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

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may charge Soules home with their sins Cry aloud spare not lift up thy voice like a Trumpet and shew my people their transgression and the house of Jacob their sins Isai 58. 1. Some are so fine fingered they dare not touch the sore so mure hearted they dare not search the wound so mealy-mouthed they cannot speak hard against sin some so guilty they are afraid to condemn themselves A Minister must Preach not as acquitting but accusing not as soothing but as searching not as discharging but charging the wicked and ungodly not as flattering but frowning upon sin not as pleasing man but pleasing God To Preach generally not particularly to Preach as a farre off never come near is not the way To make all wel for fear of ill will is too low a frame for the Spirit of a Minister of Jesus Christ to be in and argues an heart seeking more it's own temporal comfort than Gods Eternal glory I mean not that Ministers should particularize publikely persons or names or that that their words should savour of Spleen and Gall against ought but sin But this that they should charge their peoples sins upon them as Nathan said to David Thou art the man So they you are the 2 Sam. 12. 7. people that are thus and thus Let them endeavour to cause them to know that they are the people that have contemned Gods Commands broken his bonds worked wickednesse practised perversenesse refused repentance and slighted their own Soules that they are in a lost and undone condition after this manner did John the Baptist Preach to the Scribes and Pharisees Matth. 3. 7 8 9. He opens the Book and shewes them their sins he brings them to the brink of Hell and shewes them their danger and so doth Peter Him have ye taken and by wicked hands Crucified and slain Acts 2. 23. And did not the Lord blesse this his Preaching For they were pricked in their hearts and said to Peter and the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren what shall we do Verse 37. And so again in Acts 8. 20 21 22 23. Read them I pray How terrible doth Peter thunder there against Simon Magus and come home to him My heart riseth much against flattery especially in a Ministery it is a most desperate thing and of cursed consequence There is not a speedier way to damn Semper vitanda est perniciosa dulcedo people whereas a Ministers work is to Preach their Soules to Heaven For Ministers to hover and keep at a distance in their Preaching and never seek to come home nor get into the conscience argueth cowardize or unskilfulnesse Such Preaching will bring little of comfort to the Pastor or conversion to the people It is said of Bernard that once he Preached a curious neat flourishing Sermon and every one was taken with it though not by it but he was sad and heavy thereupon soon after he Preached another Sermon not of kin to the former but an home searching pressing Sermon it was no commendation of this as of the former But he carried it very lightsomely and cheerfully to what he did before the people asked him the reason of his so various divers Heri Bernardum hodie Christum deportment he answers yesterday I Preached Bernard to day Christ yesterday my self to day my Saviour Though people condemn such kind of Preaching yet God will crown it though it be harsh to flesh and blood yet it is health to the Soul and Spirit many look upon it as needlesse when the Lord knows it is very needful 3. Powerful Preaching Powerful zealous S. 12 Preaching is a means of effectual calling Ministers should Preach not with affectation but affection not with formality but fervency not with listlinesse but livelinesse Sermons should be fired with zeal and filled with love Cold dead lazy Preaching maketh Christians thereafter faint wooing for Christ goes away Qui timidè rogat negare docet with a denial if they be not more hot in their work they can never win the castle of the heart for Christ Eli's vile Children feared not their 1 Sam. 2. 25. Fathers faint chiding The Lord did earnestly protest to his people by his Ministers Jer. 11. 7. I earnestly protested saith the Lord or as in the original protesting I protested I delivered my mind to you over and over which sheweth earnestnesse Earnest Preaching many times brings early practice Ministers should first warm their hearts at the Spirits fire and then warm their Sermons at their hearts they should so speak that their words may seem not to fall from their heads but to rise from the hearts what comes from the heart is most like to go to the heart To speak as if one were afraid to wake the sleepers to disquiet sin as if one had no sence of grace or sin of mercy or misery is like to prove fruitlesse and without good issue Sinners are asleep and they must be rouzed they are secure and they must be rounded and they are regardlesse and must be ratled as the Heb. 4. 2 word should be mixed with Faith in the hearer so with fervency in the Preacher It is said of that eminent Divine Master Perkins that in his Preaching he would pronounce the word Damn with such an Emphasis that Fuller holy state he left a trembling impression upon the Spirits of his Auditors Ministers must be Boanerges Sons of Thunder as well as Barjonas Sons of Consolation when they speak they should 1 Pet. 4. 