor regarding that heauenly happinesse and waight of
those excellent qualities and rich ornaments of heauenly wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse wherewith they were beautified after Gods owne image were quite taken away The which being as it were the strong garrison which kept the Citie were no sooner expelled but the sinnefull lusts triumphing in their victory held all vnder their subiection to the diuels vse as their chiefe Soueraigne § Sect. 3. No conflict betweene the Flesh and the Spirit in the state of corruption Now there was not in eitheir of these estates this combate and conflict in vs betweene the flesh and the spirit whereof we intreate not in the state of innocency for then was there in vs a sweete harmony and consent betweene all our powers and parts of soule and body and there being no sinfull lust or vnruly passion in vs but a great multitude of well-agreeing graces wee enioyed a blessed peace Nor in the state of corruption was there any such conflict because the strong man Sathan possessing all all that hee possessed was in peace onely as it happeneth often among soldiars of the same band who striue one with another about the booty and prey there was some contention betweene the will and the conscience and betweene one vnruly passion and another but it was onely like those hot contentions betweene the Iesuits and the Priests who much disagreeing about profit and soueraigntie one with another yet all agreed and ioyned together as one man like true vassals to doe all seruice to their Lord God the Pope yea as it may probably be suspected euen their quarrels and contentions were part of his seruice and in their disagreeing they yeelded obedience to their holy father for so in like manner in the hottest contention betweene our sinnefull lusts they yeelded their obedience to the diuell as their chiefe soueraigne who if he sawe by this strife any disaduantage arising to his hellish kingdome through this hot contention was both able and ready to accord their differences as the Pope did those betweene the Priests and Iesuites and so to ioyne them together like friends in doing him seruice §. Sect. 4. The peace of the vnregenerate more pernicious then the most daungerous warre But this hellish peace was ten thousand times more dangerous pernitious to our poore soules and bodies then the most cruell and perillous war to the weakest enemy and so much the rather because we had no apprehensiō of the danger nor feeling of our own misery Because we were borne the bondslaues of the diuell and so still brought vp in doing him seruice in the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse for which wee had onely the present pay of worldly vanities though when wee had laboured most in his toylesome workes we were oftentimes cozened of our wages Herein like vnto the Israelits vnder the Egyptian Pharaoh who when they were best vsed had but their onions garlicke and flesh pottes wherby onely they were but better enabled to doe their drudgery and worke in their bricke-kils and somtime in stead of these poore comforts they had for all their labour sore beatings and cruell blowes and yet being bred in this seruitude and knowing no better they rather chuse to returne vnto it againe then to take any paines in going to the land of promise So and much worse was our miserable bondage to the Pharaoh of hell for at the best we had for all our drudgery but the stincking garlicke and onyons of worldly vanitie which he gaue not for loue to vs but in loue to himselfe giuing vs this food as the rider giueth prouender to his horse that wee might bee the more hartened to doe him seruice And out of his hellish hatred and cruelty towards vs he often withheld from those who did him most faithfull seruice this pay of earthly prosperitie and in stead thereof afflicted and misused them with the blowes and stripes of misery and afflictioon Neuerthelesse being borne and inured to this hellish thraldome such was the height of our misery wee desired still to liue and dye in it taking our whole delight and placing our chiefe happinesse in pleasing our tyrannicall maister by seruing him in the workes of darkenesse and doing all abhominable wickednesse although wee were sure after that wee had beene toyled in his seruice and scorched in his bricke-killes we should for the accomplishment of our reward be cast into the fire of hell § Sect 5. Gods infinite loue in sending his only soone to redeeme vs made wa● for this spirituall conflict But when we were in this desperate condition and now come to this height of misery that we desired still to liue in it and like the Israelits with Moses would haue beene angry with any who should haue offered vnto vs meanes of deliuerance because not onely our other parts and faculties but also our willes and hearts our loue and liking with all other our affections were enthralled in this seruice and voluntarily leauing their Lord and creatour wholly adhaered to Sathan and delighted to doe his will euen then our gracious God infinite in all mercy and goodnesse of his meere grace and free good will sent his onely sonne into world to redeeme vs with his precious death to vanquish and subdue all the enemies of our saluation and to set vs at liberty who were embondaged and were so in loue with our thraldome that wee did not so much as desire to bee freed from it Who hauing thus paide the price of our redemption and prouided a soueraigne salue for all our sores of sinne doeth not so leaue vs for then wee should haue ben neuer the better but applyeth the power and efficacy of his merits vnto vs and as it were with his owne hand ●ayeth the plaister vpon our mortall wounds whilest by his word made effectuall by his spirit he maketh knowne vnto vs this excellent worke of our redemption and the promises of grace and saluation made to all beleeuing and repentant sinners by which he begetteth this faith in vs wherewith as with an hand we lay hold on and apply vnto vs his righteousnesse death and obedience for our iustification and redemption and so in respect of right we are freed from our sinnes so as they cannot condemne vs because God in Christ hath forgiuen them and also from the tyranny and thraldome of Sathan death hell and condemnation Rom. 8. 1. 3● so as they shal be neuer able to hurt vs or lay any thing to our charge And not resting here our powerfull Sauiour sendeth his spirit with many legions of his graces into our hearts who pul vs out of the dominion of sinne and Sathan so as they cannot rule and raigne in vs as in times past regenerate and purifie vs from the filth and corruption of sin by power of the same death which deliuered vs from the guilt and punishment due vnto it and enable vs to serue God in newnesse of life by applying likewise vnto vs the vertue of his
resurrection § Sect. 6. Sanctification begun and not perfected is the formall cause of this conflict first because of the greate contrariety betweene grace corruption But this as I haue before shewed is onely begunne and not perfected and accomplished in this life not for want of sufficient vertue in Christs death and resurrection but through the weakenesse of our faith we being but partly regenerate and partly vnregenerate in part spirituall and in part carnall And that I may follow the similitude though the great tyrant Sathan be thrust from his throne so as hee cannot any longer rule vs as a King yet hee is not quite expelled out of our quarters but still he molesteth vs as an enemy and though the legions of his lustes are beaten from the strong holds and driuen out of the market place and chiefe gate of the City yet they lye lurking in the suburbs and secret corners and no sooner giue wee them through our retchlesnes the least aduantage but they steale through our sleepy watch and guard or cunningly thrust in at some posterne gate and so assault vs with all violence and malice So that there may be two maine and essentiall causes giuen of this conflict betweene the spirit accompanied with Gods graces and the flesh attended with many sinnefull lustes the one is the antipathy and contrarietie which is betweene them which is exceeding hostile and full of al emnity and opposition as it may appeare if we consider the contrariety of their natures for what is the spirit I meane the created spirit infused into vs but the qualitie of holines and righteousnes renewed according to Gods image And what is the flesh but the defacing of this image the depriuation of this originall righteousnesse and the staine of naturall corruption which hath ouerspread and defiled all the powers and parts of our soules and body so that the flesh resisteth the spirit in a double opposition both as it is a priuation and want of righteousnesse and as it is a corruption making vs prone to all vnrighteousnes And therefore the contrarietie which is betweene them is as great and vnreconcilable as betweene light and darkenes health and sicknesse heate and colde good euil so that the prospering of the one is the ruine of the other the encreasing of the one is the decreasing of the other and the ones preuayling and victory is the others weakening and vtter ourthrow The other is their cohabitation and dwelling together in the same place and subiect which ministreth vnto them mutually occasion and imposeth a necessity of their continuall opposition euen as when fire and water heate and colde meete together there can neuer bee any agreement or so much as a truce till the one of them haue gotten the vpper hand and the other as much as lyeth in the power of the contrary quality be subdued and abolished §. Sect. 6. Secondly because these enemies so contrarie and opposite dwell togeather Neither are we so to conceiue it as though these enemies so opposite dwelled in the same City but in diuers holds or in the same man in respect of his diuers parts but euen as it were in the same house and chamber in the same faculties and parts More plainely the flesh doeth not onely dwell in the body or inferiour and sensuall parts and the spirit in the soule alone or the intellectuall and reasonable faculties for so they might part their bounds dominions shut the doore against one another and sometime enioy a peace or truce without the others molestation but in the same vnderstanding will body and affections so that the whole soule in respect of it diuers faculties is partly flesh and partly spirit and cannot bee deuided but onely distinguished the vnderstanding will affections and body being partly regenerate partly vnregenerate partly sanctified by Gods spirit and partly sinnefull and corrupted with those reliques of sinne remaining in them For example the image of God is in part renewed and the image of sinne and Sathan in part remaineth As in the vnderstanding ignorance is inchoatiuely dispelled driuen away and the light of knowledge shineth in it not perfectly but still the fogge and mists of ignorance remaining obserue this light being wholly mingled with it So the peruersenesse and rebellion of the will is changed into loyaltie and obedience but yet imperfectly and therefore the reliques of corruption remaining the same will obeyeth and rebelleth willeth and nilleth both good and euill the affections which were corrupted and disordered are by the spirit sanctified and reduced to order yeelding their obedience to their soueraigne holy reason but this sanctification being but begunne and imperfect the reliques of corruption doe still remaine so that the same man both loueth and loatheth both spirituall and carnall things trusteth and distrusteth God and contrariwise distrusteth and trusteth in the creatures hopeth and dispaireth in Gods mercy feareth God and immoderately feareth man humbleth himselfe before God ascribing vnto him the whole glory and is puffed vp with pride arrogating some part of that which is due vnto God onely vnto himselfe So the same appetite being but in part sanctified is partly temperate and partly intemperate partly sober and partly addicted to excesse and the same body in the like respect is partly the instrument of righteousnesse vnto holinesse and partly the instrument of vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne In which respect the new man and regenerate part may fitly be compared to a childe which is perfect in all the parts of a man in the first hower he is borne but yet litle and weake in respect of his strength and stature notwithstanding still increasing and growing till ●ee come to be a man of ripe and perfect age And contrariwise the part vnregenerate is as fitly resembled to an olde man worne out with age decrepite who also hath in him all the parts of a man but yet weakened and enfeebled Who though hee hath a greater stature yet is not much stronger then a childe and though hee bee yet herein is his disaduantage that whereas the other encreaseth daily and waxeth stronger he decreaseth and decayeth waxing euery day more feeble then other till at last by death all his strength is wholly abolished so as now the weake childe being growne to mans age may triumph ouer him and trample on his graue § Sect. 7 How such contraries can dwell togeather and not abolish one an other Yea but how can such mortall enemies and contraries so opposite dwell together without the abolition and vtter destruction of the one party seeing they doe not onely like the Canaanits and Israelits dwell in the same land or the Israelits and Iebusits in the same City but in the same man and which is more not in diuers but euen in the very same part and faculty To this I answere that though these contraries cannot dwell together in their prime vigour and full strength therfore in the state
of perfection there could be no conflict because there could be no flesh nor yet in the state of corruption because there could bee no spirit yet they may when their degrees are abated and their vigour and full strength is somewhat blunted and deadded In which respect this residence of the flesh and spirit is fitly compared to the residence of the light and darkenesse in the ayre in the twilight or dawning of the day when as there is not one part of the ayre darke and another light but the whole ayre partly light and partly darke he darkenesse and light being mingled together or of heate and colde in the same luke-warme water where they are not diuided in place but the whole water is partly cold and partly hot or of water and wine in the same vessell in which there is not one part wine and another water but the whole mixture is partly water and partly wine or of sicknes and health in those which we call weake and sickly through some spice or reliques of an Ague or Feauer of whom it cannot be saide that hee is sicke in one part and sound in another but that he is partly healthy in his whole body so far forth as he is recoured and partly sicke so farre forth as the reliques of his sicknes remaine in him In all which these contrary qualities doe not friendly conioyne themselues nor agree one with another neither doe they communicate their properties vertues and contrary qualities to produce this mixture but both of them stand still in hostile tearmes in the same subiect labouring continually to get the victory and wholly abolish his enemy opposite CHAP. IIII. Of the Combate it selfe and the manner how it is fought in vs. § Sect. 1. When wee are called by God to this conflict WEe haue shewed what are the causes of this conflict and now we are in the next place to speake of the combate it selfe of the manner how it is fought in vs. To which purpose we are to know that the acceptable time and day of saluation being come when as the Lord is purposed to deliuer vs eternally out of the hands and power of sinne and Sathan raigning and ruling in our hearts as Kings yea Gods as the Scripture speaketh holding the Rom. 6. 12. 2 Cor. 4. 4. 2 Tim. 2. 26. whole man with all the powers and faculties of his soule and body in subiection to doe their will that for the time which remaineth we may be his seruants and souldiars to obey him in all things and to make warre vnder his standard against the spirituall enemies of our saluation it pleaseth him by the ministry of his word made effectuall by the operation of his spirit to open our blinde eyes that we may see and plainly discerne that wretched bondage vnder sinne and Sathan in which we liue the innumerable miseries into which it plungeth vs for this present life and that hellish condemnation and euerlasting torments which if we liue die in this thraldome doe attend vs in the life to come Thereby is discouered vnto vs the tyranny of the diuell whereby he raigneth and rageth in vs working our hearts to his will and inclyning vs to drudge in his seruice for no other reward but the vncertaine pay of worldly vanities which shall be accompanied with endlesse destruction the vglinesse and intollerable waight of sinne which as an heauy burthen presseth vs downe to hell the terrible wrath of God inflamed against vs by our sinnes and the curse of the lawe ready to attach vs. Finally that our liues be momentary and vncertaine and therefore also the pleasures of sinne can bee but alike vnsure and of short continuance but the life to come and both the pleasures and ioyes and the paines and torments of it are euerlasting and there is no hope to enioy the one and escape the other if wee liue and dye in our present condition And thus when by the ministery of the word wee are brought to a sight and sense our damnable and wretched estate our sleeping consciences are awakened our hard and flintie hearts are throughly humbled and softned bruised and made contrite so as our former carnall securitie being shaken of we relent and mourne in the sight of our sinne and misery Being thus cast downe and humbled the Lord by the preaching of the Gospell maketh knowne vnto vs his loue in Christ the infinitenesse of his mercy and goodnesse together with that singular pledge there of his deare and onely sonne giuen to the death for our redemption the sweete promises of the Gospel assuring all of the mercy forgiuenesse of their sins deliuerance out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies whom Christ by his death hath vanquished and subdued and of eternall life and saluation of body and soule if wee will lay hold vpon Christ and his righteousnesse by a liuing faith and bring forth the fruits thereof by forsaking our sinnes and turning vnto God by vnfained repentance Which meanes of comming out of our present misery and of attaining to a better estate being made knowne vnto vs we begin to conceiue that there is some possibilitie of comming out of the thraldome of sinne and Sathan and of attaining to saluation the which inflameth our hearts with an earnest to come out of our bondage and to this ende to be made partakers of Christ and his righteousnesse who alone can helpe vs and a firme resolution to deny our selues and all other meanes as vaine and vnprofitable and to cast our selues wholly vpon our Sauiour Christ for our iustification and saluation From hence ariseth a constant endeauour in the vse of all good meanes to attaine vnto faith whereby we may be assured of Christ and his benefits and particularly apply them vnto our selues for our owne vse which being likewise wrought in vs by the sweete and gracious promises of the Gospell and we thereby perswaded of the pardon of our sinnes of Gods loue and our owne saluation in the next place we desire to haue our assurance confirmed more and more by a liuely s●n●e and feeling and an experimentall knowledge Phil. 3. that wee are by Christ our redeemer deliuered out of the hands of our spirituall enemies To which ende we desire the assistance of Gods grace and holy spirit by which wee may be actually deliuered out of the bondage of sinne and Sathan that they may no longer haue dominion ouer vs and to finde and feele the vertue and power of Christ Iesus his death as effectuall or our sanctification as our iustification for the inriching vs with sauing grace as for the assuring vs of eternall glory for the mortifying and subduing of the corruption of sinne as for the f●●●ng of vs from the guilt and punishment § Sect. 2. The second summons to this conflict Which desires are no sooner wrought in vs by the ministery of the word made effectuall by the inward operation of Gods
spirit but presently the Lord rich in mercy and goodnesse by the same meanes doeth satisfie them and sendeth his spirit accompanied with a strong army of sanctifying graces to take possession of vs for his vse to raigne and rule in vs and to thrust downe Sathan from his throne and to depose him from his regencie or rather tyranny ouer vs and to subdue kill and mortifie all those garrisons of sinnefull lustes so as they shall not be able vnder their great Generall to rule raigne in vs as they did in former times For example hee causeth knowledge spirituall wisedome iudgement discretion holy reason and spirituall cogitations to enter into the head and by stronge assault to encounter ignorance curiositie carnall wisedome errour rash giddinesse and carnall imagination Christian resolution and holy obedience to enter the will and to set vpon cowardly feare and vnconstancy vnflexible stubbornesse and stiffe rebellion faith and loue with innumerable numbers of holy affections to take possession of the heart and to subdue vanquish infidelitie selfe-loue and loue of the world with those many legions of vnlawfull lustes and vnruly passions which Sathan had placed in it spirituall concupiscence and holy desires temperance sobriety and chastity to seate themselues in the inferiour faculties and sensuall appetite and to thrust out and to hold possession against carnall concupiscence worldly lustes intemperance wantonnesse and vncleannesse with the rest of their opposites Finally puritie and honour to seaze vpon the body and all the members thereof and to driue out and cleanse it from all vncleannesse and noysomnesse wherewith it had beene defiled like a filthy stye of impure beastes through the inhabitation and abuse of sinfull lusts § Sect 3. The maner of the conflict it selfe Which royall and heauenly army of Gods sauing graces led vnder the conduct of his holy spirit doe no sooner enter the fielde and encounter their enemies but presently they put them to the worse and causing them to retire doe get the victory Sathan the strong tyrant that held all in quiet possession and ruled as hee list is put to flight spoyled of his power and regency and the spirit of God seateth himselfe vpon the throne and the flesh and the lusts thereof in the first conflict receiue such deadly wounds that they neuer recouer of them but languish in a continuall consumption till at last they bee wholly abolished And therefore being in the first battell thus weakened foyled and discomfited they haue neuer the courage afterwards in a martiall maner to proclaime warre against the spirit and the army of Gods graces which doe accompany i● to bid thē battell and to fight against them in a pitched field but crafuly and cunningly reentrouping their scattered forces they like the sauadges or Irish kernes will onely fight vpon aduantages and therefore make secrete ambuscadoes and hide themselues as it were in the woods and thickers from which they sally out at vnawares when we are most secure and so skirmishing with vs they sometime wound and foyle vs and for a time cause vs to retire And so otherwhiles they set out some booty of worldly profit or pleasure with which they allure vs to come when wee thinke not of it within the danger of their shot somtimes as it were in the night when wee are brought into a deepe sleepe of retchlesse securitie they make some inuoades vpon vs wast and spoyle and doe much mischiefe firing our he 〈…〉 with vnlawful lusts corrupting or gagging the conscience which as the centinell should giue vs warning of their approach wounding and misleading the will vnto some peruersnesse and carrying the members of the body as captiues vnto sinne But when the spirit taking notice of these conflicts riseth vp to giue them battell gathereth his scattered forces and entring the field soundeth the alarem to the fight then the rebelles quit their standings and runne away or yeelde themselues as captiues to suffer the punishment which their rebellion hath deserued Howbeit they doe not long continue vnder subiection being onely kept vnder by slauish feare but vpon euery opportunitie they rebell againe and giue fresh assaults to Gods graces in vs though in the ende they are assured of an vtter ouerthrow like herein vnto theeues and cut purses who when they are apprehended and cast into prison are only restrained from their wicked courses but not reclaimed and amended or vnto gally-slaues who are forced to labour at the command of their enemies whilest they are tyed in chaines and feele the smart of the whip but no sooner doe they breake loose and make an escape but they are ready to encounter with all fury the same persons who not long since they so seruilely obeyed or finally like vnto their father diuell who though he be continually foyled and put to flight yet is so wholly transported with his inueterate mallice that hee continually opposeth God in all things especially in the saluation of his Elect and maketh continuall warre against Michaell the Arch-angell or the Prince of Angels Iesus Christ and the army of his Saints though he be not able to preuaile against them Now this fight betweene these enemies is maintained on both sides not by handy blowes swoord and shield pike and shot for of the fight of the spirit the Apostle saith that though we walke after the flesh yet we doe not warre after the flesh For the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mightie through God to the pulling downe of strong holds casting 2 Cor. 10. 3. 4. 5 down imaginations and euery high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bringing into captiuitie euery thought to the obedience of Christ And hauing in a readines to reuenge all disobedience when your obedience is fulfilled But as the enemies are spirituall so is the maner of the fight spirituall by inward lusting and concupiscence whereby motions and inclinations either good or euill are stirred vp in the heart and soule And thus there is a contrary lusting betweene these enemies the flesh lusting against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh as the Apostle plainely teacheth vs. In which their contrary lusting they both of them mainely ayme at two generall ends Gal. 5. 17. § Sect. 5. The first end as which the flesh aymeth in lusting against the spirit The first ende at which the flesh in it lusting aymeth is to stirre vp and incline vs vnto such lustes desires and motions as are sinnefull and contrary to the lawe of God as to infidelitie impenitency pride selfe-loue hatred enuy vncleannesse couetousnesse and such like or to speake more distinctly it endeauoureth to beget and stirre vp preserue and nourish euill cogitations in the minde wicked inclinations in the will and sinnefull affections and desires in the heart in which respect it is fitly compared to a fiery furnace or boyling potte which continually send vp sparkes and smoke and by the Apostle Iames it