11. speak as the Oracles of God powerfully pressingly vehemently urgingly Reader when the word hath been powerfully Preached to thee in a zealous stirring way hast thou not had some convictions have not the secrets of thine heart been made manifest and thou been constrained to fall down and worship God and report and say the Lord is in this Minister 1 Cor. 14. 25. of a truth Hast not been almost a Christian thereby and thou that art Godly did not the Lord use the obstetrication of means of such kind of Preaching for bringing forth the Man-child of grace The Lord give such Watch-men such Work-men where they are wanted the Lord blesse them where they are seated Was not Christs Preaching after this manner How Pathetically doth he expresse himself Luke 13. 34 35. And can we learn of a greater Doctor than he And what else doth Paul mean and intend but earnest Preaching 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pasor Lex in his counsel to Timothy Preach the word be instant in season out of season 2 Tim. 4. 2. that is be earnest pressing be urgent as some translate the word 2. Means of the higher forme Now we S. 13 come to speak of means of a superiour order and that is the Spirit of the Lord the Spirit and the Word go together the one as the Servant the other as the Master the one as the Instrument Nisi Spiritus S. adsit cordi audientium
otiosus est sermo Doctoris the other as the Agent the one as Organical the other as Authentical as Christ said to his Disciples John 15. 5. so may the Spirit say to providences and the word without me ye can do nothing These wheeles would never go if the Spirit did not drive them these sailes would never fill if that did not blow hard these means would be but as dead carcasses if that did not enliven them Words Frustrà foris verba nostra streperent si internum magisterium S. S. deesset Ephes 6. 17. Ps ●27 1. would be but wind without the Spirits working If the word be not in the Spirits hand it will never cut down the weeds of sin nor slay the Goliah of natural rebellion therefore is it called the sword of the Spirit If the Spirit joyn not it self to the chariot it will move heavily as if the wheeles were taken off Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it Unlesse the Spirit move upon the face of the Soul nothing will be brought to ripenesse and perfection As an Heathen could say when he had done some piece of eminent service It was not I that did this exploit but the Gods used me as an Instrument So may the fore-mentioned means say It is not we that have converted but the Spirit by us and may answer as Peter if we be examined of the good Acts 4. 9 10. that sinful Soules have received Be it known unto you all that by the power of the Spirit these Soules are alive this day If the Spirit do not prosper providences and work with the word the Soul can never be changed It is his proper work to give grace to grant holinesse and therefore is he called the Holy-ghost as is his name so is his nature and as his condition is so is his operation If the Spirit sit not at the stern the Minister shall plie the oar in vain Ministers may Act secondarily but the Spirit primarily they as choice subservients but the Spirit as chief superintendent they may carry on their work artificially as Servants but the Spirit architectonically as Master they may Preach out their hearts and if the Spirit doth not put out his hand Soules may go to Hell after all Now the Spirit helpeth and carrieth on this work by these actings The Spirit 1. Perswadeth 2. Fasteneth 3. Applieth 4. Examineth 5. Concludeth 6. Disquieteth 1. The first work of the Spirit is to perswade S. 14 the Soul to believe those things that are spoken Truths heard and not believed will take no place The word Preached did not profit them not being mixt with Faith in them that heard it Heb. 4. 2. The word was propounded to many yet profited but some taught to divers yet took but a few the word the same but not the work And the cause was as perswasion in the one so misperswasion or non-perswasion in the other If we be not perswaded of the sweet of a promise of the soure of a threatning of the reality of consolations pronounced of the certainty of comminations denounced of the verity of Doctrine commended and the necessity of duty commanded they may strike our ear but they will never reach the heart If one hear of a receit for the bodies good and believe not the contents thereof it will do them no good so it is in this case the Scripture is an whole Book of receits for our restitution of remedies for our maladies which we shall never follow if we believe not the vertue and use of them An unbelieving heart is like sandy Infidelitas sicut terra arenosa barren ground Now it is the work of the Spirit to perswade The belief of the misery of our Soules the mercy of a Saviour of the willingnesse and worthinesse of Christ in reference to redemption of the nature of sin and the need of Sanctity cannot be wrought in our Soules without the power of the Spirit We cannot perswade our selves the Minister cannot perswade