which remaineth vnregenerate struggleth and hindereth and when this would embrace the euil or refuse the good the regenerate part resisteth and opposeth And this is that Law which the Apostle saith he found in himselfe namely that when hee would doe good euill was present with him and that when he delighted in the lawe of God after the inner man bee saw another laws in his Rom. 7. 21. 23. members warring against the lawe of his minde and bringing him into the captiuity of the law of sinne which was in his members From whence ariseth a notable differēce betwene the sinnes of the regenerate and the vnregenerate which though they be all one in respect of the act and deede done yet not in respect of the agent and maner of doing For the regenerate man cannot commit a knowne sinne with full consent of will but there is a reluctation resisting against the flesh not onely in his conscience but also in his heart will and affection For being spirituall and regenerate in all the faculties of his soule the chiefe and principall part of his will adhaereth to the lawe of righteousnesse desiring in all things to yeelde obedience vnto it And consequently it resisteth the motions of the flesh nilling that which it willeth And if through frailty and weakenesse it be ouercome it hateth and detesteth that sinne with which it is taken captiue and maketh the Christian to be much displeased with himselfe because he hath committed it Hee consenteth to the lawe of God that it is holy and good and i● more delighted in it then in the bewitching pleasures of sinne An example whereof we haue in Dauid who though by his flesh he was drawne not onely in his wil to embrace but also in his actions to practise some grieuous sins yet he truely saith of himselfe that in his heart he hated euery false Psal 119. 10● 118. way and that he would haue respect to Gods statutes continually But the vnregenerate man though he sometime feeleth some panges of conscience checking him for his sins so as he cannot securely sleep in them without disturbance yet he liketh and loueth them with all his heart hee willingly obeyeth his sinnefull lustes hee pleaseth and delighteth himselfe in them neither doeth any thing trouble him but the feare of a guilty conscience apprehending and expecting deserued punishment so that he inuerteth the Apostles speech and is ready to say the euill I loue that doe I not but the good I hate that doe I. § Sect. 2. The regenerate man cannot at all times doe the euill which the flesh chuseth Gen. 39. 9. The effects which arise from this conflict in the actions and workes of the man regenerate are diuers first that he cannot doe the euill at all times which the flesh chuseth and imbraceth and this Ioseph intimateth in his deniall of the wicked suite which his mistresse made vnto him How can I doe this great wickednesse and sinne against God And what restrained him surely the feare of God and his holy spirit which would not suffer him to fall into so great a wickednesse Secondly that he cannot commit sinne as the wicked doe with full consent of will for sinne being deposed from it regency cannot raigne and rule in the whole man as in times past but is confined vnto a part alone and so farre foorth as we are regenerate we cannot sinne According to that of the Apostle Hee that committeth sinne 1. Ioh. 3. 9. is of the diuell whosoeuer is borne of God doeth not commit sinne for his seede that is regeneration or the seede of the spirit remaineth in him and hee cannot sinne because hee is borne of God Thirdly that hee cannot walke in the way of sinners but propoundeth vnto himselfe to worship and serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse in which course though sometime he slippeth and falleth and sometime erreth out of the right way for a little space yet the spirit of God dwelling in him and conuicting him of his sinnes and shewing vnto him the digressions and errors of his life exciteth him to rise againe after his falles and to returne into his olde and right way by renewing his repentance Whereby it appeareth that they who liue and continue in knowne sinnes and make a daily practise of committing wickednesse haue not the worke of regeneration so much as begunne in them though they make neuer so glorious a profession and like Herode doe many things praise-worthy in the sight of men § Sect 3. By reason of this conflict he cannot doe the good he would Gal. 5. 17. Rom. 7. 15. 18. Heb. 12. 1. Secondly by reason of this conflict the man regenerate cannot doe the good he would nor yeeld that perfect obedience to Gods lawe which it requireth and he desireth So the Apostle out of his owne experience saith that the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh so that we cannot doe the things that we would And againe what I would that doe I not but what I hate that doe I. To will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not For when he would runne the Christian race the sinne that compasseth him doeth clinge about his necke and either maketh him for wearinesse to sit downe or to runne forward slowly and with great difficultie It giueth him such blowes and wounds that hee is often foyled and falleth in his course and when he recouereth himselfe and riseth by repentance though he laboureth and much desireth to redeeme his lost time with his suture hast and swiftnesse yet after his wrastling and combate he goeth on his iourney but haltingly yea and is often times so dazled and blinded with the deceites of the flesh that hee erreth and goeth astray and oftentimes is haled with violence into the by-wayes of sinne and wickednesse Whereof it is that our best obedience is imperfect euen after wee are regenerate and our best actions so stained and defiled by our sinfull flesh that were not their imperfections couered with Christs perfect obedience and their pollutions washed away in his blood they would neuer ble acceptable in the sight of God for though they spring from the pure fountaine of Gods spirit yet running through the filthy puddle of our sinfull flesh they are hereby defiled and loose their natiue beautie and puritie It is true that the flesh in this conflict doeth not wholly hinder and withdrawe the regenerate man from performing of his duty nor alienate his mind and heart from the flesh cannot wholly hinder the spirit from good actions yet it interrupteth it in them study and embracing of godlinesse and righteousnesse but yet it still endeauoureth to doe it and though it cannot make him to stand still or turne backe againe yet like a heauy burthen it presseth him downe and hindereth him in his iourney though it cannot make him desist running the Christian race yet it casteth many
and at the same time was willing to die that he might yeelde obedience to his fathers will and perfect the worke of our redemption and yet as one saith Vtrobique Christus neutrobique peccatum Christ in both but sinne in neither § Sect. 2. That this conflict is not in the vnregenerate Secondly this conflict is not at all in those who are vnregenerate and vnsanctified for in these one of the combatants which is the spirit is wanting they are wholy ruled by the flesh vnder their chiefe cōmander Sathan whose kingdom is not deuided in the carnall man but he quietly raigneth without any resistance and possesseth all in peace Neither is there in him any power of opposition for he is not onely sicke but starke dead in trespasses and sinnes and Eph. 2. 1. there is not any sparke of spirituall life and grace which is wholly from the spirit according to that of the Apostle to be carnally minded is death but to bee spiritually minded is 2. Cor. 4. 4. Eph. 2. 2. life and peace Sathans throne is set vp in them and hee raigneth not onely like a King but also like a God in the children of vnbeliefe hauing not onely their bodies and outward man but euen their hearts soules their wils and affections at his commaund so as they are neither able nor willing to make any resistance but yeeld vnto him chearful obedience The flesh as Sathans Vice-roy also ruleth in them and they willingly obey it in the lustes thereof It raigneth in their mortall bodies as the Apostle speaketh yea in the most excellent parts of their soules the minde Rom. 6. 12. and vnderstanding for their wisedome is earthly carnall Iam. 3. 15. and diuellish standing in direct emnitie against God being in the flesh they doe only mind the things of the flesh Rom. 8. 7 and therefore the Apostle ioyneth both these together as Eph. 2. 3. being all one fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the minde And as they are wholly flesh so all their actions are fleshly Ioh. 3. 6. and carnall for as our Sauiour saith that which i● borne of Rom. 7. 5. the flesh is flesh and as the Apostle telleth vs when wee were in the flesh the motions of sinnes which were by the lawe did Rom. 6 17. 19. worke in our members to bring forth fruite vnto death and being the seruants of sinne they yeelded their members as seruants to vncleannesse and to iniquitie vnto iniquitie And therefore in those who are meerely naturall and vnregenerate there can be no such conflict because they are onely flesh and no spirit neither can it rightly be saide as Augustine affirmeth August Contra Iulian pelagian l. 6. cap. 11. Tit. 7. Col. 1136. that the spirit of any man can lust against his flesh vnlesse the spirit of Christ doe dwell in him § Sect. 3. That the conflict that is in the regenerate that which is in the vnregenerate differ much and first in their grounds causes from which they arise Howbeit we are to knowe that there is euen in the carnall man another fight and skirmish which hauing some seeming shewe and similitude of the spirituall conflict is by worldly and ciuill men mistaken for it in which respect it wil not be amisse to distinguish them one from another First then they differ in their ground and cause from which they arise for whereas as hath beene shewed the spirituall conflict ariseth from the grace of regeneration and sanctification whereby the gifts and graces of Gods spirit being infused into all our powers and faculties doe make warre against our carnall corruptions and fleshly lusts the conflict which is in the vnregenerate ariseth from those reliques of Gods image defaced in vs opposing the image of Sathan and our sinnefull corruption For the minde retaineth some small sparkes of the light of nature and certaine common notions which receiue some litle strength and luster from the view and study in the booke of the creatures and yet a larger increase of illumination from the word of God which illighteneth the minde euen of a meere naturall man with speculatiue and litterall knowledge whereby hee is in some sortenabled to discerne betweene good and euill trueth and falsehood right and wrong With which light of the vnderstanding the conscience being directed it retaineth also a power to excuse vs when we doe well and to accuse condemne terrifie and torment vs when we doe euill So the Apostle saith that the Gentiles who had not the lawe did shewe the worke of the lawe Rom. 2 15. written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnes and their thoughts the meane while accusing or else excusing one another The will likewise retaineth a kinde of freedome not onely about things materially euill but also such as are natural ciuill meerely morall though herein also it be very weake corrupt and defectiue And these reliques are common to all men and in some are much encreased and rise to a farre higher pitch and degree by the common guifts of the spirit and meere ciuill graces which in a farre greater measure are conferred vpon some men then vpon others But there being mingled in all these faculties a sea of corruption with some small droppes of those created reliques ioyned with a world of wickednesse in the inferiour and sensuall faculties of the soule and many of these carnal corruptions being in their speciall kindes contrary one to another although they generally agree in being all sinfull and euill from hence ariseth this warre and discord betweene them like vnto theeues and robbers who all agree together in robbing and spoyling of a true man but fall out among themselues when they come to deuide the prey Thus the vnderstanding by the light of nature or common grace discerning in particular actions what is good to be embraced and what is euil to be shunned informeth the conscience accordingly and leaueth it to it● censure and determination either to approue vs for the doing of good forsaking of euil or to condemne vs for the doing of euill and neglecting of good Vpon which censure sometimes the will is excited and moued to embrace that which the conscience alloweth to refuse that which it condemneth sometime being transported by it owne sinnefull corruption and sometime ouerswayed with the violence of the inferiour will carnall appetite and vnruly passions it harkeneth vnto them and stoppeth the eares to reason and conscience For example the vnderstanding discerning that it is grounded on reason and equirie that we should serue God who created vs doeth continually preserue vs according to that of the Apostle For we are his Eph. 2. 10. workmāship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which God hath before ordained that we should walke in them propoundeth this to the conscience that by the law of creation we are all bound to serue him the which
the spirit the reason minde and conscience not excepted But in the combate which is in the vnregenerate the conflict is betweene diuers faculties which are all carnall and corrupted fighting one of them against another as betweene the reason and the will the conscience and the carnall concupiscence passions Rom. 2. 15. and affections in which whether soeuer party preuaileth still the vnsanctified man is drawne vnto sinne And so also they differ in the manner of the fight for that which is betweene the spirit and the flesh is done by contrary lusting the one against the other in a practicall reall and effectuall maner but that which is betweene the reason and the will the conscience and the affections is maintained by logicall disputes and mentall discourses whilest the conscience inferres fearefull conclusions of punishments Gods ensuing iudgements vpon the wicked choyse of the will and their yeelding to satisfie their carnall affections For though in the creation the wil was in subiection to reason and embraced or shunned that which it approued or disalowed and though this order bee commonly obserued betweene the faculties euen in this state of corrupion yet after that man rebelled against his chiefe Soueraigne there followed rebelliō therupon in the inferior faculties against their superiour in the little commonwealth of man and now the will yeelding obedience no further then it liketh and lusteth doeth often resist reason which is his King and refuseth to follow it directions and to allow of it conclusions but rather embraceth the cleane contrary Now whilest reason is earnest in perswading by arguments and the will rebellious and violent in crossing and thawarting it the conscience being awakened and rowsed vp commeth in to the rescue of reason restraining the will from embracing that euill it liketh by the terrours of punishment which it adiudgeth the offender vnto vpon the committing of the sinne wherewith oftentimes when the violence of the will is abated and the courage thereof cooled so that it beginneth to stagger and faint in its resolution then enters in a tumultuous troope of passions and affections as fresh aydes to strengthen the will in rebellion which being themselues first hyred and corrupted to doe seruice vnto Sathan in sinnefull desires and actions with the present pay or expected wages of worldly vanities doe by the same proffers perswade the will to continue stiffe and obdurate in rebellious courses and with all resolution to oppose it selfe against reason and conscience But yet consider that in all this conflict betweene these diuers faculties there is no enmitie contrariety betweene them in their natures neither is there more grace or lesse corruption in the reason and conscience then in the will and affections for they as well as these doe like and loue sinne with the pleasures and profits of it in it owne nature if they were not deterred with the fearefull consequents of Gods iudgments and punishments which they see will necessarily follow vpon such sinnefull praemises Nor is there lesse emnitie betweene them and Gods grace and goodnesse for were they out of the gunshot of daunger they would as willingly embrace the pleasures of sinne as doe the affections and will but heere onely is the difference that they are more pollitique enemies to God and all goodnesse and more wisely louing themselues dare not seeke pleasure in such sinfull attempts as will cause more bitternesse sorrow in the ende through sense of punishment then can be counteruailed with the short ioy which they shall take in the fruition of their wicked delights whereas the other being more rude and sensuall doe onely looke vpon present obiects and therefore when they see a bayte and booty of sinne set out before them they runne vnto it with a headlong violence not fearing nor caring for the imminent daunger of denounced punishments § Sect. 6. The conflict betweene the flesh the spirit is in the same saculties But it is farre otherwise in the conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh which is not betweene diuers faculties all still remaining and agreeing in their naturall corruption and onely differing one with another like Souldiars in the same Campe and fighting vnder the same Generall vpon their diuers reasons and grounds in the managing of the War the one being more willing in running into dangers the other more wary to auoide and escape them but it is betweene the same faculties fighting against themselues reason against reason and will against will not arysing from a syllogisticall discourse vpon outward grounds of ensuing mischiefes but from a reall change of their nature wrought by Gods spirit the which because it is but begun and imperfect the reliques of sinnefull corruption remaining and dwelling in the same house and heart with spirituall and renewed graces these being euen in their owne nature as contrary one to another as fire to water light to darknesse good to euill there necessarily followeth a continuall conflict betweene them in which as vnreconciable enemies they seeke to destroy one another not moued hereunto by discourse of reason no more then in the fight betweene the Lyon and the Dragon the Dogge and the Beate the fire and water but by the antipathy and contrarietie which is in their natures Whereof it is that a new borne babe in Christ who hath litle learning and a small degree of knowledge and spirituall vnderstanding doeth with as great resolution withstand the encounters and motions of sinne and endeauours to please God though he be scarce able to render a reason of his doings as those who are growne vnto a riper age and haue attained vnto an higher degree of learning and wisedome An example whereof wee haue in many poore simple illiterate men who as conscionably auoide all sin and practise the holy duties of a Christian life as other Christ ans who are learned and haue a greater measure of knowledge and wisedome and also in many martyres who being vnlearned and not able to maintaine the trueth of their cause by syllogisticall disputes did yet as resolutly oppose themselues against idolatry and popish heresies and as willingly and couragiously seale the trueth with their blood as others who had attained to the greatest learning Which plainely sheweth that their opposition to errour and falsehood was not chiefly grounded on mentall discourses for then those who most excelled in learning knowledge should haue as much exceeded in their resolution and opposition but vpon that secret change of nature made in them by Gods spirit by which they opposed that which was euil not onely in their reason and vnderstanding but also in their will hearts and affections with all other powers and parts of their soules and bodies By which it appeareth that the Christian is no sooner conceiued of the seede of the spirit and by communication of sauing grace receiueth spirituall life birth and being but hee presently becommeth one of Gods souldiars and as naturally and voluntarily by vertue
and foyleth the aduerse party like those warres of old betweene the Romanes and Carthaginians and those mighty enemies the Turkes and Persians in these dayes And because both parties continue in their great strength hereof it commeth to passe that these sharpe and fierce encounters doe also last euen to the end of their liues vntill the Lord by death doe put an end to the battaile giuing vnto the spirituall man full and finall victory ouer all his enemies and the crowne of victory euerlasting happinesse § Sect. 4. That this conflict is aften weake in strong Christians Finally the Lord to shew the riches of his bounty doth sometimes giue vnto his seruants such a large measure of spirituall strength sauing grace knowledge faith loue Christian magnanimitie and the rest that like those mightie worthies in the time of Dauid none of their spirituall enemies are able to withstand them but in the first encounters after this strength receiued they foile wound and vanquish them either leading them captiue without any great resistance or else putting them to a shamefull flight So as they neuer againe gather their scattered forces nor once dare to enter the field onely they may perhaps after a treacherous manner lye in ambushment and make some attempt vpon some great aduantage And in this case the spirituall sould our gloriously triumpheth ouer his spirituall enemies and keeping them vnder with vnresistable power doth enioy his victory with much peace and heauenly comfort But all this while we are to remember that the Christian Champian and the Lords great worthy doth not thus preuaile by vertue of any naturall strength which he hath aboue others of his fellow souldiers but like Sampson through the gifts of the spirit and the power of God communicated vnto him which because through their pride and selfe-loue they are apt to forget and beeing swollen vp in their owne conceipts to rob God of his glory by arrogating some part of the praise of their spirituall strength and victories vnto themselues the Lord leaueth them by spiritual desertions vnto their owne abilities and letteth loose their enemies to assault and encounter them In which case they are vtterly vnable to stand in the least conflict but are shamefully foyled put to flight and led captiue of sinne as we see in the example of Noah Lot Iob Dauid Peter and many others And then being discouraged and discomfited they complaine with Iob that God opposeth them as a mightie enemie making them his markes and shooting against them his enuenomed arrowes With Dauid that God hath forsaken them will be no Psal 22. 1. 77 7. 8. more intreated but hath shut vp his kindnesse in displeasure that his terrours doe fight against them dry their bones and drinke vp their spirits And finally with the Church they cry out O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy Esa 63. 17. 64. 9. wayes and hardened our heart from thy feare Bee not wroth very sore O Lord neither remember iniquitie for euer On the other side the flesh all this while proudly swelleth in victorie insulteth ouer the spirit is this the man that tooke God for his hope Carryeth away the spoiles and vaunteth it selfe in a wicked triumph But though God hath withdrawne himselfe a little that the spirituall man might more carnestly seeke him yet hee doth not vtterly forsake his souldiers and seruants and those his graces in them though in respect of sense motion and outward operation they seeme qu●●e vtterly extinguished yet in truth they are but in a swound and as it were couered ouer with the ashes of corruption and therefore when the Lord reuiueth them bloweth vpon them with his spirit and cherisheth their inward heate by fresh fuell and a new accesse of sauing grace then Sampsons haire growing cut againe hee recouereth his strength and the Christian Champion being grieued and ashamed for his former foyles gatheteth together his scattered forces and with more then wonted valure and resolution encountering his enemies he putteth them to flight obtaineth the victorie and for euer after holdeth them vnder in more base subiection CHAP. XI How we may know whether this Conflict be fought in vs that is whether the spirit of God dwell in vs or no. § Sect. 1. That euery faith fall man may ought to be assured that the spirit of God dwelleth in him THE third point propounded i● how a Christian may know whether there bee in him this conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh or no which is in effect as much as to knowe whether wee be sound Christians whether we be the children of God whether wee belong to Gods election and finally whether we haue in vs any sauing grace yea or no seeing in all these and these onely this conflict is or wil be fought as soone as they are regenerate and conuerted vnto God The which waighty question hath already in part beene resolued when as I shewed the differences betweene the combate of the flesh and spirit and the conflict of conscience and the will and affections and now commeth to be more fully and directly handled For the clearing whereof we need not to make any further search but onely to examine whether the spirit of God accompanied with his sauing graces which is one of the combatants doth reside and dwell in vs. For if it doe thē there is no question but this conflict is in vs seeing it no sooner entreth and taketh possession of vs but presently it maketh warre against our flesh with all the carnall lusts thereof deposeth them from their regency giueth them deadly wounds holdeth them in subiection and laboureth all it may vtterly to desplace and roote them out Now euery faithfull man ought to be assured of this namely that the spirit of God dwelleth in him or if hee haue not this assurance as yet he is neuer to be at rest till it bee euident and cleare in his owne heart and conscience as being the greatest question and the waightiest and most important case of conscience that can bee propounded or knowne of vs. The which as it may bee knowne so no Christian ought to bee ignorant of it as the Apostle implyeth by that interrogation Know yee not that yee are the 1 Cor. 3. 16. 6. 19. Temple of God and that the spirit of God dwelleth in you And againe Know yee not that your bodies are the temples of the holy Ghost And therefore we must not content our selues with the doubtfull opinion of the Papists nor with the vncertaine and vngrounded hope of carnall gospellers but labour after certaine assurance that wee are the Temples of God and that his holy Spirit dwelleth in vs. Which that we may studiously indeauour to attaine vnto let vs consider first that God in his Word reuealeth this truth of the spirits dwelling in euery faithfull Christian by many infallible markes and signes to this end and purpose that we Deut. 29. 19.