us without the influx of the Holy-ghost We may go down into the Waters of the word and if the Spirit move not them and us we may come up again as leprous as ever we were Let the Minister informe soundly reprove sharply examine searchingly and exhort sweetly yet all is nothing unlesse the Spirit do something But the Spirit deals and treats with the Soul propounds delivers the truth of God answers objections silenceth queries infallibly demonstrates and by such strong Mediums proves it's Divine conclusions that the Soul is non-plus'd confuted hath nothing to say and is now so clearly convinced that unlesse it would deny principles and shut it's eyes against the light of Argument it must needs come over to the Spirits part and be of it's mind You that are effectually called what say you till the Spirit perswaded you could man prevail with you till you believed indeed the writings of the Prophets and Apostles and the sayings of Ministers from thence did you getany good till then was not allspoken as to the dead 2. It fasteneth In the next place the Spirit S. 15 fasteneth and fixed some word or providence upon the Soul which it cannot forget or shake off and causeth it like Mary to keep all these things and ponder them in their heart Some Luke 2. 19. general thoughts and sence of the word believed of providences experimented do light upon the Spirit of a man or woman but are soon scared away Now the Spirit cometh and holdeth these things to the heart the sound of the word cometh and goeth and the Lord in his providences passeth by us and we take little notice of him But the Spirit as the Master of the assemblies fasteneth something like a naile in a sure place and strikes the arrow into the side the Soul would put all away and thrust all out of doors by company mirth by letting in thoughts of vanity but the Spirit striveth against this stream and now the requiring repentance pressing piety reproving iniquity in general or such a sin in particular the threatning of fury promising favour such a passage or such a phrase in the Ministery of the word and for providences the visiting with sicknesse the lessening the estate the preserving from danger the saving from wrack or the like are so tied by the Spirit to the Soul that it cannot get loose from them and come so freely into it's thoughts that it cannot avoid acquaintance with them and now saith Oh such an expression of the Minister what means it by this providence what doth the Lord intend and where ever it is going whatever it is doing almost these things and thoughts do interveen the Soul cannot but revolve and turn them up and down in it's mind 3. It applieth The Spirit helpeth the Soul S. 16 to apply to it's self in particular what is spoken in the general We are all prone to excuse our selves and are like little Children
dissolve you It argueth a very evil frame of heart to oppose or not to mind this work throughly It argueth desperate pride of spirit to resist to refuse the grace of God the calls of Christ under such various dispensations He hath come to you with a rod in his hand with chidings in his mouth he hath come also in love and in the spirit of meekenesse too He hath sent a thundring Luther and a mild Melanchthon to you he hath spoken bigge words his words and calls have been of all sorts and sizes He hath laid before you the curse of the Law to deterre you he hath set up the crosse of Christ in the Preaching of the Gospel to draw you you have had sound reprehension sweet exhortation and yet for all this you have not run to the bosome of Christ but remain in the borders of the Devil's Kingdom Verily this makes your sin to swell and boln exceedingly 2. The altitude of your inexcusablenesse S. 5 Though people be never so guilty yet they are Vsitatum generis humani vitium est peccatum defendendo excusare too ready to acquit themselves and though they are to be accused yet they would fain be excused this practice we learned from our first Parents and though we offend yet we would defend but the Lord hath stopped thy mouth that thou hast nothing to say for thy self and the Figg leaves of vain pretences will be but a weak Bulwark against the charge of the Almighty If God should ask you how it comes to passe that you are still unchanged who have sate under the means you will be like that poor man Matth. 22. 12. speechlesse and it will be most dreadful for any man or woman when they shall be brought to their trial and judgement at the last to have no plea nor allegation to put in for themselves It is the way of the righteous God if sinners will not be pliable so to order his dispensations towards them that they shall be left without excuse and shall be condemned by their own Conscientia peccati formidinis mater conscience which will be matter of greatest horrour consider these ensuing particulars and see what excuse will be found for you 1. Somtimes people excuse themselves because S. 6 they want their hearing which I confesse is a sad thing for though the heathen Philosophers have determined sight to be the most noble of the senses yet Christians have reason to account hearing the most noble because the most useful for faith comes by hearing It is