may take notice thereof labour to attaine to the knowledge and assurance of it being a truth so important and comfortable Secondly if we doe not know that the Spirit dwelleth in vs we cannot know that we haue any part in Christ and consequently that we are true Christians seeing the holy Spirit is the principall bond of the vnion betweene him and vs by which he dwelleth in vs and wee in him Thirdly if we doe not know that the Spirit dwelleth in vs we cannot know that wee are iustified for wee haue nothing to doe with Christs righteousnesse in which we stand righteous before God till by our spirituall vnion he is made ours whereby we haue right and interest in all his benefits wee cannot know that wee are adopted the children of God vnlesse we know that wee haue the spirit of Adoption whereby wee cry in our hearts Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. Nor that we are sanctified vnlesse wee haue the sanctifying spirit which is the beginner and perfecter of all our holinesse nor that our prayers are heard of God seeing of our selues we know not how to pray as we ought but it is the spirit of supplication which helpeth our infirmities and teacheth vs to pray with sighes and grones which cannot bee expressed Rom. 8. 26. Iam. 4. 3. Neither doth the Lord heare any prayers but such as the Spirit inspireth because such only are according to his will And when without his helpe wee pray Wee aske and receiue not because wee aske amisse as the Apostle speaketh Fourthly vnlesse we know that wee haue the Spirit wee Ioh. 2. 20. 27. Ioh. 14. 26. cannot know whether we are in errour or truth or whether our Religion which we professe bee true or false because he is the spirit of illumination who onely inlighteneth vs and teacheth and leadeth vs in all truth Now how shall he shew vs other things so as we may know that hee sheweth them if he doe not shew vs himselfe and make it knowne vnto vs that he dwelleth in vs and teacheth vs Fiftly if we be not assured that he is in vs wee can haue no sound comfort because hee is the onely true comforter from whom all sound comfort springeth and all other comforts of which he is not the author are false vngrounded and meere delusions Lastly wee must labour after the knowledge 2 Cor. 13. 5. of the fruits of the spirit dwelling in vs as that wee haue faith and that Christ dwelleth in vs and therefore we must also be assured that we haue the tree and roote for the effect argueth his cause as well as the cause his effect and not to know that wee haue the spirit is not to know that we haue any grace § Sect. 2. The first infallible signe is the ministery and meanes by which it hath bene wrought in vs. Now we may know whether the spirit of God be in vs or no First by the ministerie and meanes which it vieth to make entrance and to take possession of vs the which is the ministerie of the Word of God For when the flesh with the lusts thereof are somewhat amazed and affrighted with the canon shot of legall threatnings making as it were a large breach into the heart and conscience and the trumpet of the Gospell soundeth offering remission of sin and eternall saluation to all that beleeue and repent then this victorious captaine maketh his entrance assaulteth the flesh and driueth it into corners taking possession of all for Gods vse the great Monarch of heauen and earth And this the Apostle sheweth where he saith that the Galathians Gal. 3. 2. receiued the spirit not by the workes of the law but by the hearing of faith that is the doctrin of faith contained in the Gospel of Iesus Christ Whereof it is that the Ministers of the New Testament are by him called the ministers of the 2 Cor. 3. 6. spirit because by their preaching they prepare the way for the spirit as Iohn the Baptist for Iesus Christ and are as it were his harbingers to take vp a lodging for him in our hearts and soules So that wee may discerne the spirit by the meanes whereby it entreth which is not by dreames and extraordinarie reuelations for this is the fanaticall spirit of Anabaptists and Familists nor by the preaching of the law onely For he commeth not in this great strong 1 King 19. 11. 12. winde that rents the Mountaines and breakes in pieces the Rockes nor in this earthquake which shaketh the foundations of mans heart nor in this fire which consumeth all sinners that come in the way of it But when these haue gone before like a peale of Canons that giue warning of the comming of this mighty Prince then the still voice of the Gospell is vttered by the Ambassadours and Heralds of the great King and with it hee entreth and scateth himselfe in our hearts as it were vpon his royall throne § Sect. 3 The second signe is the effects and fruits of the spirit 1 by the nature of the gifts in vs we may discerne the spirit Secondly we may know whether the spirit dwelleth in vs and fighteth against the flesh by the effects and fruits of it And first generally by the nature of the things wrought in vs and then by their constancie and continuance For if the gifts and endowments which we haue be but meerely naturall or such as may be attained vnto by our owne art industrie and indeauours then are they no infallible notes of Gods sanctifying spirit or sauing graces dwelling in vs the which are supernaturall diuine and sent downe as it were from heauen into vs. Whereof it is that the Apostle opposeth this spirit of God and that which is in worldly men the one against the other Wee haue receiued not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God And a little after the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2. 12. 14 of God Againe if they be but the common gifts of the Spirit as meerely Morall vertues and restraining graces which are common to ciuill worldlings and haue beene also in many Heathens and honest infidels then cannot we by them gather any assurance that the sanctifying spirit dwelleth and warreth in vs against the flesh onely there is a fight betweene conscience and affections vice is curbed and ouer-ruled by vice and one corrupt facultie by an other of the same kinde §. Sect. 4. The graces of the spirit may be knowne by their constant continuall actions and operations Secondly the spirit and the sauing graces thereof are constant and continuall in their actions and operations dayly more and more mortifying and subduing the flesh and carnall corruptions and inciting vs vnto all Christian and holy duties like the sunne which from the rising shineth still more gloriously vntill noone day or a liuely fountaine which continually springeth and sendeth forth
it cleare and sweet streames but the common gifts of the restraining spirit doe worke and shew themselues onely by fits like flashes of lightning which suddenly appeare as suddenly vanish leauing nothing behind them but grosse and palpable darknesse or like standing waters and winter brookes which swell and ouer flow vpon the fall of raine and descent of land waters but soone after fall and are dried vp in the time of drought So the sauing graces of the sanctifying spirit are lasting and permanent euer continuing with increase euen to the very end of our liues but all gifts meerely naturall indure but for a time and like the body 1 Ioh. 2. 27. after they are growne to their full strength ripenes they decrease till by a daily consumption they come to nothing as we see in naturall knowledge and wisedome which decayeth with age vntill at last it commeth to dotage and childish ignorance § Sect 5. Of the particular effects of the spirit the 1 whereof is spirituall illightening Iohn 14. 26. But let vs descend to some particular effects which the spirit worketh for these arguing their cause will plainely shewe the residence and abiding of this holy guest in vs. And first the spirit of God is the spirit of illumination inlightning our blinde eyes reuealing vnto vs the things of God and leading vs into all trueth according to that of our Sauiour But the Comforter which is the holy Ghost whom 1 Ioh. 2. 20. 27. the Father will send in my name hee shall teach you all things And that of the Apostle But ye haue an vnction from the holy one and yee knowe all things And againe But the annoynting which yee haue receiued of him abideth in you and ye neede not Eph. 1. 17. that any man teach you but as the same annoynting teacheth you of all things And hence it is that this holy spirit is called the spirit of wisedome and reuelation in the knowledge of God Yea but the wicked also may haue some illightening Heb. 6. 4. of the spirit as the Apostle sheweth and which is more they may haue a tast of the heauenly guift be partakers of the holy Ghost that is of the gifts and graces of the sanctifying spirit and haue also a tast of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come yea and hereby they may attaine vnto a farre greater measure of knowledge then those who are truely regenerate and how then can this be a difference whereby we may discerne the one from the other To which I answere that though there bee no difference betweene the knowledge of the regenerate and vnregenerate in the quantity in which respect the knowledge of the wicked yea of the diuell himselfe doeth oftentime exceed the knowledge of the godly and faithfull yet there are many other differences betweene them for first the knowedge of the regenerate is much better grounded euen vpon that infallible foundation of the holy Scriptures the which they carefully and conscionably heare reade study and meditate in them that they may bee more and more edified and inlightned grounded and built vpon this sacred authoritie as vpon the firme and vnmoueable corner stone whereas the knowledge of the vnregenerate is chiefly founded vpon humaine authorities the doctrines and traditions of men which as they are sometimes true so sometimes false and erroneous and neuer in themselues certaine and infallible So also their knowledge is confirmed by the experience which they haue of the things they knowe in themselues by a liuely and powerfull sense and feeling of the operation of it in their owne hearts and consciences purging and purifying them from all sinfull corruptions and renewing them to all obedience and inuiting and prouoking them to them to the performance of all Christian duties of holinesse and righteousnesse which moueth the Lord to reueale vnto them his great secrets and the mysteries of his kingdome according to that The secrete of the Lord is with them that feare him and he will shew them his couenant and againe his secretes Psal 25. 14. Pro. 3. 32. are with the righteous Whereby they not onely knowe the things themselues barely vttered but also Gods secret will and purpose in them But the knowledge of the wicked is onely in theory and speculation whereby they are enabled onely to talke and discourse of the things they conceiue and haue no sense feeling or experience of that powerfull working of it for their inward sanctification or outward reformation but still lye frozen in the dregs of their sins and neuer cōscionably practise any duties though they can learnedly and cloquently discourse of them In which respect it is saide that the seede of the word taketh no roote in them Mat. 13. 6 7. because their knowledge is not setled and grounded vpon these onely true foundations which neuer faile Secondly the knowledge of the regenerate is more cleare distinct and particular and therefore sufficient to direct and guide them not onely after some generall manner but also in all particular duties and actions but the knowledge of the vnregenerate is more generall confused and darke onely inabling them to set downe generall rules of duties or if particular yet rather to others then to themselues who are so blinded with their passions and carnall lustes that their knowledge giueth them no sufficient direction for their owne cariage in particular duties Thirdly the knowledge of the regenerate still applieth the things knowne to particular vse bringing the word of God home to their owne hearts and consciences as the threatnings of the law for their humiliation to driue them to Christ to restraine them from sin when they are ready to fal and to raise them being fallen by vnfained repentance So Iob kept his eyes vnder couenant that they should not glaunce wantonly vpon women Iob. 31. 1. 3. because hee knewe that destruction was to the wicked and a strange punishment to the workers of iniquitie And hereby Ioseph was restrained from harkening to his mistresses wicked suite How can I doe this great wickednesse and Gen. 39. 9. sinne against God And so likewise hereby they are inticed and spurred forward vnto all good duties when as they feele themselues dull and slow For so the Apostle hauing spoken of Gods feareful iudgement he applieth this knowledge 2 Cor. 5 11. to particular vse knowing therefore saith he the terrour of the Lord we perswade men as though hee should say I dare not knowing this terrible iudgement but perswade you to obedience and dehort you from sinne least neglecting my duty I also bee lyable vnto it And thus also knowing the promises of the Gospell they apply them for their owne consolation according to that of the Apostle Whatsoeuer things were written aforetime were written for Rom. 15. 4. our learning that wee through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope But the wicked by their knowledge