Via Domini ad cor dirigitur quum veritatis sermo humiliter auditur the channel whereby the word of life by the work of the Lord runs to the heart blesse God you that have the use of this sense and use it to Gods glory yet the Lord many times shuts up the passages of the ear by infirmities and casualties for reasons best known to himself but though thou canst not hear yet thou canst read Though thine eares be obstructed yet thine eyes be opened though thine eares be deaf yet thine eyes are not dim though the Lord hath taken away thine eares yet he hath given thee eyes and though he have shut up one door that leadeth to the head yet he hath opened another and hath afforded thee such education and bringing up that thou hast been taught to read and though grace usually come in by the ear yet when the Lord bars up that he can let it in by the eye but you have not improved your talent of reading you have been like the unprofitable servant that hid his Lords Matt. 25. 25. Talent in the earth There hath been a price put into thine hands but thou hast been so foolish thou hast not had an heart to improve Prov 17. 16. and make use thereof The Scripture and good books have been to you as a garden inclosed and as a fountain sealed so little have you given your self to reading Paul's counsel to Timothy give attendance to reading is calculated 1 Tim. 4. 13. not only for the meridian of a Minister but of every true Christian also what know you but God might have set home the word read upon your heart and have sent Acts 7. 29 30. his spirit to help you as he did Philip to the Eunuch in reading will not this enervate and ham-string the force of other pleas that you had a could but not a would to read a faculty but not a fancy a power but no pleasure to read that you had skill but no will at all 2. Many say they cannot read when yet S. 7 they can hear Not to read is very sad and such have not performed the part of loving Parents who have not given their children so good education they are like to hold up their hands for it at the bar another day without repentance and thou also art in fault thy self for thou mightest have learned to read and thou wouldest not give thy mind to it or thou maiest learn to read yet but thou hast many excuses thou art too old Indeed we are alwayes too young or too old to that which is good you have your senses and memory vigorous enough for other things and why not for this There wanteth only a will I Sola voluntate quisque efficitur Plut. have read of one Eurydice a noble Lady who being a Slavonian born and most barbarous yet for the instruction of her own children she took pains to learn good letters when she was well stept in yeers And ought not the life of our souls to be as dear to us as the children of our body And though your sight be taken away from you now yet time was when you had the use of it and it may be for not making use of it aright God hath deprived thee of it therefore that cloke of excuse is not long enough And though you cannot read yet it may be some of yours can though not the Parent yet the posterity though not the Master yet the man and you may hear them God hath not denied you your sence or if none in the house can read which sometimes falls out a woefull thing it is yet you having a gift of hearing must wait upon the publike preaching of the word the more The Philosophers say that nature is an indulgent mother and where she is defective in one kind she is redundant in another and what she subtracts from one faculty or sence she gives to another and so doth compensate and make amends as those to whom she denies sight she gives the bettet memory c. So we wanting one faculty or sence which might be very subservient for our souls good should labour to make double and so much the more improvement of that we have But thou though thou canst hear yet givest not thy self to it Thou shouldest hear more and thou hearest less than others thou shouldest hear oftner and thou hearest seldomer
seek to be made good As ever you desire to be made a living Saint so see your selfe to be a lost sinner but the wretched world love and Joh. 3. 19. live in darkness and rather then they will have a true reflextion of their condition they either draw the curtain before the glass or put their hand before their eyes and so farre hath the God of this world infatuated them that they will draw up such conclusions to Conscientia est codex in quo quotidiana peccata conscribuntur which neither conscience if suffered to speak nor Scripture will give consent If you did but search consciences record and Scriptures testimonie sure you could not be of that perswasion whereof you are 2. Of Gods compassion people think that the S. 23 Divine being is all mercie and no justice and that by his mercy they shall be preserved from damnation though through wilfulness they persevere in their abominations This is the last refuge that they betake themselves to and the universal remedie and plaister that they think Vltimum refugium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be healed by It is true the mercy of God is the sovereign salve for the sores of our souls but it must be rightly spread and applied It is the onely balm of Gilead but it must be rightly used Gods mercy is sanctifying as well as saving renewing as well as redeeming delivering from the power as well as from the penalty of sin from the way as well as from the wages of sin and those that have not the first effect thereof cannot expect the latter If it bring not to repentance for sin it will never bring to acceptance in a Saviour The Author Rom. 2. 