chearefull readinesse to suffer any thing which it pleaseth God to cal him vnto for his sake vntill at last it come to that plerophory and full perswasion of Gods vnchangeable loue and our Election Rom. 8. 38. 39. 1 Ioh. 4. 18. Adoption and Saluation which was in the Apostle Paule who was fully perswaded that nothing in the world was 1. Pet. 1. 8. Rom. 5. 3. able to seperate betweene Gods loue and him And this is accompanied with such peace of conscience as passeth all vnderstanding For when we are assured that wee haue the remission of our sinnes and are quite freed from them both in respect of their guilt and punishment then the terrours and feares which did accompany them are taken away and both Sathan and our owne consciences which did continually accuse vs are put to silence so as they can no longer affright vs nor disturbe our peace From whence springeth spirituall ioy vnspeakeable and glorious whereby we reioyce not onely in the fruition of Gods benefits but also in afflictions and tribulations as the Apostle witnesseth when as we see our selues freed out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies the wrath of God the curse of the lawe death hell and condemnation and now brought into an happy and blessed estate of grace and saluation in and by Iesus Christ and and his benefits apprehended and applied by faith Which effects who so finde thus wrought in them they may be assured that they haue the spirit which is the cause and authour by which they are wrought euen as the light bringeth vs the Sunne the streames to the fountaine and the branches and fruite vnto the roote from which they flow and spring § Sect. 7 The differences betweene a iustifying faith and the faith of presumptuous ciuill worldlings Yea but hypocrites and vnregenerate men doe boast most of their faith and assurance of saluation and therefore they also may haue the spirit or else this faith is no infallible signe of it To which I answere that they haue no true faith but as it were in a dreame and dotage they delude themselues by mistaking their carnall and secure presumption for a liuely and iustifying faith But how shall we discerne the one from the other seeing they seeme to haue oftentimes as strong confidence assurance of their saluation as the best Christians I answere that though there be betweene them some seeming similitude yet there is as great difference as betweene pure gold a rotten post guilded ouer For first true faith is grounded on the Scriptures the word of God but presumption hath no ground but an idle conceipt arising cut of pride and selfe-loue True faith alwayes followeth vnfained humiliation in the sight and sense of our sinne and misery whereas the presumptuous man was neuer humbled but hath a proude conceipt of his owne righteousnesse and worthinesse Faith followeth illumination and knowledge and first we must know God and his Christ before we can truely beleeue in them but presumption riseth commonly out of ignorance and the more destitute the woldly man is of the knowledge of God and his wayes the more bold and confident hee is in his perswasion True faith is ioyned with all other graces as loue zeale of Gods glory humilitie patience and obedience manifesting it selfe by the fruites that it bringeth foorth in good workes But presumption is seuered from them all and goeth alone without any such company and attendants True faith is not discerned before sound conuersion and then it beginneth in some small and weake degrees but presumption is borne and bred with vs and in an instant commeth to its full strength which maketh the secure worldling to bragge that he hath alwayes beleeued and is so strong in faith that he neuer doubted of his saluation True faith is not attained vnto without great difficulty it being no lesse a worke to beleeue the Gospell then to fulfill the Lawe but presumption voluntarily creepeth into our hearts and the lesse paines wee take in the vse of Gods holy ordinances the more easily it entreth and the stronger it waxeth Faith is alwayes assaulted with doubting and the one being a fruite of the spirit the other of the flesh there is a great and continuall conflict betweene them but presumption is bold and confident and he who is possessed of it professeth that hee neuer doubted of his saluation neither feeleth he any conflict in him because he is wholly carnall and corruption warreth not against corruption but onely runneth out of one extreame into another for when the secure worldling being by some meanes awakened out of his lethargy ceaseth to presume then he beginneth to despaire Faith purifieth the heart and worketh by loue and is neuer seuered from vnfained repentance but presumption nourisheth and increaseth all sinfull corruptions and they who most presume are most destitute of all true loue towards God and their neighbours And howsoeuer they leaue some grosse sinnes forworldly respects yet they repent of none there being no charge in their affections but onely in their actions yea in this respect also they nourish many sins in their bosomes which they thinke most sweete and aduantageable and will by no meanes be perswaded to part with them Faith vniteth and applieth Christ vnto the beleeuer for all vses for which God gaue him that is as well for sanctification as for iustification and saluation and applieth the vertue of his precious Rom. 12. 1. blood for the taking and purging away of the pollution and corruption of sinne as well as the guilt and punishment and as it taketh hold of Christ to make him ours so it giueth and offereth our soules and bodies vnto Christ that we may become his and be wholly deuoted and dedicated to his worship and seruice but presumption onely apprehendeth Christ for the remission of sinne and the obtaining of euerlasting life and not for the mortification of sinne by vertue of his death nor spirituall quickening and renewing by power of his resurrection and so also it is onely a receiuer but no giuer it taketh all in shewe which Christ offereth but it will in loue of thankefulnesse returne nothing vnto him againe Faith finding it owne weakenes and the sharpe encounters of doubting and incredulity laboureth earnestly in the vse of all good meanes whereby it may bee more and more encreased and confirmed as hearing the word receiuing the Sacrament reacing prayer meditation and such like but presumption finding no such assaults securely neglecteth all these helpes feeling it selfe then the strongest when it is most destitute of them Finally true faith endureth in the day of fiery tryall and temptation and euen when God seemeth to frowne to withdrawe outward testimonies of his loue and in stead of them sendeth afflictions and crosses then the beleeuer with Abraham hopeth aboue hope and beleeueth against beliefe it Rom. 4. 18. Iob. 13. 15. 19. 25. pearceth through all these cloudes of
true iustifying faith maketh vs to reioyce when as wee thinke of the appearing of our Sauiour Christ vnto iudgement and euen to long for this time as being the day of our full redemption when both in body and soule wee shall be freed from all sinne and misery and enioy all glory and endlesse happinesse according to that of our Sauiour When these things beginne to come to passe then looke vp and lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth nigh And so the Apostle saith that we which haue receiued the first fruites Luk. 21. 28. Rom. 8. 23. of the spirit euen we our selues groane within our selues waiting for the adoption to wit the redemption of our body The which ioy in thinking on this day and mourning because it is deferred commeth through our assurance of faith and confidence of hope For therefore doe we desire to leaue 2 Cor. 5. 1. 7. Gal. 5. 5. this world and to be dissolued because we knowe that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolued wee haue a building of God a house not made with handes but eternall in the heauens and because through the spirit wee waite for the hope of righteousnesse by faith But no such ioy or longing accompanieth the faith of temporaries because they haue no such assurance of this happinesse and are besides so besotted with the loue of worldly things that they cannot without terrour and amazement thinke of that day which when it commeth will wholly depriue them of all their earthly ioy § Sect. 19. The 3 effect is the spirit of adoption A third effect of the spirit dwelling in vs is to perswade and assure vs that we are the children of God and to entitle vs as heyres to our heauenly inheritance the which is a priuiledge and prerogatiue that belongeth to all the faithfull and to them alone according to that of the Euangelist But as many as receiued him to them gaue hee power to Ioh. 1. 12. become the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue on his name And this is an vndoubted fruit of the spirit as the apostle witnesseth For yee haue not saith hee receiued the spirit of bondage againe to feare but yee haue receiued the spirit Rom. 8. 15. 16. Gal. 4. 6. of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father The spirit it selfe beareth witnesse to our spirit that wee are the children of God and if children then heyres heyres of God and ioynt heyres with Christ And againe Because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father In which regard the spirit of God dwelling in vs 2 Cor. 5. 5. is called the spirit of adoption which doeth not giue vnto vs a doubtfull testimony of this inestimable priuiledge but certainely assureth vs that it doeth belong vnto vs. In which regard it is called an earnest which God therefore Eph. 1. 14. giueth vs to put vs out of all doubt that he wil make good this heauenly bargaine which hee hath promised vnto vs. Which is saith the Apostle the earnest of our inheritance vntill the redemption of the purchased possession And in the same respect it is called a seale which by the powerfull impression that it imprinteth in vs assureth vs that God will make good vnto vs the promise of grace and saluation in Iesus Christ So the Apostle saith In whom also after ye beleeued yee were sealed with that holy spirit of promise And Eph. 1. 13. 4. 30. grieue not the holy spirit of God whereby yee are sealed vnto the day of redemption If therefore by this earnest and seale we haue attained vnto this assurance of our adoption and right vnto our heauenly inheritance we may be assured also that the spirit of God dwelleth in vs for the cause and the effect cannot be seuered and our assurance of our heauenly bargaine doeth plainely argue that we haue receiued this earnest and seale by which alone it is confirmed vnto vs. But that we may not be deceiued with a false and counterfeite seale let vs remember that this seale onely is annexed vnto the couenant of grace which requireth on our part the condition of faith and repentance and as it is Gods priuy seale according to that the Lord knoweth them that are his so there is a broade seale ioyned with it let euery 2 Tim. 2. 19. one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity and therefore those who liue in their infidelity and impenitency haue not receiued this seale for what haue they to doe with the seale to whom the couenant doeth not appertaine § Sect 20. The fourth effect is the spirit of supplication A fourth effect of the spirit is to enable vs vnto prayer and to powre forth our soules vnto God in such an acceptable manner as that our suites and petitions are hard and graunted by him whereof it is called by the Prophet Zachary the spirit of grace and supplication which the Lord promiseth to power vpon the house of Dauid and vpon the inhabitants Zach. 12. 10. of Ierusalam that is all the true members of the inuisible Church militant here on earth So the Apostle plainly Rom. 8. 26. telleth vs that we know not for what to pray as we ought but it is the spirit which helpeth our infirmities and maketh intercession Iud. ver 20. for vs with groanings which cannot bee vttered And therefore the Apostle Iude knowing our insufficiencie in our selues to performe this duty doeth exhort vs to pray in the holy Ghost Whereby it appeareth that the spirit of God dwelleth in all those who in the sight and sense of their owne spirituall wants doe powre foorth their hearts and soules vnto God in prayer with faith and feruency of spirit which properties I require in that prayer which assureth vs that the spirit dwelleth in vs and not ability on the sudden vpon euery occasion to conceiue a prayer and to vtter it in eloquence of words choyse phrases or a continued ready discourse of speach For it is not saide that the spirit teacheth vs wordes and fluent phrases but to pray in the heart and spirit with sighes and groanes which cannot bee vttered which language God that searcheth the heart vnderstandeth and accepteth as the Apostle speaketh yea being a spirit and requiring to be worshipped in spirit and Rom. 8. 27. Ioh. 4. 24 trueth hee esteemeth not the most eloquent prayers conceiued and vttered without this sight of our wants zeale and feruency of spirit and contrariwise where these are he heareth and granteth our fuites supplications though with Ezechias we are not able to expresse them but chatter like a Crawe or Swallow or with Hannah onely moue our Esa 38. 14. lippes yea in trueth though wee should not so much as moue them so that with her wee speake vnto him in our 1 Sam. 1. 13. hearts Neither hath the Lord promised that he
will hearken vnto them who can speake eloquently but that hee will satisfie the desires of them that feare him heare their cry and Psal 145. 18. 19 saue them and that hee will be nigh vnto them that call vpon Exod. 4. 10. 16. him in trueth Of which wee haue an example in Moses who though he were not cloquent but so slowe of speach that he needed to haue Aaron to be his spokesman and in stead of a mouth vnto him for the deliuery of his ambassage to Pharaoh and the people yet God gaue audience vnto his slowe and vnready suites rather then vnto Aaron who exceeded him in cloquence in so much that when Moses must pray in the behalfe of the people Aarons office was to stay vp his hands that hee might more fitly continue and perseuere in this holy exercise Againe to conceiue a prayer vpon euery occasion and to vtter it in a continued and eloquent phrase of speech is no assured signe that the spirit of God dwelleth in vs because it is neither proper to the faithfull nor commune to them all For an hypocrite may attaine vnto this abilitie yea euen excell in it by vertue of his naturall endowments memory eloquence and liberty of speech boldnesse and such like especially when as he hath had vertuous education and hath beene instructed in the doctrine of godlinesse and also trained vp in these Religious duties not onely by precepts but by the examples of the godly which he is able to imitate by helpe of these naturall endowments in the exercise of prayer as well as in the function of Preaching and ministery of the word And so likewise it is not commune to all the faithfull to haue this ability for there are many who haue a great measure of grace sight of sinne and sense of wants seruent desires strong faith who are so disabled through naturall imperfections want of memory boldnes or slownesse or vnreadines of speach that they are not able to performe this duty especially whē they are in the presence of others And this I write not to detract any thing from the excellency of their guifts who are able vpon all occasions to expresse the desires and prayers of their heart in good wordes and conuenient discourse of speach seeing this is a guift of God which not onely stirreth vp our owne deuotion but is profitable also for the edification of others who can onely conceiue of holy desires as they are by vtterance made knowne of those that haue them but partly to giue vnto the prayer of the heart and soule a superiour excellency farre aboue the prayer of the lippes euen then also when it is without it partly that none should please themselues in it though they could rauish others with the admiration of their gifts if they be not as earnest deuoute and feruent in the desires of their hearts as they are able and eloquent in the prayers of their mouthes for of these in their greatest excellency it may be truely saide that they are in Gods estimate but meere lip-labour which will for reward drawe vpon vs that iust censure this people draweth neare vnto me with their lips when their hearts are farre from Esa 29. 13 me And partly yea especially for the comfort of all those who hauing holy desires through want of naturall parts haue no ability to vtter them seeing if such can but make their suites knowne vnto God by their sighes and grones it is an euidence vnto them that the spirit dwelleth in them who enableth them thus to pray and whose suites and supplications are sure to be heard and granted But yet we are not truely capable of this comfort if we doe not labour 1 Cor. 14. 1. after perfection striue to attaine vnto the best gifts much lesse if wee are disabled for the performance of these holy duties not through want of naturall guifts but of spirituall grace and through sloth and negligence which hindreth vs from imploying and vsing them Of which this is an euident signe when as wee haue libertie of speach and plenty of wordes to discourse readily and freely vpon all occasions of worldly and earthly things but are then onely tongue tied when we should speake vnto God and can finde no fit wordes to expresse our mindes in any sensible manner when as by prayer wee should make our suites knowne vnto him CHAP. XII How wee may knowe that Gods spirit dwelleth in vs by our sanctification and the qualities and gifts of holinesse infused into vs. § Sect. 1. The fift effect of the spirit is the worke of sanctification A Fift effect of the spirit whereby hee may bee knowne to dwell in vs is the worke of sanctification and the qualities of holinesse infused into vs which is so proper and peculiar to the spirit that none besides him can effect it For as impossible it is for any man to giue vnto himselfe this spirituall renewing as it was at first to be the cause of his owne being as vnable are wee to bee the causes of our regeneration as wee were to bee of our generation and therefore as the creature euidently proueth that it had a creatour and the childe that it had a father so alike certainly may we be assured by our renewing and regeneration that the spirit of God dwelleth in vs who hath beene the sole authour of this worke And thus our Sauiour ascribeth it to his holy spirit where he saith that vnlesse wee bee borne of water and the spirit wee cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen Ioh. 3. 5. 1 Cor. 6. 11 Rom. 1. 4. So the Apostle hauing tolde the Corinthians that they had beene notorious sinners saith that they were washed and sanctified by the spirit of our God And hereof it is that he is called not onely the holy spirit but the spirit of holinesse the spirit of sanctification or the sanctifying spirit not onely because he is infinitely holy himselfe but also doth sanctifie and make vs holy who were in our selues corrupt and sinnefull The which sanctification he worketh by begetting a liuely faith in vs which purifieth our hearts and so applyeth vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and resurrection whereby we are cleansed from our sinfull corruptions and quickened in the inner man to holinesse of life the which sanctification mortification and spirituall quickening alwayes beginneth at the heart minde will and affections and then afterwards sheweth it selfe in our outward actions And therefore whosoeuer finde this worke of sanctification thus begun in them they may bee assured that the spirit of God dwelleth in them § Sect. 2. Of the sixt effect of the spirit which is repentance and of the preparation there unto A sixt effect of the spirit dwelling in vs is like vnto the former namely vnfained repentance and amendment of life vnto which it maketh the same preparation that it doth for faith For first by the ministerie of the law the
spirit as our Sauiour speaketh conuinceth vs of sin shewing vnto vs both the hainousnesse of our sinnes together with their multitude and also the grieuous and endlesse punishments Ioh. 16. 8. which they haue deserued And this it doth commonly at the first in a more generall and confused maner amazing and astonishing vs with terrours and feares horrours of minde and panges of conscience when as wee see the huge masse or mountaine of our manifold and grieuous sinnes as it were in the whole lumpe and the wrath of God the curse of the Law the plagues and punishments of this life and the life to come which we haue by them deseruedly and in respect of our owne meanes ineuitably drawne vpon vs and afterwards more particularly and distinctly it setteth our sinnes in order before vs and especially presenteth to our viewe those sinnes which wee are most guiltie off and by which wee haue most dishonoured God and wounded our owne consciences By all which it worketh in vs that which we call penitence contrition and humiliation whereby we are cast downe vnder the heauie waight of our sinnes and lye grieuing and groning vnder them as it were vnder an intollerable burthē finding no rest or comfort in our selues or in any worldly things besides And thus the spirit by the law as it were with an yron hammer battereth and bruiseth our hard and stony hearts in pieces that he may mixe with them beeing made contrite Ier. 4. 3. the oyle of his spirituall graces and vseth it like a plow to breake vp as it were these clunge stiffe and fallow grounds that being thus prepared he may sow in them these holy seedes For when hee hath thus cast vs downe and throughly humbled vs then he raiseth vs vp againe by reuealing vnto vs the mysterie of saluation the mercies of God and merits of Christ offered vnto all who will receiue them by saith And then as hath beene shewed it worketh in vs an hungring desire after Christ and his righteousnesse and a carefull earnest and constant endeauour in the vse of all good meanes as the hearing of the word prayer and the rest whereby wee may be made partakers of them The which by his inward and secret operation he so blesseth and sanctifieth vnto vs that they become effectuall to worke in vs a liuely faith whereby wee lay hold vpon Christ and his benefits and so are assured of the mercie of God and the remission and pardon of all our sinnes of Gods grace in this life and eternall glory in the life to come § Sect. 3 That faith is the cause and foundation of our repentance And thus being possessed by faith of all these inestimable benefits our hearts are rauished with the apprehension of the infinite loue of God and our Sauiour Christ and inflamed with vnsained loue towards them againe which faith thus working by loue doth cause a change and alteration which is called repentance beginning in the minde and heart and so proceeding to the outward parts and actions and worketh in vs a godly sorrow because by our sinnes we haue so much offended and displeased so gracious a God and good a father a true hatred of those sinnes and corruptions which wee haue either formerly committed or which yet adhere and cleaue vnto vs and a settled resolution and constant purpose to mortifie and subdue leaue and forsake them for the time to come and to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life All which wee doe not out of seruile feare but out of child-like loue and affection which maketh vs willing and desirous by our new obedience to please and glorifie our heauenly father not for feare of condemnation but because through the mercies of God and merits of Christ we are assured that we shall neuer be condemned Where by the way we may note a notable difference betweene that sorrow for sinne which the spirit worketh in the regenerate and that which is in carnall men For though these may sorrow and grieue after they haue sinned yet it is not for sinne it selfe the remembrance whereof is pleasant vnto them but for the punishments which they either presently feele or feare and expect in time to come where as the sorrow of Gods children is a floud or streame that springeth from faith and loue making vs to bewaile our sinnes because we haue offended and dishonoured so good a God who hath freed vs from the guilt and punishment of them by giuing his onely Sonne to death as the price of our redemption § Sect 4. That the spirit dwelling in vs purgeth vs from our naturall corruptions So that if the Spirit of God dwell in vs then hath it wrought in vs this worke of repentance in all the parts thereof and hath made in vs an happy and blessed change from euill to good from sinne to holinesse and from corruption to grace For as in nature corruption goeth before generation the abolishing of the old forme before the bringing in of the new so before wee can bee spiritually renewed the old man must bee killed and crucified and then the new man will bee quickned and reuiued sinne and corruption is purged away and then holinesse and righteousnesse is wrought in vs. First then in effecting this worke of repentance the Spirit of God dwelling in vs purgeth and purifyeth vs from all our sinfull corruptions in all the parts of our soules and bodies by applying vnto vs the efficacie and power of Christ Iesus his death which mortifith and crucifieth them in vs so as they doe no longer raigne in our mortall bodies as in time past As for example it causeth the scales of ignorance to fall from the eyes of our minde it freeth in some measure our iudgements from errour our imaginations from vanitie our consciences from dead workes our hearts from hardnesse our wils from peruersenesse and rebellion our affections from corruption and disorder and all the members of our bodies from the seruitude of sinne All which are the proper and peculiar workes of the spirit and the fruits of our regeneration and n●w birth according to that of the Apostle Whosoeuer is borne of God doth not commit sin for his seede remaineth in him and he cannot sinne because he is 1 Ioh. 3. 9. borne of God § Sect 6. That the spirit is knowne to be in vs by his quickning of vs in the inner man Yea but in the regenerate also there may seeme to bee some mortification some mourning for sinne some leauing and forsaking of it As we see in Herod who heard Iohn the Baptist gladly and did many things according to his instructions In Simon Magus who for a time left his forcerie beleeued and was baptized In Ahab who humbled himselfe before God wearing sackcloth and going mournfully In Iudas Demas Ananias and Sapphira with many such like and how then may we discerne the one from the other I answere that though there be some seeming
first this sobernesse of minde maketh vs contented with that measure of earthly blessings which wee enioy as being that portion which God hath allotted vnto vs and not so much as to desire any more but when the Lord offereth it vnto vs by honest and lawfull meanes Contrarie wherevnto are the desires and indeauours of worldly men who when they haue little murmure and repine against Gods prouidence and are ready vpon all occasions to vse vnlawfull meanes for the bettering of their earthly estate and when they haue much and more then enough are not contented and satisfied with their aboundance but still abour after more carking and caring as though they were in want and biting at euery baite which promiseth gaine although the hooke of sinne be hid vnder it Secondly from contentation springeth thankefulnesse whereby we ascribe all wee haue receiued vnto God as being his gifts and hauing nothing else to returne doe render vnto him praise and thanksgiuing Whereas contrariwise those who are wicked and vnregenerate howsoeuer they reioyce in the fruit o● of his temporall benefits yet not in him for they doe not giue vnto him the glory of his owne gifts but rather glory in themselues and sacrifice as the Prophet speaketh vnto their Hab. 1. 16. owne nets and kisse their hands as though by their owne wisedome and prouidence industry and painefull indeauours they had made themselues owners of al these things whereby they are moued to an high and proud conceipt of their excellencie and sufficiencie and in comparison of themselue● to contemne all others So in the second place this sobrietie of minde appeareth in the right vse of spirituall graces For the spirituall man looking vpon them as the gifts of God and beholding them as the first fruits of the spirit which are not perfect but only begun and seeing the many faylings defects wants and weakenesses which are in them and the strong corruptions which are mixed with them he resteth not contented and satisfied with the portion which he hath receiued but like a new borne babe hungreth and thirsteth after the sincere milke of the word that 1 Pet. 2. 1. 2. he may grow vp thereby and still inlargeth his desires and striueth indeauoureth in the vse of al good meanes wherby hee may attaine vnto more and more perfection in the meane time waiting vpon the Lord with faith and hope meekenes and patience for his blessing vpon these meanes whereby they may become effectuall and profitable for the ends for which they vse them As we see in Dauid who expected and waited for the Lord more then they who watch for Psal 130. 6. the mourning and as the eyes of seruants looke to the hands of their maisters and of the maiden vnto the hand of her mistresse Psal 123. 2. so his eyes waited vpon the Lord his God vntill hee had mercie vpon him But yet the faithfull doe not so looke after more increase of spirituall graces as that they forget to bee thankefull vnto God for that measure which they haue alreadie receiued but considering that they are no naturall endowments but Gods free and gracious gifts which of meere loue he hath granted vnto them without any their deserts denying them to many others which are by nature as good as they this maketh them not onely for the present to inioy the graces they haue receiued with contentation and much comfort and spirituall reioycing but also to leade and magnifie Gods mercie and goodnes towards them and to render vnto him all thankes and praise for his gracious gifts CHAP. XIII Of the euent and successe of the fight betweene the Flesh and the Spirit § Sect. 1 Of the foyles which the spirit receyueth in this conflict THE last thing to be considered in this conflict betweene the spirit and the flesh is the euent and successe of the fight betweene them which is two-fold the first whereof is the repuses and foyles which the spirit receiueth and suffereth through the malice and furie of the flesh the second is the victory and triumph of the spirit ouer it the first being temporarie and lasting onely for a time the other permanent and euerlasting Concerning the former the spirit is often foyled in this combat when as by the subtiltie or violence of the flesh it is hindred in the course of godlinesse and allured or forcibly drawne to the committing of sinne Of which the Apostle complaineth I see saith he another law in my members warring against the law of my minde and bringing me into captiuitie to the law of Rom 7. 21. 22. sinne which is in my members And againe I finde then a law that when I would doe good euill is present with me The which happeneth either through the weakenesse of the spirit or want of watchfulnesse and spiritual care to keep the whole armour of God fast buckled vnto vs. Of which foyles there follow two notable effects the first is vnfained and bitter griefe and sorrow for our slips and fals the other an earnest and feruent desire to rise againe to be deliuered from the bondage of the flesh and hauing regained the victory to subdue and keepe it vnder for the time to come Of the former we haue an example in the Church which finding her failings and fals into sinne pittifully complaineth and cryeth out vnto God for helpe O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy wayes And hardened our heart from thy feare Returne for thy seruants sake the tribes of thine inheritance Esa 63. 17 Wherein we may obserue an apparant difference betweene the fals of the faithfull and the vnregenerate For whereas these being fallen willingly doe liue and lye in their sinnes with pleasure and delight The godly beeing surprized at vnawares or being ouercome through their frailetie and weakenesse and the violence of tentation doe mourne and grieue for their sinne and labour to rise out of it by vnfained repentance and whereas they yeeld vnto it voluntary and cheerefull obedience as vnto their lawfull King and soueraigne the other being held vnder a forcible and tyrannicall subiection doe bewayle their thraldome and are neuer at rest till they haue found out some meanes to be deliuered out of it § Sect. 2. That from the foyles of the spirit arise earnest desires to be freed from the slauerie of sinne Rom. 7. 24. And from hence arise vehement and earnest desires to be freed from the slauery of sinne like that of the holy Apostles O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death And to serue the Lord in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse For as the needle in the dyall which is touched with a loadstone may by a forcible motion turne wind too and fro but wil neuer stand fixed and stedfast till it bend vnto it owne proper point so the heart of the regenerate touched with Gods holy spirit howsoeuer through the violence of