4. to the Hebrews speaking of mercy of the highest strain even that which comes to souls in the blood of Christ which though it be the pillar and basis of Gods kingdom yet he doth not infer that therfore be we what we will we shall shall be saved but this that we must have grace Heb. 12. 24. 28 29. whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly feare or otherwise he will be a consuming fire notwithstanding this eminent demonstration of his mercy The Lord saveth none in their sins but saved from your sins you may be To fancie such mercy is but In omni opere Dei est misericordia et justitia to fall down to an Idol for mercy and justice meet together the rising of one attribute is not built upon the ruine of another God is full of pity thou thinkest that he will spare thee though thou be never so full of impietie and therefore you send not forth so much as one thought to look after grace He that made you will not damn you he that formed you will not confound you for your sinnes you think Doe but consult that startling place in Esay It is a people of no understanding therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them and he that formed them will shew them no favour Esa 27. 11. Gods mercie you see will not advance you to happinesse if you live and die without holiness By such thoughts you make mercy a means to sink you which otherwise might be a means to save you what is this but to turn the grace of God into wantonness Be not deceived God will not be mocked the Lords mercy glorifieth in heaven onely those whom he sanctifieth on earth Though God be mercifull yet you will be miserable without grace presumption of Gods favour without a change on your heart will prove the confusion of your face and if because of his compassion you disobey the call of his Spirit you are like to meet with nothing but condemnation let mercie be a motive to draw you to contrition and not a means to drown you in perdition Every one though their hearts be fraughted with nothing but sin yet they would cast anchor in the mercy of God that they might be saved from tormenting tempests and so long as they think they shall have glory let who so will look after grace if they may be saved through Gods mercy what need they care for Christs Spirit but soul know thus much that though Gods mercy have neither bottom nor bank yet it will not benefit you in reference to glory if you come into and goe out of the world a sinfull wretch Those that confide in Gods mercy against Gods method are like to have a sad come off when it comes to the upshot 3. Sinful procrastinations This is another cause of peoples being without and not looking S. 24 after effectual calling because they defer and put it off to the time to come hereafter they think will be time enough though it be Qui non est hodiè cras minus aptus erit high time at present not considering that duration in sin brings obduration of heart in temporals people are altogether upon the speed and in spirituals altogether upon the slack It is an usual thing for people at 20 to put off repentance and the serious minding of their souls to 30 and when they are come to 30 to crave yet a further day and that the businesse may lie still till 40 and so putting off from one time to another from the Spring to Autumn from the flower to the fall of our age the work is undone for gray heads can find excuses as well as green heads for when they grow old then their senses sinke their memories grow mean their understandings decay and now it is no time for such things even as Thales who when his mother asked Plutarch him in his younger years why he did not marry answered He was too young and after in his elder years she putting the same question to him answered He was too old So the Lord by his Ministers and Spirit asketh people when they will marry be espoused to Jesus Christ they say It is too soon they have good desires to Christ but they would stay yet a while the Lord in patience waits and comes to them with the same query afterwards and then they say It is too late nature is decayed their spirits are spent but they will wish well and they would have God accept of that most put of all to the last and yet then they are as unfit and unwilling as ever and God in justice rejects them who injuriously refused him People are like little children who loathe to have their play spoiled or hindred by wet weather say Rain rain go away come again another day Sinners have sometimes convictions that they begin to melt and be sorrowful and the heavenly doctrine falls upon them in such drops that it begins to wet them to damp their sport to dull their joy and they bid it go away and if it come in old age it shall be welcome and put away the messages of God the calls of the spirit and say as Felix to Paul