the flesh for though it be often weakened and wearied yet it can neuer be vtterly vanquished but still recouereth strength and courage whereby againe it preuaileth and putteth the flesh to flight though it receiue many wounds foiles and fals in the combate yet the wounds are recured by applying of the precious balsum of Christs bloud by the hand of faith and it recouereth of the soiles and fals through the power and promises of God apprehended by the same meanes and through the gracious assistance of Gods spirit which supporteth our weakenesse and when wee are ready to faint and sinke sendeth fresh supplies of renewed graces which re-enforcing our decayed bands encourageth vs to giue fierce assaults against the flesh and the lusts thereof and enableth vs to obtaine the victorie Neither is it possible that the flesh or the Diuell himselfe should finally preuaile against the man regenerate not because he is mightier then they or is superiour in power or policie for herein euen the stoutest champion commeth farre short of our spirituall enemies but because God hath in many places of holy scripture promised vnto them victorie and that if they will resist and fight their enemies shall flee and be discomfited and therefore the issue of the battell resteth not vpon their strength but vpon the infallible Eph 6. 10. 12 truth of God which can neuer faile Secondly because we sight not with our owne weapons but with the sword of the spirit which nothing can withstand we stand in the field not in our owne armour but in the compleat armour of God which being o● his making must needs bee high proofe and will not by its weakenesse and insufficiencie discredit the workeman we goe not on warfare in our own priuate quarrell but like Dauid against Goliah wee goe out against them in the name of the Lord of Hosts the God of 1 Sam 17. 45 the armies of Israel whom they defie and his battailes we fight who is all-sufficient by his sole word to giue vs victorie and therefore wee are sure to preuaile in so good a quarrell neither will our Grand-captaine let his mightiest enemies destroy the weakest of his souldiers who beare his colours and fight vnder his standard seeing it is his owne cause and he is able alone without other helpe euen with a word of his mouth to vanquish them all and put them to shamefull flight Thirdly because it is the spirituall conflict wherein the spirit of God with the royall armie of his graces fighteth against the Diuell and his chiefetaine the flesh with the lusts thereof and therefore wee cannot doubt of victory vnlesse wee should in againe that the holy Spirit should want power to preuaile against the wicked spirit or hauing it would in his wisedome suffer himselfe to bee so much dishonoured as to be vanquished in the conflict Finally we are sure of victory and that the enemies of our saluation shal neuer be able to preuaile against vs because our victorious Eleazar Iesus Christ hath already ouercom them all and onely putteth vs to fight against conquered enemies yea and that wee may receiue no mortall hurt in this conflict hee holdeth vs by the right hand and biddeth vs to fight without feare yea himselfe holdeth vs in his right Esa 41. 10. 11. 12. 42. 6. hand and as he is powerfull to keepe vs so he hath bound himselfe by his gracious promise that none of our enemies shall pull vs from him Yea which is most of all hee hath inseparably vnited vs vnto himselfe by his holy spirit and made vs liuely members of his body and therefore being Ioh. 10. 28. powerfull to defend vs he will neuer suffer vs to perish for so should his owne blessed body receiue no mayme § Sect. 13. An obiection against the former truth answered Now whereas it may bee obiected that there are many Christians who by themselues and others are reputed members of Christ that yet quite fall away from him and become limmes of Sathan to this I answere that the members of Christ generally so called are of two sorts First such liuely members as are inseparably vnited vnto him by his holy spirit and a liuely faith the which neither the Diuell nor the flesh nor all the power of hell can plucke away from him Secondly such as are improperly called Christs members being dead and fruitlesse and onely so in their outward profession the which they making onely for worldly respects must necessarily fayle when they fayle and bee quite seuered from Christ when their outward profession which is the onely bond of their vnion is taken away euen as a woodden legge which is tyed to a liuing body with strings and points must needs fall from it when they are cut in sunder the which separation doth not proue that the true members of Christ may perish but rather that these who haue thus perished were neuer the true members of his body As for the liuely members of Christs body they can neuer be parted from him in respect of their spirituall vnion because the spirit of God which is the chiefe band of it can neuer faile It is true that there may be a temporary separation betweene our bridegroome Christ and the Christian soule espoused vnto him but not Hos 21. 9. in respect of their spirituall vnion for he betrotheth her vnto himselfe for euer in righteousnes iudgement louing kindnesse mercie and faithfulnesse as the Prophet speaketh and not sinne it selfe can separate them for it is one branch of the mariage couenant that he wil forgiue her sins and remember Ier. 31. 34. them no more nor death for they are both immortall Only they may be parted for a time in respect of cōmunion and fellowship of that sweet influence of his spirituall graces at least in her feeling apprehension Euen as the wise and louing husband may for the hainous faults of his wife cease for a time to communicate vnto her his person in respect of sweet societie delightfull familiarity and yet the vnion of marriage remaining firme he may receiue her againe vpon her repentance into his wonted fauour and communicate vnto her himselfe with all testimonies of his loue But this chaste spouse the Christian soule can neuer sleepe in securitie nor rest contented in this estate but with the Church in the Canticles she lamenteth the absence of her dearest loue Cant. 3. 1 shee neuer ceaseth seeking of him in his holy ordinances and in the exercises of faith and repentance till shee haue found him and haue the sensible fruition of his sweet society where by shee approueth her selfe to bee vnited vnto Christ in coniugall affection seeing it is as vndoubted a signe of it to mourne for the absence of our bridegroome as to reioyce in his presence and our fruition of his loue § Sect 14. That there are 2 degrees of the spirits victory 1 in this life Now being thus vnited vnto
the graces thereof increased in vs the Lord will satisfie our psal 145. 19. desires and bring this worke of grace begun to accomplishment Phil. 1. 6. and perfection For therefore doth the Lord inlarge our hearts with these longing desires that hee may satisfie them therefore doth he make vs to hunger after grace and to finde and feele our owne emptinesse that hee may fill and replenish vs with them Wee must not therefore rest contented and satisfied with that measure of grace vvhich wee haue receiued or that portion of the spirit wherewith wee are already indued but wee must hunger after more perfection and growe from grace to grace from strength to strength and from one degree of spirituall stature vnto another vntill wee come vnto a perfect age in Christ And this is an inseparable and infallible signe and property of the faithfull regenerate who are said to bee Psal 92. 14. trees of righteousnes of Gods owne planting which bring forth more plenty of fruit in their old age and are not doted Pro. 4. 18. and rotten with yeeres but when they are at the eldest they are most fat and flourishing They are like vnto the morning Eph. 2. 20. light which shineth more and more vnto the perfect day They are Gods building which is still in framing and setting vp vntill it bee fully finished They are Gods children who grow from strength to strength vntill they come to perfect stature neither haue they any time of olde age but are in a continuall spring of youth They are branches ingrafted into the true Vine Iesus Christ which bearing fruit in him ●e purgeth pruneth them that they may bring forth more fruit That therefore wee may approue our selues to bee in this number let vs not content our selues that we haue receiued some measure of the spirit but as the Apostle exhorteth vs let vs desire to grow in grace and in the knowledge Eph. 4. 12. 13. Ioh. 15. 2. 2 Pet. 3. 19. of our Lord IESVS CHRIST For they who haue once tasted of these spirituall excellencies are not satisfied vvith a small pittance but rather thereby their desire is inlarged their appetite sharpened and their hunger increased after a more full and perfect allowance § Sect. 2 The 2 meanes a carefull indeauour in the vse of all good meāes for the strengthening of it Now as we are thus to desire more and more an accesse of all spirituall grace vnto perfection so in the second place we are to endeauour in the vse of all good meanes appointed by God for the strengthening and increasing of Gal. 3. 2. them And first we must bee carefull and diligent in hearing reading and meditating in the word of God which is the ministery of grace and saluation and not onely the seede whereby wee are regenerate and made new borne babes in Christ but also the foode whereby we are nourished 1 Pet. 2. 1. 2. and increased in grace and spirituall strength vntill we come vnto a full age in Christ Milke for our tender infancy and more strong and perfect nourishment for our riper age Now because there may come a deare yeere when as this spirituall food will be very scarce so as wee may wander Amos. 8. 12. from sea to sea and runne to and fro from the North euen vnto the East to seeke the word of the Lord and shall not finde it as he threatneth by the Prophet therefore we must with Ioseph foreseeing this daunger in our yeeres of plentie lay vp store against the time of scarcitie and penury that our spirit doe not loose it strength nor our soules be famished with this spirituall famine and not like the foolish Egyptians for want of prouidence be driuen to seeke our foode with much inconueniency when as we should feede vpon it Yea wee are not onely to lay vp sufficient store for our owne prouision but as Ioseph did for the reliefe and comfort of all that sue and seeke vnto vs that their soules may blesse vs when as they finde themselues refreshed and comforted with this spirituall nourishment And this meanes of comforting and strengthening the spirit Cyrill commendeth vnto vs. If saith hee comming often vnto the Church thou giuest eare to the holy Scriptures and conceiuest Cyril in Leuit. lib. 9. Col. 129. the meaning of these diuine precepts then as the flesh is pampred with excesse of meates and daintie dishes so the spirit will grow strong by feeding on this heauenly Manna and becomming more powerfull then our sensuall desires and carnall lustes it will bring the flesh into subiection and make it to submit it selfe to be ruled by its lawes Whereas contrariwise if wee withdrawe this foode from the spirit it will growe so faint and languish in strength that it will not bee able to stand against the assaults of the flesh in the day of battell And vnto the ministery of the word we must adioyne the frequent vse of the Lords Supper which is a spirituall feast purposely ordained by our Sauiour Christ for the confirming and strengthening of our communion with him by his spirit and for the filling and replenishing of all those with his sanctifying and sauing graces who come with a good stomack and an hungring appetite to this holy table for the strengthening of those that are weake and faint the restoring of them who are entred into a spiritual consumption and for the confirming of such in their vigour and strength who already enioy desired health Finally we must vse the helpe of holy conferences instructing exhorting admonishing counselling and comforting one another Iud. 20. that wee may bee further edified in our holy faith for as stickes scattered asunder will hardly keepe fire but if they be laide together will quickly growe to a great flame so if we single our selues from one another and admit no communion by religious conferences wee shall quickly coole and quench the fire of the spirit but if wee meete together and exercise our selues in holy conferences wee shall hereby stirre vp Gods graces in vs wee shall like vnto kniues whetted one vpon another sharpen our gifts and set an edge on our desires to the performance of all good dutie we shall pile vp our graces one on another and with these bellowes of conference blowe vpon them vntill they grow to a great flame § Sect. 3. The 3 meanes is to nourish the good motions of the spirit The third meanes of cherishing and strengthening the spirit is to nourish the good motions thereof neither vtterly quenching them nor delaying to put them in practise but presently harkning vnto them and labouring after the first and best opportunitie of performing those duties which it requireth For it is a great comfort and encouragement to this spirituall Vice-roy whom God hath set vp in his stead to raigne and rule in vs when as wee yeelde obedience vnto him and suffer our selues willingly to bee gouerned by his